{"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1936\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026page=18","prev":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1936\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026page=17","next":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1936\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026page=19","last":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1936\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026page=359"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":18,"next_page":19,"prev_page":17,"total_pages":359,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":170,"total_count":3587,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Armistead L. Boothe collection","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Boothe, Armistead L. (Armistead Lloyd), 1907-1990","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"This collection documents the life and career of Armistead Boothe, an Alexandria, Virginia, lawyer, state legislator, and trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636","ead_ssi":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636","_root_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/GMU/repositories_2_resources_636.xml","title_ssm":["Armistead L. Boothe collection"],"title_tesim":["Armistead L. 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Jan, 1994, 5-46. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4249409."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmistead Lloyd Boothe (1907-1990) was a lawyer and state legislator from Alexandria, Virginia. Boothe attended Episcopal High School, the University of Virginia, and Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He and his wife, Elizabeth Peele Boothe, were married in 1934. Boothe served as a Democratic Virginia state legislator from 1948-1963. He was a prominent member of a group of legislators known as the \"Young Turks\" who opposed the entrenched establishment politicians of Virginia government. Boothe also served as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg. A lifelong Episcopalian, he left politics and the law in 1970 to serve as the Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria. 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Boothe died in 1990."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia's Special Collections holds additional \u003cextptr href=\"http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu02776.xml;query=;\" title=\"Armistead L. Boothe papers.\" show=\"new\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Related Material"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["The University of Virginia's Special Collections holds additional "],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Boothe collection, C0268, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Armistead L. Boothe collection, C0268, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessed by Special Collections Research Center staff. Processing completed by Elizabeth Beckman in June 2015. EAD markup completed by Elizabeth Beckman in June 2015.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processed by Special Collections Research Center staff. Processing completed by Elizabeth Beckman in June 2015. EAD markup completed by Elizabeth Beckman in June 2015."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection documents the life and political career of Armistead L. Boothe from his school days in Alexandria, Virginia, in the early 1920s to his role as Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in the 1970s and his retirement in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Included are certificates, a few photos, and a letter from Boothe's time as a student at Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia, travel and bank documents from his time in England in the 1920s and 1930s, and newspaper articles, speeches and writings, press releases, campaign materials, and correspondence from his days as a lawyer, politician, and director of development at Virginia Theological Seminary. Of particular interest is a letter from 1969 to the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne, who was killed in the accident at Chappaquiddick in Ted Kennedy's car. Also included in the collection are Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia briefs dating from the 1940s to the 1960s, as well as correspondence, agendas, news articles, etc, from Boothe's role as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents note"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The collection documents the life and political career of Armistead L. Boothe from his school days in Alexandria, Virginia, in the early 1920s to his role as Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in the 1970s and his retirement in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Included are certificates, a few photos, and a letter from Boothe's time as a student at Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia, travel and bank documents from his time in England in the 1920s and 1930s, and newspaper articles, speeches and writings, press releases, campaign materials, and correspondence from his days as a lawyer, politician, and director of development at Virginia Theological Seminary. Of particular interest is a letter from 1969 to the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne, who was killed in the accident at Chappaquiddick in Ted Kennedy's car. 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Included are certificates, a few photos, and a letter from Boothe's time as a student at Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia, travel and bank documents from his time in England in the 1920s and 1930s, and newspaper articles, speeches and writings, press releases, campaign materials, and correspondence from his days as a lawyer, politician, and director of development at Virginia Theological Seminary. Of particular interest is a letter from 1969 to the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne, who was killed in the accident at Chappaquiddick in Ted Kennedy's car. Also included in the collection are Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia briefs dating from the 1940s to the 1960s, as well as correspondence, agendas, news articles, etc, from Boothe's role as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.","The copyright and related rights status of materials created after 1931 have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)","This collection documents the life and career of Armistead Boothe, an Alexandria, Virginia, lawyer, state legislator, and trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.","George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Boothe, Armistead L. (Armistead Lloyd), 1907-1990","English"],"unitid_tesim":["C0268","/repositories/2/resources/636"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Armistead L. Boothe collection"],"collection_title_tesim":["Armistead L. Boothe collection"],"collection_ssim":["Armistead L. 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Photos and travel/school documents were grouped together by the processing archivist.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged in the order in which it was received. Photos and travel/school documents were grouped together by the processing archivist."],"bibliography_html_tesm":["\u003cbibref\u003eSmith, Douglas. \" 'When Reason Collides with Prejudice': Armistead Lloyd Boothe and the Politics of Desegregation in Northern Virginia, 1948-1963.\" The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 102:1. Jan, 1994, 5-46. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4249409.\u003c/bibref\u003e"],"bibliography_heading_ssm":["Bibliography"],"bibliography_tesim":["Smith, Douglas. \" 'When Reason Collides with Prejudice': Armistead Lloyd Boothe and the Politics of Desegregation in Northern Virginia, 1948-1963.\" The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 102:1. Jan, 1994, 5-46. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4249409."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmistead Lloyd Boothe (1907-1990) was a lawyer and state legislator from Alexandria, Virginia. Boothe attended Episcopal High School, the University of Virginia, and Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He and his wife, Elizabeth Peele Boothe, were married in 1934. Boothe served as a Democratic Virginia state legislator from 1948-1963. He was a prominent member of a group of legislators known as the \"Young Turks\" who opposed the entrenched establishment politicians of Virginia government. Boothe also served as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg. A lifelong Episcopalian, he left politics and the law in 1970 to serve as the Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria. Boothe died in 1990.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Armistead Lloyd Boothe (1907-1990) was a lawyer and state legislator from Alexandria, Virginia. Boothe attended Episcopal High School, the University of Virginia, and Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He and his wife, Elizabeth Peele Boothe, were married in 1934. Boothe served as a Democratic Virginia state legislator from 1948-1963. He was a prominent member of a group of legislators known as the \"Young Turks\" who opposed the entrenched establishment politicians of Virginia government. Boothe also served as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg. A lifelong Episcopalian, he left politics and the law in 1970 to serve as the Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria. Boothe died in 1990."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia's Special Collections holds additional \u003cextptr href=\"http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu02776.xml;query=;\" title=\"Armistead L. Boothe papers.\" show=\"new\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Related Material"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["The University of Virginia's Special Collections holds additional "],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Boothe collection, C0268, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Armistead L. Boothe collection, C0268, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessed by Special Collections Research Center staff. Processing completed by Elizabeth Beckman in June 2015. 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Included are certificates, a few photos, and a letter from Boothe's time as a student at Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia, travel and bank documents from his time in England in the 1920s and 1930s, and newspaper articles, speeches and writings, press releases, campaign materials, and correspondence from his days as a lawyer, politician, and director of development at Virginia Theological Seminary. Of particular interest is a letter from 1969 to the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne, who was killed in the accident at Chappaquiddick in Ted Kennedy's car. Also included in the collection are Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia briefs dating from the 1940s to the 1960s, as well as correspondence, agendas, news articles, etc, from Boothe's role as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents note"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The collection documents the life and political career of Armistead L. Boothe from his school days in Alexandria, Virginia, in the early 1920s to his role as Director of Development at Virginia Theological Seminary in the 1970s and his retirement in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Included are certificates, a few photos, and a letter from Boothe's time as a student at Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia, travel and bank documents from his time in England in the 1920s and 1930s, and newspaper articles, speeches and writings, press releases, campaign materials, and correspondence from his days as a lawyer, politician, and director of development at Virginia Theological Seminary. Of particular interest is a letter from 1969 to the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne, who was killed in the accident at Chappaquiddick in Ted Kennedy's car. Also included in the collection are Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia briefs dating from the 1940s to the 1960s, as well as correspondence, agendas, news articles, etc, from Boothe's role as a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe copyright and related rights status of materials created after 1931 have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["The copyright and related rights status of materials created after 1931 have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract id=\"aspace_ref2\"\u003eThis collection documents the life and career of Armistead Boothe, an Alexandria, Virginia, lawyer, state legislator, and trustee of Colonial Williamsburg.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["This collection documents the life and career of Armistead Boothe, an Alexandria, Virginia, lawyer, state legislator, and trustee of Colonial Williamsburg."],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Boothe, Armistead L. (Armistead Lloyd), 1907-1990"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center"],"names_coll_ssim":["Boothe, Armistead L. (Armistead Lloyd), 1907-1990"],"persname_ssim":["Boothe, Armistead L. (Armistead Lloyd), 1907-1990"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":21,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-05T07:16:19.666Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_636"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_4_resources_102","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Armistead Mason Dobie papers","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_4_resources_102#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_4_resources_102#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.\u003c/p\u003e","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_4_resources_102#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"viu_repositories_4_resources_102","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_4_resources_102","_root_":"viu_repositories_4_resources_102","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_4_resources_102","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_4_resources_102.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/132814","title_ssm":["Armistead Mason Dobie papers"],"title_tesim":["Armistead Mason Dobie papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1902-1965"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1902-1965"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS.78.2","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/4/resources/102"],"text":["MSS.78.2","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/4/resources/102","Armistead Mason Dobie papers","Circuit courts -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment -- United States","Law  -- Study and teaching","School integration -- Virginia","School integration -- Massive resistance movement","University of Virginia. School of Law -- History","There are no restrictions.","Armistead Mason Dobie was born 15 April 1881 to Mary Kearns Cooke and Richard Augustus Dobie of Norfolk, Virginia. Armistead entered the University of Virginia and earned three degrees in rapid succession: BA in 1901, MA in 1902, and LLB in 1904. He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.","  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.","  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.","  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.","  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.","  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.","  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.","  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by  Plessy v. Ferguson .","  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962.","The papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.","  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the  Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward  for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case,  Briggs v. Elliott . The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.","  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.","Subjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. Glenn","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","Records and Correspondence","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","2 3 ring notebooks","1 3 ring notebook","1 3 ring notebook","3 ring notebook","There are no restrictions.","Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections","United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)","United States. Supreme Court. Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure","Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962","Byrd, Harry F. 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School of Law -- History"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Circuit courts -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment -- United States","Law  -- Study and teaching","School integration -- Virginia","School integration -- Massive resistance movement","University of Virginia. 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He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003ePlessy v. Ferguson\u003c/emph\u003e.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Armistead Mason Dobie was born 15 April 1881 to Mary Kearns Cooke and Richard Augustus Dobie of Norfolk, Virginia. Armistead entered the University of Virginia and earned three degrees in rapid succession: BA in 1901, MA in 1902, and LLB in 1904. He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.","  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.","  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.","  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.","  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.","  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.","  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.","  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by  Plessy v. Ferguson .","  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003eDavis v. County School Board of Prince Edward\u003c/emph\u003e for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case, \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003eBriggs v. Elliott\u003c/emph\u003e. The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSubjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. 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Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.","  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the  Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward  for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case,  Briggs v. Elliott . The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.","  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.","Subjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. 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School of Law -- History","There are no restrictions.","Armistead Mason Dobie was born 15 April 1881 to Mary Kearns Cooke and Richard Augustus Dobie of Norfolk, Virginia. Armistead entered the University of Virginia and earned three degrees in rapid succession: BA in 1901, MA in 1902, and LLB in 1904. He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.","  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.","  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.","  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.","  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.","  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.","  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.","  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by  Plessy v. Ferguson .","  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962.","The papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.","  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the  Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward  for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case,  Briggs v. Elliott . The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.","  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.","Subjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. Glenn","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","Records and Correspondence","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","2 3 ring notebooks","1 3 ring notebook","1 3 ring notebook","3 ring notebook","There are no restrictions.","Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections","United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)","United States. Supreme Court. Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure","Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962","Byrd, Harry F. (Harry Flood), 1887-1966","Glass, Carter, 1858-1946","Parker, John J., 1885-1958","Roosevelt, Franklin D., 1882-1945","Soper, Morris A., 1873-1963","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS.78.2","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/4/resources/102"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Armistead Mason Dobie papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Armistead Mason Dobie papers"],"collection_ssim":["Armistead Mason Dobie papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"creator_ssm":["Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962"],"creator_ssim":["Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962"],"creators_ssim":["Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962"],"access_terms_ssm":["There are no restrictions."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Circuit courts -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment -- United States","Law  -- Study and teaching","School integration -- Virginia","School integration -- Massive resistance movement","University of Virginia. School of Law -- History"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Circuit courts -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment -- United States","Law  -- Study and teaching","School integration -- Virginia","School integration -- Massive resistance movement","University of Virginia. School of Law -- History"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["6 Linear Feet 15 boxes (6 linear ft.)"],"extent_tesim":["6 Linear Feet 15 boxes (6 linear ft.)"],"date_range_isim":[1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmistead Mason Dobie was born 15 April 1881 to Mary Kearns Cooke and Richard Augustus Dobie of Norfolk, Virginia. Armistead entered the University of Virginia and earned three degrees in rapid succession: BA in 1901, MA in 1902, and LLB in 1904. He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003ePlessy v. Ferguson\u003c/emph\u003e.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Armistead Mason Dobie was born 15 April 1881 to Mary Kearns Cooke and Richard Augustus Dobie of Norfolk, Virginia. Armistead entered the University of Virginia and earned three degrees in rapid succession: BA in 1901, MA in 1902, and LLB in 1904. He left Charlottesville to practice law in St. Louis, Missouri, but returned to his alma mater in 1907 to teach law and to re-establish the close ties with the University which he would maintain the rest of his life. When Dobie joined the faculty, he assumed the teaching duties of Dean William M. Lile, who was temporarily absent due to ill health. Lile returned, and Dobie remained on the faculty, becoming a full professor in 1909.","  World War I claimed Dobie's service in 1917. He was commissioned a captain in the US Army and became an aide to General Adelbert Cronkhite, with whom he went to France. Before the war was over, Dobie was promoted to major and was made assistant to the chief of staff of the 80th Infantry Division. He was recommended for the Distinguished Service Order (DSO), and the French honored him by making him an Officier of the Order of Academic Palms.","  After the war was over, Dobie returned to Charlottesville, but instead of teaching, he served for a year as the executive director of the University's drive for the Centennial Endowment Fund. The following year, Dobie went to Harvard Law School and began work on an SJD. In the summer of 1922, Dobie studied at Columbia's graduate school of jurisprudence, returning to Charlottesville in time to begin the fall term.","  At the time Dobie joined the faculty, the Law School program increased from a mandatory two to three years. Dobie taught three required courses --criminal law, federal procedure, and probate and administration- - and six electives --Roman law, master and servant, carriers and bailments, code pleading, public officers, and taxation and tax titles. Upon his return from Harvard, Dobie began employing the case method. Young faculty members followed Dobie's lead. With Dean Lile's retirement in 1932, Dobie was appointed dean of the Law School and served in that position until 1939, although ill health in 1936 caused him to relinquish the dean's duties for year or so.","  Armistead Dobie wrote a definitive work on the law of bailments and carriers, a widely respected casebook, and several treatises on federal jurisdiction and procedure, and numerous articles for the Virginia, Harvard, and Yale law reviews. In the mid-1930's he was appointed special assistant to the US Attorney General, and served for over twenty years. He also served as legal advisor to the Conflict of Laws Section of the American Law Institute, and was appointed by the US Supreme Court to a committee of fourteen to make procedure in federal districts courts uniform nationwide.","  In May of 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Dobie the newly created judgeship on the US District Court for the Western District of Virginia, with the promise that he might move to the Fourth Circuit when vacancy occurred. Dobie accepted. True to his word, Roosevelt appointed him to the Fourth Circuit Court only six months later.","  From early in 1940 until the first of February 1956, Armistead Dobie served on the Fourth Circuit Court with Senior Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper. Dobie heard almost 1400 cases during his sixteen years on the Circuit Court bench, and wrote over 450 opinions; he dissented from his colleagues on six occasions, and was upheld by the Supreme Court in four of those opinions.","  The most historically significant cases Dobie heard were those involving school segregation. The decisions he helped reach on these cases reflected his firm belief that African Americans should have facilities as nearly equal to whites as possible, and his reluctance or disinclination to go against the segregation pattern established by  Plessy v. Ferguson .","  Judge Dobie officially retired from the bench on the first of February 1956 in poor health. After many months of complete rest, he recovered somewhat, and on 18 July 1958, he married a long-time Charlottesville friend, Elizabeth McKenny. He lived out the rest of his life at their home in Charlottesville, dying at 81 on 8 August 1962."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003eDavis v. County School Board of Prince Edward\u003c/emph\u003e for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case, \u003cemph render=\"italic\"\u003eBriggs v. Elliott\u003c/emph\u003e. The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSubjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. Glenn\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRecords and Correspondence\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[2 folders]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e2 3 ring notebooks\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 3 ring notebook\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 3 ring notebook\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e3 ring notebook\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The papers of Armistead M. Dobie span the years 1902 to 1963, with the bulk of the material covering 1939 to 1956, the years of Dobie's judgeship. The first three boxes contain general correspondence, which is primarily of biographical interest, although there are some items, especially the 1939 letters from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd, that have historical value. The correspondence with Judges John J. Parker and Morris A. Soper in the general files, as well as in the court materials, yield very little information about the cases the three were considering. Other correspondents who wrote Dobie one or two letters of interest were Felix Frankfurter, Stanley Reed, Roscoe Pound, Samuel Williston, Manton Davis, and many former University classmates and students. The general correspondence files were kept alphabetically by correspondent's name or, occasionally, by subject, and within the alphabetical division the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Following the correspondence are four notebooks of mimeographed \"textbooks\" from Dobie's graduate studies at Harvard and teaching at Virginia in the 1920s.","  Boxes four and five contain drafts of speeches arranged alphabetically by title or subject. Boxes six through fifteen contain court materials that include records, briefs, and correspondence for a small percentage of the cases Dobie heard. There are few notes and drafts or copies of the opinions he wrote. There are several folders on the  Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward  for both the 1951 and 1955 hearings; also of interest is Judge Waties Waring's dissenting opinion on the Davis \"sister\" case,  Briggs v. Elliott . The cases are arranged chronologically, and are followed by a box containing the dockets for the Fourth Circuit from 1948 to 1956.","  Box fifteen also contains notebooks regarding the work of the US Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure, and of a committee studying the jury system.","Subjects include: Alumni Address, American Legion, Armistice Day, New York Bar Association Address P. Barringer, G. B. Battle, J. C. Battle, Confederacy, Clark Hall, Conflict of State and Federal Judicial Power, Democratic Convention, Geo. B. Eager, Education, C. Glass G. Glenn","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","Records and Correspondence","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","[2 folders]","2 3 ring notebooks","1 3 ring notebook","1 3 ring notebook","3 ring notebook"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"names_coll_ssim":["United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)","United States. Supreme Court. Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure","Byrd, Harry F. (Harry Flood), 1887-1966","Glass, Carter, 1858-1946","Parker, John J., 1885-1958","Roosevelt, Franklin D., 1882-1945","Soper, Morris A., 1873-1963","Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962"],"names_ssim":["Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections","United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)","United States. Supreme Court. Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure","Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962","Byrd, Harry F. (Harry Flood), 1887-1966","Glass, Carter, 1858-1946","Parker, John J., 1885-1958","Roosevelt, Franklin D., 1882-1945","Soper, Morris A., 1873-1963"],"corpname_ssim":["Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections","United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)","United States. Supreme Court. Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure"],"persname_ssim":["Dobie, Armistead Mason, 1881-1962","Byrd, Harry F. (Harry Flood), 1887-1966","Glass, Carter, 1858-1946","Parker, John J., 1885-1958","Roosevelt, Franklin D., 1882-1945","Soper, Morris A., 1873-1963"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":387,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-24T23:25:11.137Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_4_resources_102"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Armstead L. Robinson papers","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_595#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_595#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.\u003c/p\u003e","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_595#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_595.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/516","title_filing_ssi":"Robinson, Armstead L., papers","title_ssm":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"title_tesim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1848-2001","1967-1992"],"unitdate_bulk_ssim":["1967-1992"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1848-2001"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["File","Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595"],"text":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595","Armstead L. Robinson papers","Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans","Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)","The collection is open for research use.","Original order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:","Series 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.","Series 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.","Series 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  ","Series 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).","Series 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.","Series 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters.","Armstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.","Robinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.","Robinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. ","Robinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).","It is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). ","Robinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). ","He served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).","Robinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.","Robinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].","Robinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory.","The Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.","The scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.","\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.","As to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.","Prominent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.","The collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. ","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"","1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]","37 maps.","The ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]","Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission.","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"collection_ssim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"geogname_ssim":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"creator_ssm":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creator_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creators_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"places_ssim":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"access_terms_ssm":["Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Prof. Mildred W. Robinson, 12 June 2003;  \nTransfer by University of Virginia Press acquisitions editor Richard K. Holway, 9 August 2005; Tranfer by Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies, 2 October 2008."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["38 Cubic Feet 34 cubic boxes, 5 card file boxes, 3 clamshell boxes, and 1 oversize box"],"extent_tesim":["38 Cubic Feet 34 cubic boxes, 5 card file boxes, 3 clamshell boxes, and 1 oversize box"],"genreform_ssim":["Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"date_range_isim":[1848,1849,1850,1851,1852,1853,1854,1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is open for research use.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["The collection is open for research use."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eOriginal order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Original order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:","Series 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.","Series 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.","Series 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  ","Series 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).","Series 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.","Series 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIt is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHe served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Note"],"bioghist_tesim":["Armstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.","Robinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.","Robinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. ","Robinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).","It is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). ","Robinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). ","He served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).","Robinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.","Robinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].","Robinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 12836, Armstead Robinson Papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 12836, Armstead Robinson Papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProminent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e37 maps.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.","The scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.","\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.","As to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.","Prominent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.","The collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. ","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"","1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]","37 maps.","The ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSeveral folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"persname_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":71,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:47:27.185Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_595","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_595.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/516","title_filing_ssi":"Robinson, Armstead L., papers","title_ssm":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"title_tesim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1848-2001","1967-1992"],"unitdate_bulk_ssim":["1967-1992"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1848-2001"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["File","Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595"],"text":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595","Armstead L. Robinson papers","Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans","Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)","The collection is open for research use.","Original order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:","Series 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.","Series 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.","Series 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  ","Series 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).","Series 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.","Series 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters.","Armstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.","Robinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.","Robinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. ","Robinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).","It is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). ","Robinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). ","He served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).","Robinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.","Robinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].","Robinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory.","The Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.","The scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.","\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.","As to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.","Prominent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.","The collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. ","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"","1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]","37 maps.","The ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]","Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission.","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 12836","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/595"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"collection_ssim":["Armstead L. Robinson papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"geogname_ssim":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"creator_ssm":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creator_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"creators_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"places_ssim":["Slave trade-United States-History","United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- African Americans"],"access_terms_ssm":["Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Prof. Mildred W. Robinson, 12 June 2003;  \nTransfer by University of Virginia Press acquisitions editor Richard K. Holway, 9 August 2005; Tranfer by Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies, 2 October 2008."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Slavery--United States--History--19th Century","African Americans -- Study and teaching","African Americans -- History -- 1863-1877","Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["38 Cubic Feet 34 cubic boxes, 5 card file boxes, 3 clamshell boxes, and 1 oversize box"],"extent_tesim":["38 Cubic Feet 34 cubic boxes, 5 card file boxes, 3 clamshell boxes, and 1 oversize box"],"genreform_ssim":["Audiocassettes.","letters (correspondence)"],"date_range_isim":[1848,1849,1850,1851,1852,1853,1854,1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is open for research use.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["The collection is open for research use."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eOriginal order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Original order has been preserved as much as possible; several original boxes (Boxes 15-19 [note cards] and 26-28 [1880 census schedules]) was retained because of the size of their particular contents. Items with no ostensible order have been organized with similar materials. Folders, with some exceptions, are arranged alphabetically within each series and their contents chronologically. Throughout the collection Robinson is occasionally addressed as \"ALR,\" \"Armstead Robinson,\" \"Armstead L. Robinson,\" \"Prof. Robinson,\" \"Robbie\" or \"Robby.\" Some folders abbreviate Robinson's name as \"ALR,\" particularly in Series 5; his Bitter Fruits of Bondage folders are occasionally abbreviated as \"BFOB. The collection is arranged in six series:","Series 1: Correspondence, 1967-1995 (0.5 c.f., Box 1).  This series consists of the bulk of Robinson's general correspondence, 1967-1995, but researchers should note that other correspondence is available throughout Series 2, 3, 4 and 5. Letters of interest include a letter of Whitney Moore Young Jr. of the National Urban League, promising assistance to Robinson, August 18, 1969. Much of Robinson's 1971 correspondence, while an assistant professor of Black Studies at State University of New York at Stony Brook, consists of his research inquiries relating to Black life in Memphis, Tennessee; there are also references to an accident he suffered, December 7 and 15, 1971.  There are several interesting letters during the 1980s (however, researchers should note the absence of 1982, 1988 and 1989 letters in the general \"Correspondence\" folders), especially Robinson's letter of  resignation from the University of California at Los Angeles, May 13, 1980; many of his May 1980 letters pertain to his University of Virginia faculty appointment. Also of interest: a March 26, 1981 letter from Robinson to John Wilkinson, Alumni Affairs Development, Yale University, seeking financial assistance for the daughter of  University of Virginia faculty colleague Vivian V. Gordon; November 23, 1981, to the Rector of the Board of Visitors, Virginia Commonwealth University, expressing opposition to the proposed consolidation of its library system with the school's Visual Education Services; December 9, 1981, to the editor of The Harvard Magazine, describing Robinson's role in the establishment of a Black Studies program at Yale University; March 1984 correspondence with Molefi Kete Asante (founder of Afrocentricity and a Black Studies proponent) accusing Robinson of falsely claiming to have been founding director of the Center for Afro-American Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.","Series 2: Academic Career, 1964-1969 (4.5 c.f., Boxes 1-5).  This series is concerned with Robinson's academic career and is divided into four subseries; there is some chronological and historical overlap among the folders.\nSubseries A: Yale University (Boxes 1-3) chiefly concerns Robinson's work with the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY), its 1968 symposium \"Black Studies in the University,\" and seven audiotape reel recordings of the symposium's proceedings later transcribed, published and edited by Robinson and others as Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969). Symposium participants included McGeorge Bundy; Lawrence Chisolm; Harold Cruse; Robert Dahl; Nathan Hare; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga; Martin Kilson, Jr.; Sidney W. Mintz; Boniface I. Obichere; Donald Ogilvie; Alvin Poussaint; Edwin S. Redkey; Charles Henry Taylor, Jr.; Farris Thompson, and Gerald A. McWorter.\nSubseries B: State University of New York (Box 4) is concerned with Robinson's faculty career and early interest in Black Studies. \nSubseries C: University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Rochester, New York (Box 4)includes Robinson's UCLA class lecture notes and papers while a Rochester doctoral student. \nSubseries D: University of Virginia (Boxes 4-5)represents the longest and final phase of Robinson's academic career. Included are lecture notes, syllabi, course evaluations, and various topical and subject files including folders for colleagues Matthew W. Holden Jr., Nathan A. Scott, Jr., and Jeanne Maddox Toungara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies (researchers should note that the majority of the Woodson Institute's papers, including those during Robinson's tenure, are retained there and may not yet be available for public research); the Corcoran Department of History (with correspondence and memoranda of Edward L. Ayers and Edwin E. Floyd concerning Robinson's appointment and tenure); the Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (a university committee Robinson co-chaired); the Office of Afro-American Affairs (1986 letters to University of Virginia president Robert O'Neil in defense of OAAA dean Paul L. Puryear and critical of the handling of his resignation as dean and the controversy surrounding it), and, the transcribed remarks of  F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (labor and civil rights activist.","Series 3: Subject and Topical Files (Boxes 5-11) consists of alphabetized subject and topical folders of select individuals followed by those of organizations and groups.  Among the prominent correspondents (Boxes 5-7): Herbert Aptheker, Ira Berlin, LaWanda F. Cox, Stanley L. Engerman, Michael W. Fitzgerald, John Hope Franklin, Eugene D. Genovese, Herbert Gutman, Stephen Hahn, Vincent Harding, Darlene Clark Hine, C. Stuart McGehee, Pauline Maier, August Meier, Nell Irvin Painter, Lewis Perry, Edwin S. Redkey, William Scarborough, Robert Brent Toplin, Edmund S. Wehrle, and C. Vann Woodward. Folders of some of  Robinson's former students are also present.\n  ","Series 4: Research Materials (Boxes 11-32)is the collection's largest series and contains research materials, 1850-1995, on the American Civil War, African-American history, Robinson's dissertation and Bitter Fruits of Bondage book, and census projects. (His extensive census research is filed at the end of this series). The majority of nineteenth century material are photocopies. Folders are arranged alphabetically, and several contain materials cited in Bitter Fruits of Bondage. Folders of interest include: \"First Africans in Virginia (Jamestown)\" (Box 11); \"Memphis Social History Project/Memphis Leadership Project\" (Robinson's letter of June 17, 1977 describes this project as having been conceived by him in 1966, while a junior at Yale, as a history of the Black community in Memphis) (Box 12); \"Research Material: Reconstruction: Black Political Leaders in Memphis, Tennessee (city directory and census data)\" (Box 14).Census materials comprise the latter part of Series IV, and at twelve boxes are the largest groups of materials in the series and the collection (Boxes 20-32).","Series 5: Writings and Publications (Boxes 32-42)the collection's second largest series, contains Robinson's writings, publications and manuscripts of his Yale honors' thesis, University of Rochester dissertation \"Day of Jubilo\" [formerly \"Cotton, Contrabands, and Mr. Lincoln's War\"], Bitter Fruits of Bondage (Boxes 32-38), articles, book reviews, public and conference lectures. These folders are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically within title headings. Some of Robinson's manuscripts were critiqued on his behalf by colleagues and fellow historians such as Ira Berlin, Edward L. Ayers, Michael F. Holt, Michael Johnson, Julie S. Jones, Theresa M. Towner, and Bell Irvin Wiley.","Series 6: Oversize (Oversize Box U-10) is the last for the collection. Items are arranged chronologically and include: a photostatic copy of a 1863 letter from James Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, to Jefferson Davis; two pencil and ink sketches of Carter G. Woodson; a 1994 certificate declaring Robinson an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi; an incomplete numbered set of \"Images of Afro-Americans of the Emancipation Era\" (Hodges Publications); University of North Carolina Department of Geography census templates and demographic maps; photostatic copies of Civil War maps from National Archives (Washington, D.C.) record group numbers 77 and 94, and speaking engagement posters."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArmstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIt is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHe served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Note"],"bioghist_tesim":["Armstead Louis Robinson was born on April 30, 1947 in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of Reverend Dr. DeWitt Robinson (a Lutheran clergyman) and Ruth Dickinson Robinson. He attended segregated New Orleans public schools (Trinity Lutheran Elementary and Rivers Frederick Junior High), and Hamilton High School in Memphis, Tennessee, from which he graduated with honors in 1964.","Robinson enrolled at Yale University in 1964 as one of eighteen African-American men (out of 1,061 men admitted that year) and received a bachelor's degree in History and graduated with honors and distinction in 1969 for his Scholar of the House thesis, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1865-1870.\" As a Yale student Robinson helped create an undergraduate Black Studies program culminating in a 1968 symposium, \"Black Studies in the University,\" and co-edited the conference anthology, Black Studies in the University; A Symposium (Yale University Press, 1969), one of the first books on Black Studies. This experience led to his lifelong interest in promoting Black Studies. While at Yale, Robinson began his teaching career with a lecture series on Black History for the New Haven, Connecticut public school system as well as elementary school day sessions and junior high school evening sessions during 1966-1968.","Robinson was a member of the dean's list (1967-1969), captain of Yale's ROTC Rifle Team (1966-1968), recipient of the 1968 Von Snidren Prize for book collecting, and a member of the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY). As an alumnus he served on the Yale Development Board (1983-1988), the Association of Yale Alumni Board of Governors (1981-1986), and the Yale University Council (1977-1995), of which he served as president during 1981-1986. In 1987 he was the recipient of the Yale Medal for Distinguished Service, his alma mater's highest alumni honor. ","Robinson briefly attended Yale Divinity School (1968-1970) before withdrawing to become a visiting professor at Southern Illinois University, in Carbondale, Illinois (1970), an assistant professor of Africana Studies at the State University of New York, SUNY-Stony Brook, and assistant professor of Africana and Afro-American Studies, SUNY Brockport (1970-1973). Later, Robinson was a visiting scholar or professor of history at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), Southwestern at Memphis [now Rhodes College], and Smith College, Massachusetts (Box 10), and the University of Richmond (Box 11).","It is unknown exactly when and why Robinson decided to become a Civil War historian. While an assistant history professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 1973-1980), he began work on his dissertation at the University of Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by two of America's leading historians, Stanley L. Engerman and Eugene D. Genovese. Genovese was among the scholars who early recognized Robinson's talents as a historian. In his seminal study Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World The Slaves Made (1974), Genovese cited Robinson's thesis (pp. 700n26 and 725n4) as \"'In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870,' unpubl. undergraduate thesis, Yale University, 1969\" (Boxes 5, 6, 15-16, 40-41). ","Robinson received a Doctorate of Philosophy with Honors from the University of Rochester in 1977 for his dissertation \"Day of Jubilo: Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865.\" In 1980 he joined the University of Virginia faculty as an associate professor in the Corcoran Department of History and was also appointed the first director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies; as director he was the general editor of the Carter G. Woodson Series in Black Studies published by the University Press of Virginia and retained these positions until his death. In a June 25, 1980 letter to James T. McIntosh, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis, Robinson noted the racial and cultural significance of his Virginia appointment: \"I am happier than I can possibly express to be able to return home to the south, particularly at UVA where I am scheduled to teach . . .  I am indeed excited about the day when a southern black can teach southern and Civil War/Reconstruction history at a major southern university\" (folder \"Papers of Jefferson Davis,\" Box 12). ","He served on numerous university committees during his career. At the University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of: the Faculty Senate (1975-1979); the American Field Written Comprehensive Examination Committee (1976-1979; chairman, 1977-1979), and, the Fellowships Committee, Center for Afro-American Studies (1975-1980; chairman, 1977-1980). While at the University of Virginia he was a member of the Faculty Steering Committee for Major in Afro-American and African Studies (1980-1995); the Faculty Senate (1981-1984; 1987-1990); the Afro-American Faculty-Staff Forum (1982-1984); the Presidential Advisory Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action (1992-1995), and co-chairman, Venable Lane Burial Site Task Force/Catherine \"Kitty\" Foster Homesite (1993-1995). Other notable committee service consisted of the Planning Committee, Booker T. Washington Commemoration, Booker T. Washington National Monument (1983-1984); the Jefferson Davis Book Award Committee (1989-1991; chairman, 1991); the Abraham Lincoln Prize National Advisory Committee (1990-1995); the Afro-American Studies Advisory Committee, Princeton University (1991-1995), and the James Monroe Papers Advisory Board at Ash Lawn-Highland (1992-1997).","Robinson received numerous awards and scholarly recognitions including the Ford Foundation Fund for Distinguished Black Scholars (1971); the UCLA Faculty Career Development Award (1979-1980); the Carter G. Woodson Award, Journal of Negro History (1981); Fellow at the National Humanities and National Research Council (1984-1985); Jefferson Davis Memorial Lecturer, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia (1990); William Allan Neilson Research Professor, Smith College (1991-1992); Louis P. Gottschalk Memorial Lecturer, University of Louisville (1994), and the Jessie Ball DuPont Visiting Professor, University of Richmond (1994-1995). The Virginia State Library Board of Trustees issued a 1990 resolution of thanks for his service during 1984-1989 while a member of its board of trustees, and Robinson was declared an honorary citizen of Natchez, Mississippi in 1994. He was a member of several scholarly organizations including the American Historical Association, the American Studies Association, the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians, and the Southern Historical Association.","Robinson published extensively. He co-edited Black Studies in the University: A Symposium (1969) [Boxes 1-2]; The African Religious Tradition: Historiography (Associated Publishers, 1987), and New Directions in Civil Rights Studies (University Press of Virginia, 1991). His posthumous magnum opus, Bitter Fruits of Bondage: The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy, 1861-1865 (University of Virginia Press, 2005), was nationally acclaimed (Boxes 32-38). The author of several articles, essays and book reviews, Robinson's most significant articles include: \"In the Shadow of Old John Brown: Insurrection Anxiety and Confederate Mobilization, 1861-1863,\" Journal of Negro History (Fall 1980) [Box 41]; \"Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New Meanings of Reconstruction for American History,\" The Journal of American History (September 1981) [Box 32], and, \"Reassessing the First Reconstruction: Lost Opportunity or Tragic Era,\" Reviews in American History, (March 1978) [Box 42]. He also wrote the foreword to Calder Loth's Virginia Landmarks of Black History: Sites on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places (University Press of Virginia, 1995) [Box 42].","Robinson married Mildred (Wigfall) Ravenell, a University of Virginia law professor, at the university's Colonnade Club in 1987. He died of complications from a brain aneurysm at the University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, on August 28, 1995, at the age of forty-eight. He was survived by his wife Mildred and their daughter Allison; his mother Ruth Robinson; his sisters DeWittress Taylor and Miriam Elmore and a brother, Llewlyn Robinson; two stepchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews and relatives. After a funeral on September 5, 1995, Robinson was interred at Cross of Cavalry Lutheran Church Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. A two-hour memorial \"Service of Thanksgiving,\" attended by nearly 500 colleagues, family and friends, was held on September 29, 1995 at the University of Virginia's Old Cabell Hall auditorium. The Armstead L. Robinson Fellowship Fund was established at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies in his memory."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 12836, Armstead Robinson Papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 12836, Armstead Robinson Papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProminent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArmistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e37 maps.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Armstead L. Robinson papers(1848-2001; 43 cubic feet) consist of audiotapes; book reviews; census material; computer printouts; conference papers; correspondence; biographical information; instructional material; lectures and speeches; manuscripts and original writings by Robinson, his colleagues and students; maps; memorabilia; microfilm; organizational and professional files; photographs; printed items, and research and topical files. Most of the nineteenth century material is in the form of photocopies.","The scope of this collection is national. Professor Robinson's papers are reflective of the life and career of a nationally active professional historian and educator. Topics of interest include: African-American history; African-American life in Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, 1840s-1880s; life as an African-American student at Yale University during the 1960s; the development of Black Studies during the 1960s; life as an African-American faculty member at the State University of New York (SUNY), the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and the University of Virginia during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; slavery in the Confederacy; the nineteenth century American South, especially during the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the modern Civil Rights Movement. Several organizations of interest to Robinson include but are not limited to: Antioch College; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History); the Black Student Alliance at Yale (BSAY); the Booker T. Washington National Monument; Corporate/Community Schools of America; the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center and Institute of the Black World; National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina); Papers of Jefferson Davis; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of California at Los Angeles; the University of Rochester; the University of Virginia; the Virginia State Library Board, and Yale University.","\n    \n    Robinson corresponded with numerous fellow scholars, historians and prominent persons: Herbert Aptheker (1915-2003), historian; Molefi Kete Asante (b. 1942), founder of Afrocentricity and proponent of Black Studies; Ira Berlin (b. 1941), American historian; John B. Boles (b. 1943), historian and managing editor, Journal of Southern History; F. N. Boney, historian; Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902-1973), educator, librarian and Harlem Renaissance novelist; McGeorge Bundy (1919–1996), United States National Security Advisor and head of the Ford Foundation; Austin C. Clarke (b. 1934), Afro-Canadian novelist; John F. Cooke (president, The Disney Channel/Walt Disney Company); Emâilia Viotti da Costa, historian of Brazil; LaWanda F. Cox (1909-2005), historian; Lynda Lasswell Crist (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Merle Curti (1897-1997), American social and intellectual historian; Mary Seaton Dix (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Stanley L. Engerman (b. 1936), economic historian; Karen E. Fields, director, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-Americans Studies, University of Rochester; Michael W. Fitzgerald (b. 1956), historian; Harold E. Ford [Harold Eugene Ford, Sr., b.1945], U. S. congressman from Tennessee; Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941-2007), historian; John Hope Franklin (1915-2009), American historian; George M. Fredrickson (b. 1934), historian; Eugene D. Genovese (1930-2012), historian; Henry Louis \"Skip\" Gates Jr. (b. 1950); A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989), Yale president (and later commissioner of Major League Baseball); Herbert Gutman (1928-1985), historian; Stephen Hahn (b. 1950), Faulkner scholar; Vincent Harding (b. 1931), historian; Nathan Hare (b. 1933), sociologist, psychotherapist, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Darlene Clark Hine (b. 1947), historian; Alton Hornsby (Journal of Negro History); C. Stuart McGehee, historian; Ron \"Maulana\" Karenga (b. 1941), a leader of the Black Studies movement and founder of Kwanzaa, a cultural celebration of African-American culture and community; Lauranett Lee (later curator of African American History, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia); James T. McIntosh (Papers of Jefferson Davis); Pauline Maier (b. 1938), professor of American History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; August Meier (1923-2003), historian; Nell Irvin Painter (b. 1942), historian; Lewis C. Perry (b. 1938), historian and editor of The Journal of American History; Edwin S. Redkey (b. 1931), American historian; Joseph Reidy (b. 1948); Dan Roberts, University of Richmond; Leslie S. Rowland, historian; William Scarborough, historian, University of Southern Mississippi; Daryl M. Scott (later a Howard University professor of history and vice president for programs, and member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's executive council); Robert Brent Toplin (b. 1940), American historian; Edmund S. Wehrle, University of Connecticut; C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999), American historian; Karen L. Wysocki,  and, Whitney Moore Young Jr. (1921-1971), executive director of the National Urban League, Inc., and American civil rights leader.","As to be expected, there is correspondence with several University of Virginia colleagues: Edward L. Ayers (b. 1953), Corcoran Department of History; William A. Elwood (1932-2002), professor of English and associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Edwin E. Floyd, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Matthew Holden, Jr. (b. 1931), Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs; Michael F. Holt, Corcoran Department of History; Ervin L. Jordan Jr. (b. 1954), Special Collections Department, Alderman Library; Robert O'Neil, president of the University of Virginia; Nathan Alexander Scott, Jr. (1925-2006), Commonwealth Professor of Religious Studies; Jeanne Maddox Toungara, Corcoran Department of History, and, Theresa M. Towner, Department of English.","Prominent persons mentioned in the collection include: Howard K. Beale (1897-1959), a University of North Carolina historian; Reginald Butler, Corcoran Department of History, and Robinson's successor as director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African studies; Lawrence Chisolm, historian, State University of New York at Buffalo; Robert R. Church [Robert Reed Church, Sr.] (1839-1912), business leader and the South's first African-American millionaire; Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998), a founder of the Black Panther Party; Harold Cruse (1916-2005), historian and proponent of Black Studies; Philip D. Curtin (b. 1922), historian; Robert Dahl (b. 1915), Yale political scientist; St. Clair Drake (1911-1990), sociologist, anthropologist and educator; Alex Dupuy, historian of Haiti; Drew Gilpin Faust (b. 1947), American historian; Robert W. Fogel (b. 1926), American historian; Vivian V. Gordon (1934-1995), sociologist; Martin Kilson, Jr., political scientist, Harvard University; James Armistead Lafayette (1760-1832), African-American slave and spy; Alan Lomax (1915-2002), folklorist and musicologist; Gerald A. McWorter, political scientist, Spelman College, and a founder of the Black Studies movement; Sidney W. Mintz (b. 1922), anthropologist; Boniface I. Obichere (1933-1997), historian; Donald Ogilvie (Yale student); Dorothy B. Porter [Dorothy Porter Wesley]; Alvin Poussaint (b. 1934), psychiatrist; Paul L. Puryear (1930-2010), dean of the Office of Afro-American Affairs, University of Virginia; John T. Schlotterbeck (b. 1948), historian; Henry Taylor, Jr. (b. 1928), educator and psychoanalyst; William Shockley (1910-1989), American physicist and eugenicist; F. (Frederick) Palmer Weber (1914-1986), labor and civil rights activist; Charles Harris Wesley (1891-1987), an African-American historian; Bell Irwin Wiley (1906-1980), American Civil War historian; Carter G. Woodson (1875-1950), \"the Father of Negro History,\" and George Carlton Wright, vice provost of the University of Texas at Austin.","The collection has been organized into six series: Corespondence, Academic Career, Topical Files, Research Materials, Writings and Publications, and Oversize materails. ","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"Pre 1865, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1866 (again), Not yet Filed, 1870 (2)\"","Armistead L. Robinson, Scholar of the House Thesis, Yale University, \"In the Aftermath of Slavery: Blacks and Reconstruction in Memphis, Tennessee, 1865-1870\": Research note cards (5x8 multicolored-lined):\"1865, 1866 (2), 1867, 1869, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869 (again), 1870 (2), Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866,1867, 1868,1869,1870, Not Yet Filed, 1865,1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870 Not Yet Filed, 1865, 1866, General Patterns, A-W\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"A-W and unrelated miscellaneous note cards","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Maps, Official Documents, Government Documents: Federal, Guides to Manuscript Collections, Guide to Printed Materials, Special Collections, Printed Public Documents, Miscellaneous Documents, Newspapers (4), Urban Directories and State Gazetteers, Periodicals, Personal Collections, Published Letters and Papers, Printed Correspondence, Memoirs, and Autobiographies, Diaries and Journals, Memoirs and Contemporary Accounts, Contemporary Periodicals, Contemporary Books and Pamhlets (2)\" and \"Regional and State Slavery Studies\"","Armistead L. Robinson dissertation, University of Rochester, \"Day of Jubilo: The Civil War and the Demise of Slavery in the Mississippi Valley, 1861-1865\": Bibliographic note cards (5x8 white-lined): \"Works Dealing Chiefly With the South, Biography, Biographical Studies, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce, and Transportation, The Southern Frontier, Biography, Biographies, Articles in Periodicals and Publications, General American History, State and Local History, Politics, Political and Social Change, Miltary Studies, General and Special Histories, American History: Special Topics, The Wilkinson-Burr Intrigues\"","1. The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 [January 24, 1863]\n2. Colored Troops, Under General Wild, Liberating Slaves in North Carolina [January 23, 1864] 3. A Negro Regiment In Action [March 14, 1863] 4. The Negro In The War–Various Employments of The Colored Men in The Federal Army [undated] 6. Negroes Escaping Out of Slavery [May 7, 1864] 7. Plantation Police, or Home Guard, Examining Passes on the Road Leading to the Levee of the Mississippi River [May 11, 1863] 8. Emancipated Slaves, White and Colored [January 20, 1864] 9. President Lincoln Riding Through Richmond, April 4, 1865, Immediately After The Evacuation of The City By General Lee [undated] 10. The First Vote [November 16, 1867] 11. The First Colored Senator and Representatives [undated] 12. A Remarkable Event in the History of the National Congress–The Honorable  John Willis Menard, Colored Representative From Louisiana, Receiving the Congratulations of His Friends On The Floor of the House, Dec. 7th, 1868 [undated] 13. Flower Sellers In The Market at Washington, D. C./Free Municipal Election in Richmond Since the End of The War–Registration of Colored Voters [June 4, 1870]\n14. Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866/A Political discussion [May 12, 1866]\n15. Educating the Freedmen/St. Philip's Church, Richmond, Virginia–School For Colored Children [May 25, 1867]\n16. Zion School For Colored Children, Charleston, South Carolina [December 15, 1866]\n17. Cotton Team In North Carolina [May 12, 1866]\n18. Our Cotton Campaign in South Carolina–Gathering, Picking and Shipping The Cotton Crops of The Sea Islands, Port Royal By The Federal Army, Under General Sherman [February 15, 1862] 19. Rice Culture on the Ogeechee, Near Savannah [January 5, 1867]\n20. Cotton Culture In The South [n. d.]","37 maps.","The ten maps in this group were reprinted in George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley; compiled by Calvin D. Cowles, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, with an Introduction by Richard Sommers (New York: The Fairfax Press, 1983) [other publishers: New York: Gramercy Books; Avenel, N. J.: distributed by Outlook Book Company, 1983]"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSeveral folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["Several folders of \"Research Materials: Civil War\" in Boxes 12-14 include photocopies of materials from various research and academic institutions; researchers should note that most do not permit the reproduction of their materials held by other institutions without their express written permission."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"persname_ssim":["Robinson, Armstead L., 1947-1995"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":71,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:47:27.185Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_595"}},{"id":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Arnett Family History","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Arnett family","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Includes 'Descendants of James Arnett Family of Monongalia County' by L.D. Arnett. Also includes copies of certificates, receipts, and the Bible family record of the Arnett family. The family records are those of Eleazor Judson Arnett and Lucinda Sanders Arnett and their children. There are also Sunday school certificates and clippings pertaining to the family.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426","ead_ssi":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426","_root_":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426","_nest_parent_":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2426","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/WVU/repositories_2_resources_2426.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.wvu.edu/ark:/99999/196492","title_ssm":["Arnett Family History"],"title_tesim":["Arnett Family History"],"unitdate_ssm":["1862-1950"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1862-1950"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["A\u0026M 0096","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2426"],"text":["A\u0026M 0096","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2426","Arnett Family History","No special access restriction applies.","Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. For more information, please see the  Permissions and Copyright page  on the West Virginia and Regional History Center website.","Includes 'Descendants of James Arnett Family of Monongalia County' by L.D. Arnett. Also includes copies of certificates, receipts, and the Bible family record of the Arnett family. The family records are those of Eleazor Judson Arnett and Lucinda Sanders Arnett and their children. There are also Sunday school certificates and clippings pertaining to the family.","West Virginia and Regional History Center / West Virginia University / 1549 University Avenue / P.O. Box 6069 / Morgantown, WV 26506-6069 / Phone: 304-293-3536  / URL: https://wvrhc.lib.wvu.edu/","West Virginia and Regional History Center","Arnett family","English"],"unitid_tesim":["A\u0026M 0096","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2426"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnett Family History"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnett Family History"],"collection_ssim":["Arnett Family History"],"repository_ssm":["West Virginia and Regional History Center"],"repository_ssim":["West Virginia and Regional History Center"],"creator_ssm":["Arnett family"],"creator_ssim":["Arnett family"],"creator_famname_ssim":["Arnett family"],"creators_ssim":["Arnett family"],"access_terms_ssm":["Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. 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Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Goldman, Arnold","Arent, Arthur","Losey, Joseph"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. 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Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce.","Processing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.","The Special Collections Research Center also holds the Federal Theatre Project collection.","Consists of research materials, mainly photocopies, of research on \"Injunction Granted\" published in Minnesota Review in 1973. Includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.","Documents and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.","Documents and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper.","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. 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Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Special Collections Research Center also holds the Federal Theatre Project collection.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Material"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["The Special Collections Research Center also holds the Federal Theatre Project collection."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eConsists of research materials, mainly photocopies, of research on \"Injunction Granted\" published in Minnesota Review in 1973. Includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. 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Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note","Scope and Contents note"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Consists of research materials, mainly photocopies, of research on \"Injunction Granted\" published in Minnesota Review in 1973. Includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.","Documents and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.","Documents and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper.","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services.","The Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract id=\"aspace_e7a75b7b6ff59b344922c4a792a07ffa\" label=\"Abstract\"\u003eConsists of research materials, mainly photocopies, of research on \"Injunction Granted\" published in Minnesota Review in 1973.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Consists of research materials, mainly photocopies, of research on \"Injunction Granted\" published in Minnesota Review in 1973."],"names_coll_ssim":["Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Arent, Arthur","Losey, Joseph"],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Goldman, Arnold","Arent, Arthur","Losey, Joseph"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Goldman, Arnold","Arent, Arthur","Losey, Joseph"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":7,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T05:10:24.808Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_164"}},{"id":"vifgm_goldman","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_goldman#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Arthur Goldman\n","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_goldman#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973. ","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_goldman#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vifgm_goldman","ead_ssi":"vifgm_goldman","_root_":"vifgm_goldman","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_goldman","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/gmu/goldman.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"http://scrc.gmu.edu/finding_aids/goldman.html","title_ssm":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection"],"title_tesim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection"],"unitdate_ssm":["1931-1973\n"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1931-1973\n"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["C0173\n"],"text":["C0173\n","Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection","Living Newspaper.","Theater--United States--History--20th century.","There are no access restrictions.\n","Arranged by subject into one series.\n","Arnold Goldman was a writer and professor of English and American literature. Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce.","Processing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\n","Special Collections Research Center also holds the  .\n","This collection consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in THE Minnesota Review in 1973. It also includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.\n","","Documents and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper. \n\t","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t","The Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t","There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n","Consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n","George Mason University.  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Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information\n"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Goldman was a writer and professor of English and American literature. Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n"],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information\n"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\n"],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSpecial Collections Research Center also holds the \u003cextptr type=\"simple\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\" href=\"http://sca.gmu.edu/collections-subject.php#THEATRE\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Material\n"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["Special Collections Research Center also holds the  .\n"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in THE Minnesota Review in 1973. It also includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. 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Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content\n"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in THE Minnesota Review in 1973. It also includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. 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Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper. \n\t","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t","The Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eConsists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n"],"names_ssim":["George Mason University.  Special Collections Research Center.\n","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Arthur Goldman\n","Arent, Arthur.","Losey, Joseph."],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University.  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Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.\n","","Documents and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper. \n\t","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t","The Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t","There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n","Consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n","George Mason University.  Special Collections Research Center.\n","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Arthur Goldman\n","Arent, Arthur.","Losey, Joseph.","English\n"],"unitid_tesim":["C0173\n"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection"],"collection_ssim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection"],"repository_ssm":["George Mason University"],"repository_ssim":["George Mason University"],"creator_ssm":["Arthur Goldman\n"],"creator_ssim":["Arthur Goldman\n"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Arthur Goldman\n"],"creators_ssim":["Arthur Goldman\n"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Arnold Goldman in 2009.\n"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Living Newspaper.","Theater--United States--History--20th century."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Living Newspaper.","Theater--United States--History--20th century."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["0.5 linear feet (1 box)"],"extent_tesim":["0.5 linear feet (1 box)"],"date_range_isim":[1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no access restrictions.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions\n"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no access restrictions.\n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArranged by subject into one series.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement\n"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arranged by subject into one series.\n"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Goldman was a writer and professor of English and American literature. Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information\n"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Goldman was a writer and professor of English and American literature. Born in Swampscott, MA, Goldman received degrees from both Harvard University and Yale University. Goldman taught at the Universities of Manchester, Sussex, and Keele in the United Kingdom, where he also served as Professor of American Studies. Much of Goldman's work focused on the writings of author James Joyce."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection, C0173, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n"],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information\n"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed by Hal Barthold in 2011. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in February 2019.\n"],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSpecial Collections Research Center also holds the \u003cextptr type=\"simple\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\" href=\"http://sca.gmu.edu/collections-subject.php#THEATRE\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Material\n"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["Special Collections Research Center also holds the  .\n"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in THE Minnesota Review in 1973. It also includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.\n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper. \n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".\n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content\n"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in THE Minnesota Review in 1973. It also includes correspondence with Living Newspaper actors and interviews with Arthur Arent and Joseph Losey which occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There is also other correspondence about the research, scripts, and research notes. Also, there are 3 black and white 8 x 10\" prints of a \"Injunction Granted\" performance, probably in the 1930s.\n","","Documents and correspondence about Arthur Arent. Material includes a photocopy of the play \"Can You Hear Their Voices?\", photocopies of The Living Newspaper, newspaper advertisement for Arthur Arent \"The Laying On of Hands\", a biography of Arthur Arent, \"The Technique of the Living Newspaper\" by Arthur Arent, transcripts of an interview between Arnold Goldman and Arthur Arent, notes, abstracts of nationwide reviews of Arthur Arent, scene scripts and an issue of Federal Theatre Magazine.\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a 1970s project dealing with the 1930s Federal Theatre Project play \"Injunction Granted\". Material includes 8 x 10\" prints of \"Injunction Granted\", notes, a script for \"Injunction Granted\", a series of correspondence between Roger Mitchell and Arnold Goldman and the original score of \"Injunction Granted\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about a play by Andre Van Gyseghem about Adolf Hitler. Materials include notes on the \"Injunction Granted\" scrapbook, press releases on Federal Theatre Project plays, memos, scripts and information from a play about Adolph Hitler, an interview with Andre Van Gyseghem, a newspaper article, \"The Dies Committee and the Federal Theatre Project\" and an article about the Living Newspaper. \n\t","A thesis by Sally Smith Potter titled \"A Study of the Form, History and Influence of the Living Newspaper\".\n\t","Documents and correspondence about Joseph Losey's work with the Living Newspaper. Material includes correspondence with Joseph Losey, interview questions for Joseph Losey, notes, an interview with Joseph Losey, notes by Joseph Losey about \"Injunction Granted\", an article for Encore by Joseph Losey titled \"The Individual Eye\", biofilmographies, a list of reviews, a list of books on the Federal Theatre project and the Living Newspaper, a microfilm order form and information about the New York Public Library photographic services. \n\t","The Minnesota Review Fall 1973 issue.\n\t"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Goldman Living Newspaper collection must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eConsists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Consists of research materials - mainly photocopies - of research on \"Injunction Granted,\" published in The Minnesota Review in 1973.\n"],"names_ssim":["George Mason University.  Special Collections Research Center.\n","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Arthur Goldman\n","Arent, Arthur.","Losey, Joseph."],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University.  Special Collections Research Center.\n","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Arthur Goldman\n","Arent, Arthur.","Losey, Joseph."],"language_ssim":["English\n"],"total_component_count_is":7,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T06:33:36.071Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_goldman"}},{"id":"vifgm_sundgaard","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Arnold Sundgaard papers","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_sundgaard#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_sundgaard#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. ","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_sundgaard#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vifgm_sundgaard","ead_ssi":"vifgm_sundgaard","_root_":"vifgm_sundgaard","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_sundgaard","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/gmu/sundgaard.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"http://sca.gmu.edu/finding_aids/sundgaard.html","title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1925-1988"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1925-1988"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["C0226"],"text":["C0226","Arnold Sundgaard papers","New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States.","There are no access restrictions.","There are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the  . ","This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)","Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Sundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006.","Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter.","The Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers.","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.","Series 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Corresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.","There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. ","George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","English\n\t\t"],"unitid_tesim":["C0226"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_ssim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"repository_ssm":["George Mason University"],"repository_ssim":["George Mason University"],"creator_ssm":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creators_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"access_terms_ssm":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Arnold Sundgaard to Special Collections and Archives on October 19, 1978."],"access_subjects_ssim":["New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States."],"access_subjects_ssm":["New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States."],"has_online_content_ssim":["true"],"extent_ssm":["19.0 linear feet (46 boxes)"],"extent_tesim":["19.0 linear feet (46 boxes)"],"date_range_isim":[1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no access restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no access restrictions."],"altformavail_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the \u003cextptr type=\"simple\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\" href=\"http://images.gmu.edu/luna/servlet/GMUDPSdps~23~23\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e. \u003c/p\u003e"],"altformavail_heading_ssm":["Alternative Form Available"],"altformavail_tesim":["There are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the  . "],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003clist type=\"ordered\"\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003c/list\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAfter working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical note"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Sundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Material"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["The Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNote commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePress releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFour 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: two playscripts, postcard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eYale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFree adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdaptation of Sardou play.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmerica Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eComedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHabimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMadam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMartha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eForests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNot Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhilemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCeremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShow Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTi-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnder Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVery Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWaiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePromised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShort story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle in Living magazine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eText for film written with and for Anton Refregier.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSpeech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnpublished, music by Alec Wilder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThree issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAbout Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStory; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVoices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIndian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTury; The Invader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMontparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.","Series 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Corresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. \u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. "],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"language_ssim":["English\n\t\t"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":527,"online_item_count_is":3,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T06:07:50.641Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vifgm_sundgaard","ead_ssi":"vifgm_sundgaard","_root_":"vifgm_sundgaard","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_sundgaard","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/gmu/sundgaard.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"http://sca.gmu.edu/finding_aids/sundgaard.html","title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1925-1988"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1925-1988"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["C0226"],"text":["C0226","Arnold Sundgaard papers","New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States.","There are no access restrictions.","There are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the  . ","This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)","Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Sundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006.","Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter.","The Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers.","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.","Series 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Corresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.","There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. ","George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","English\n\t\t"],"unitid_tesim":["C0226"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_ssim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"repository_ssm":["George Mason University"],"repository_ssim":["George Mason University"],"creator_ssm":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creators_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"access_terms_ssm":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Arnold Sundgaard to Special Collections and Archives on October 19, 1978."],"access_subjects_ssim":["New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States."],"access_subjects_ssm":["New Deal, 1933-1939.","Performing arts.","Playwriting. ","Theater--United States."],"has_online_content_ssim":["true"],"extent_ssm":["19.0 linear feet (46 boxes)"],"extent_tesim":["19.0 linear feet (46 boxes)"],"date_range_isim":[1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no access restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no access restrictions."],"altformavail_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the \u003cextptr type=\"simple\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\" href=\"http://images.gmu.edu/luna/servlet/GMUDPSdps~23~23\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e. \u003c/p\u003e"],"altformavail_heading_ssm":["Alternative Form Available"],"altformavail_tesim":["There are digital documents from this and other GMU FTP collections in the  . "],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003clist type=\"ordered\"\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003citem\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003c/list\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (boxes 38-41)"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAfter working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical note"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin.","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage. The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays such as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Sundgaard died in Dallas, Texas, on October 22, 2006."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections and Archives, George Mason University."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Material"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["The Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNote commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePress releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFour 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: two playscripts, postcard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eYale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFree adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdaptation of Sardou play.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmerica Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eComedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHabimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMadam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMartha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eForests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNot Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhilemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCeremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShow Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTi-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnder Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVery Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWaiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePromised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShort story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle in Living magazine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eText for film written with and for Anton Refregier.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSpeech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnpublished, music by Alec Wilder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThree issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAbout Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStory; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVoices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIndian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTury; The Invader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMontparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.","Series 1, Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2, Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3, Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4, Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5, Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6, Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7, Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Corresondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Abssence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hatful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company; New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Theives Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness...along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970); Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Arnold Sundgaard papers must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\n\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. \u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. "],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections \u0026 Archives","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"language_ssim":["English\n\t\t"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":527,"online_item_count_is":3,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T06:07:50.641Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_sundgaard"}},{"id":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Arnold Sundgaard papers","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","ead_ssi":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","_root_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/GMU/repositories_2_resources_344.xml","title_filing_ssi":"Arnold Sundgaard papers","title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1925-1988"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1925-1988"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344"],"text":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344","Arnold Sundgaard papers","Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States","There are no access restrictions.","There are also additional documents from this and related collections in the  .","This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)","Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. ","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022.","The Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project.","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  ","Series 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Correspondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.","The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings.","Map Case 22.4","George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","English"],"unitid_tesim":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_ssim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"repository_ssm":["George Mason University"],"repository_ssim":["George Mason University"],"creator_ssm":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creators_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"access_terms_ssm":["The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Arnold Sundgaard on October 19, 1978."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["19 Linear Feet 46 boxes"],"extent_tesim":["19 Linear Feet 46 boxes"],"date_range_isim":[1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no access restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no access restrictions."],"altformavail_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are also additional documents from this and related collections in the \u003cextptr href=\"http://images.gmu.edu/luna/servlet/GMUDPSdps~23~23\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e.\u003c/p\u003e"],"altformavail_heading_ssm":["Alternative Form Available"],"altformavail_tesim":["There are also additional documents from this and related collections in the  ."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003clist type=\"ordered\"\u003e\n      \u003chead\u003eSeries\u003c/head\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)\u003c/item\u003e\n    \u003c/list\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAfter working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. ","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Materials"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["The Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNote commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePress releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFour 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: two playscripts, postcard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eYale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFree adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdaptation of Sardou play.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmerica Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eComedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHabimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMadam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMartha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eForests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNot Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhilemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCeremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShow Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTi-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnder Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVery Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWaiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePromised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShort story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle in Living magazine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eText for film written with and for Anton Refregier.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSpeech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnpublished, music by Alec Wilder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThree issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAbout Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStory; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVoices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIndian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTury; The Invader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMontparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  ","Series 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Correspondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract id=\"aspace_81b1393c5a8bb601d6b50fdcc01513d0\" label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc id=\"aspace_4e8da7bbdb61d3efe004415f7a003934\"\u003eMap Case 22.4\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Map Case 22.4"],"names_coll_ssim":["Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":527,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-04T07:14:00.013Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","ead_ssi":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","_root_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","_nest_parent_":"vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/GMU/repositories_2_resources_344.xml","title_filing_ssi":"Arnold Sundgaard papers","title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1925-1988"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1925-1988"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344"],"text":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344","Arnold Sundgaard papers","Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States","There are no access restrictions.","There are also additional documents from this and related collections in the  .","This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)","Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. ","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.","Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022.","The Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project.","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  ","Series 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Correspondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.","The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)","The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings.","Map Case 22.4","George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006","English"],"unitid_tesim":["C0226","/repositories/2/resources/344"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"collection_ssim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers"],"repository_ssm":["George Mason University"],"repository_ssim":["George Mason University"],"creator_ssm":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"creators_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"access_terms_ssm":["The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Arnold Sundgaard on October 19, 1978."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Children's theater","New Deal, 1933-1939","Performing arts","Playwriting","Theater -- United States"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["19 Linear Feet 46 boxes"],"extent_tesim":["19 Linear Feet 46 boxes"],"date_range_isim":[1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no access restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no access restrictions."],"altformavail_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are also additional documents from this and related collections in the \u003cextptr href=\"http://images.gmu.edu/luna/servlet/GMUDPSdps~23~23\" title=\"Federal Theatre Project collection\" show=\"new\"\u003e\u003c/extptr\u003e.\u003c/p\u003e"],"altformavail_heading_ssm":["Alternative Form Available"],"altformavail_tesim":["There are also additional documents from this and related collections in the  ."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003clist type=\"ordered\"\u003e\n      \u003chead\u003eSeries\u003c/head\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44)\u003c/item\u003e\n      \u003citem\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)\u003c/item\u003e\n    \u003c/list\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["This collection is organized into 8 series based on material type.","Series Series 1: Correspondence, 1933-1988 (Boxes 1-5) Series 2: Musical Scores, 1947-1982 (Boxes 5-6, 44-46) Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, 1935-1976 (Boxes 6-8, 43) Series 4: Photographs, 1933-1982 (Boxes 8, 42, 44) Series 5: Playscripts, 1932-1978 (Boxes 8-21, 42) Series 6: Programs and Posters, 1925-1988 (Boxes 22-29, oversize folder) Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, 1933-1988 (Boxes 29-37, 43, 44) Series 8: Audio Recordings, 1955-1980s (Boxes 38-41)"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAfter working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Arnold Olaf Sundgaard was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 31, 1909. He studied English at the University of Wisconsin and then drama at Yale University. Sundgaard taught at many colleges including the University of Texas, Columbia University in New York, Bennington College, and at Trinity College in Dublin. ","Sundgaard worked for the Chicago Federal Theatre Project and is best known in this context as the writer of the Living Newspaper production Spirochete. He worked with the FTP from 1936 to 1938 as an author and play reader, after which he was let go since he was starting to make a living as a writer. The main theme of Spirochete is the history and spread of syphilis from the 15th century in Europe to the 1930s in America. The play was politically minded and current in relation to the Marriage Test Law of 1937. This Law would require a blood test for syphilis prior to marriage.  The play opened in Chicago on April 29, 1938, and had showings in Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Portland, Oregon during February of 1939. Even though the play was met with protest in some areas due to its controversial subject matter, it was the second most performed Living Newspaper play after One-Third of a Nation.","After working with the FTP Sundgaard went on to be a successful writer and librettist. As an author he wrote articles, lyrics, plays, and children's books. To his credit are articles for The New Yorker, and the Atlantic; libretti for Down in the Valley by Kurt Weill, and The Greenfield Christmas Tree; plays suchs as Giants in the Earth (co-written with Douglas Moore), Everywhere I Roam, the Broadway produced Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Forests of the Night, The Great Campaign, and Young Abe Lincoln; children's books include An Axe, an Apple, and a Buckskin Jacket, The Lamb and the Butterfly, and Jethro's Difficult Dinosaur."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eArnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Arnold Sundgaard papers, C0226, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processing and EAD markup completed in October 2012 by Greta Kuriger Suiter. Finding aid updated by Amanda Brent in July 2022."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Materials"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["The Special Collections Research center also holds the Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers related to the Federal Theatre Project."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNote commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePress releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFour 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOutline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerformed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes: two playscripts, postcard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eYale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFree adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdaptation of Sardou play.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmerica Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eComedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHabimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMadam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMartha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eForests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNot Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhilemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCeremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShow Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTi-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnder Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVery Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWaiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePromised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eShort story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle in Living magazine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eText for film written with and for Anton Refregier.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSpeech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUnpublished, music by Alec Wilder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThree issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAbout Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStory; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVoices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIndian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTury; The Invader.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eI am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSeries 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMontparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content","Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings. Series are primarily arranged alphabetically by material type and then alphabetically by folder title. Series eight, Audio Recordings, is arranged by size of material.  ","Series 1: Correspondence, is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the correspondence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Series 2: Musical Scores, is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes. ","Series 4: Photographs, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints; there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Series 5: Playscripts, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced. ","Series 6: Programs and Posters, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications, is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Series 8: Audio Recordings, is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","Series 1: Correspondence (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by play title, organization or person. Plays written about include Akron by Moonlight, Down in the Valley, The Beautiful and Anxious Maidens, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The First Crocus, The Great Campaign, The Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, and Nobody's Earnest. Persons and organizations included in the corresponence are: The Atlantic Monthly, George P. Baker, Yale, The Barter Theatre, Louis Bellson, Bing Crosby, Lehman Engel, Archibald MacLeish, The New Yorker magazine, Gregory Peck, E. B. White, Alec Wilder, and Thornton Wilder among others.","Includes: Theodore Apstein, Giants in the Earth (1951) to Kilgo Run (1968); letters to Mildred Kayden in London and Spain. Apstein, Kayden and Sundgaard collaborated on a play together - Cortes, correspondence continued with Apstein until 1977.","Includes: permission to reprint the article \"Jazz: Hot and Cold\"; \"Autumn of a Virgin\"; rejection of \"The Drifter\".","Correspondence regarding the royalties from Everywhere I Roam.","Note commenting on Sundgaard's first play at Yale.","Correspondence regarding music and Seven Joys of Buddy Biloxi.","Correspondence regarding plays, rights, and membership in the Guild.","Correspondence with Stephen Murray who appeared in Dublin.","In memoriam for Bob Porterfield of Barter Theatre and Stanley Young (playwright); Jerome Hill, film editor of Louis W. and Maud Hill Family Foundation.","Correspondence regarding Man of La Mancha and Cuckoo's Nest and Montparnasse.","Series 2: Musical Scores (1947-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and comprises sheet music and lyrics written by Arnold Sundgaard. Some of the music is published under title of play and some are handwritten music for individual songs. Plays included are: Buddy, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, Promised Valley, Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree, Down in the Valley, Gallantry, Sunday Excursion, The Lowland Sea, The Lonesome Dove. About one-third of the material is in oversize boxes.","Original draft to Arnold Sundgaard from Louis Bellson.","Cumberland Fair: A Jamboree; Down in the Valley; Gallantry.","Kittiwake Island; The Lowland Sea; The Greenfield Christmas Tree.","Sunday Excursion; The Lowland Sea; The Lonesome Dove.","Shepherds, Rise; Gepäck träger Blues (The Baggage Room Blues); An Axe, an Apple and a Buckskin Jacket; Long John; There's Doubt in my Mind (but hope in my heart); Where do you go?","Sheet music for \"The Earth Turns Around Without Me Now\", \"Where do we come from? What are we? Where do we go from here?\", \"The Ocracoke School song\", \"That Thing I'm Looking For\", \"I'm Free at Last\", \"I Know my Star is There Somewhere\", \"Hurry Home\", \"Here Comes Tomorrow\", \"The Greenfield Christmas Tree\", \"The Lowland Sea\", \"Cumberland Fair\".","Includes the songs: \"No Country Boys Allowed in Chicago\", \"Laurel, Mississippi (Ora's)\", \"Here Tiz\", \"You Can Keep Countin' on me\", \"Isabella\", \"Jazz\", \"The Pie Mau\", \"On That Judgement Day\", \"Ora's Song\", \"Dig Down Deep\", \"Buddy's Blues\", \"Blues Singer\", \"By Surprise\", \"How do you Buy Back a Dream\", \"Opening Act part II\".","Series 3: Newspaper Clippings (1935-1976) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily newspaper and magazine clippings relating to play productions and writings authored by Sundgaard, as well as scrapbooks, programs, ephemera, and some photographs. Two scrapbooks, one about Of Love Remembered, the other about Federal Theatre Project productions, Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam, are housed in oversize boxes.","Press releases, newspaper and magazine clippings.","Includes newspaper clippings, program, broadside.","Includes newspaper and clippings, promotional letters and mailings.","Includes photographs, newspaper clippings, telegrams, and programs about Of Love Remembered, actress Ingrid Thulin, and Forests of the Night premiere in Dublin.","Mostly newspaper clippings and programs from Federal Theatre Project productions of Spirochete and Everywhere I Roam. Also contains newspaper article and sign relating to Sundgaard's later career.","Includes mostly newspaper clippings, some programs, one photograph.","Series 4: Photographs (1933-1982) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes photographs of play productions, actors, and Arnold Sundgaard. Photographs of play productions include the plays: Brigham, Down in the Valley, Equinox, Everywhere I Roam, Forests of the Night, Giants in the Earth, The Great Campaign, The First Crocus, Kilgo Run, Knock on Wood, Of Love Remembered, The Promised Valley, Spirochete, This Fallow Ground, and The Truth About Windmills. Images are mostly prints, there are some slides, and some oversize material.","Four 16\" x 20\" oversize black and white prints with thick board backing. Images depict Theatre, Inc. productions of Playboy of the Western World, Henry IV part I, and Oedipus.","Series 5: Playscripts (1932-1978) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes primarily playscripts but also radio and television scripts, libretti, outlines, drafts, production notes, scores, programs, costume designs, and some correspondence. Multiple drafts of produced plays are here, as is unfinished scripts and scripts for plays not produced.","Includes: cassette tape; First you have a dream song lyrics; two \"Brigham!\" metal pins.","Includes: black and white photographs; program; newspaper clipping.","Outline for a musical comedy and research material consisting of copies of articles, postcards, and a paper written by Edmund G. Love.","Outline for a musical comedy by Sundgaard; playscript written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.","Sundgaard's first play written in Madison, Wisconsin.","Scripts for a school opera from 1945, and a film version in 1974.","Performed by the Columbia Opera Workshop March 8 to April 7, 1951.","Performed at the University of Virginia, based on characters witnessed at Hotel Delano, Chicago while working for the Federal Theatre.","Scripts for Village Incident - India; Jack Be Normal; Four Flags of the Confederacy; Beethoven's Fifth.","Written for Williamstown Bicentennial 1953, directed by David Bryant at Williams College Adams Memorial Theatre.","A comic opera written for post-dinner entertainment at Applegreen Old Westbury, Long Island.","Includes: two playscripts, postcard.","Written for first year class in playwriting at Yale during the Fall of 1932.","Yale workshop 47, first play by Sundgaard to be produced at Yale in 1935, directed by Alexander Dean.","Free adaptation in collaboration with Albert Marre for Joan Dehner).","Adaptation of Sardou play.","Series 6: Programs and Posters (1925-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes programs and posters for productions written by Sundgaard as well as programs collected by Sundgaard.","Two posters from the Williamstown Theatre production of Nobdy's Earnest. One has a yellow background with green text and highlights Nobody's Earnest and The Good Woman of Setzuan, the other has a white background, red and blue lettering and features a drawn map at the top.","America Hurrah; Absence of a Cello; A Chorus Line; The Actors Studio - Strange Interlude; The Advocate; The Affair; Agatha Sue I Love You; Ain't Misbehavin'; Aldwych Theatre - The Persecution and Assassination of Marat; All American; All the Way Home; Abe Lincoln in Illinois; Absurd Person Singular; ACT (American Conservatory Theatre); After the Rain; The Alchemist; Jack Ruby, All-American Boy; Alvin Ailey: City Center Dance Theater.","The American Academy of Arts and Letters and The National Institute of Arts and Letters Ceremonial; American Buffalo; American Repertory Theatre; American Shakespeare Festival Theatre; Anne Meacham; Annie Get Your Gun; APA-Phoenix; APA-Repertory Company; Ashes; The Azuma Kabuki Dancers and Musicians; The American Dream; The American Mime Theatre; Amharclann na Mainistreach; Anastasia; Anniversary Waltz; Applause; Apple of His Eye; The Apple Tree; At the Drop of a Fan; Auntie Mame.","The Bad Seed; Baker Street; The Ballad of the Sad Café; Ballet Ballads; The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; Barefoot in Athens; The Beggars Opera; Berkshire Festival; Berkshire Music Center; Big Fish, Little Fish; Black Comedy; Boesman and Lena; Claudia; Breakfast in Bedlam; Bad Habits; Bajour; The Beauty Part; Becket; The Bed Before Yesterday; Barefoot in Athens; The Best Man; Billy Budd; The Blacks; The Blood Knot; Borstal Boy; The Boy Friend.","Brigadoon; Follow the Girls; Buck Clayton; Bullfight; Bye Bye Birdie; Brigadoon; Brooklyn Academy of Music; The Browning Version; Bus stop; By George; Beggar on Horseback; Bravo.","Cabaret; Camelot; Camp Meeting; The Caretaker; Call Me Mister; Camino Real; Can-Can; Carib Song; Carousel; Carnegie Hall; Carry Nation; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Catch Me if You Can; The Caucasian Chalk Circle; The Chalk Garden; The Cherry Orchard; The Changing Room; Chapter Two.","The Children's Hour; Chips with Everything; Chicago; Chicago Stagebill - High Button Shoes; City Center Joffrey Ballet; The City Center - How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; The City Center - Marcel Marceau; Coco; Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide with the Rainbow is Enuf; The Chinese and Dr. Fish; The Chinese Prime Minister; A Chorus Line; Circle in the Square; City Center Joffrey Ballet; A Clearing in the Woods; The Climate of Eden; The Cocktail Party; Colette; Come Live With Me; Come Share My House.","Comedie Francaise; Company; Compulsion; The Confidential Clerk; Conversations at Midnight; The Creation of the World and Other Business; Cyrano; Comedians; Comedy; Command Performance; Conduct Unbecoming; Courtin' Time; The Crucible; The Country Girl; Cyrano de Bergerac; The Condemned of Altona.","The Dark at the Top of the Stairs; Damn Yankees; Dances of Bali; Danny Kaye; Dear Judas; The Deputy; Desire Under the Elms; Dial 'M' For Murder; Diary of a Scoundrel; Dames at Sea; The Dark is Light Enough; Dark of the Moon; The Deadly Game; The Deep Blue Sea; The Desperate Hours; The Diary of Anne Frank; The Deputy; Dickins and Jones; Dirty Linen and New-found-land; Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights; A Doll's House; Do Not Pass Go; The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London.","The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of London; Dracula; The Dybbuk; Dutchman; Duel of Angels; Dylan.","Eastward in Eden; Edward, My Son; Elizabeth I; The Enemy is Dead; Emergency Broadway Theatre Directory; An Enemy of the People; Enter Laughing; The Entertainer; Entertaining Mr. Sloane; Equus; Erlanger.","A Far Country; Fiddler on the Roof; Fair Harvard; Family Business; The Farmers Hotel; Frank Merriwell or Honor Challenged; The Fighting Cock; First One Asleep, Whistle; Faust.","Mexicana; Funny Girl; The Four Winds; Follies; Find Your Way Home; Flora and the Red Menace; The Foo Hsing Theatre; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; The Fourposter; Finian's Rainbow; Fiorello!; Flahooley; The Flowering Peach; Fortune and Men's Eyes; Forty Carats.","The Gambler; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; Gideon; The Gin Game; The Glass Menagerie; The Golden Apple; Golden Boy; Georgy; Good Evening; The Great White Hope; Guys and Dolls; Gantry; Garden District; Gemini; Generation; The Gingerbread Lady; Gloria and Esperanza; The Grand Street Follies; Grease; The Green Pastures; Gypsy.","Habimah; Hair; Half a Sixpence; Hamlet (at Arena Stage); Harkness Ballet; Hello Dolly!; Hadrian VII; Hail Scrawdyke!; Half in Earnest; Happy Ending and Day of Absence; Harvey; A Hateful of Rain; Helen; Hello Solly!","Henry V; High Spirits; Hispania (at SUNY Stony Brook); The Homecoming; Hope's the Thing; The House of Blue Leaves; The House of Bernarda Alba; How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying; Here's Where I Belong; High Button Shoes; The Hollow Crown; Home; The Hostage; Hostile Witness; Hotel Paradiso; Awake and Sing; House of Flowers.","I am a Camera; The Immoralist; Impossible on Saturday; The Incomparable Max; Indians; Inherit the Wind; The Innocents; Inquest; The Iceman Cometh; I Love My Wife; Inadmissible Evidence; Inner City; Institute for Advanced Studies in the Theatre Arts (Phedre); In the Summer House; Inside U.S.A.; In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel.","I was Dancing; The Irish Players; Iphigenia in Aulis; Invitation to a March; Ivanov; The Investigation; In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.","Jamaica; Joe Egg; John Loves Mary; Jose Greco and his Company; Jacques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris; Jimmy; The Jockey Club Stakes; The John Drew Theater; John Murray Anderson's Almanac.","The King and I; Kiss Me Kate; King Lear; The Knack; Knickerbocker Holiday; The Killing of Sister George; King of Hearts; Kennedy's Children; The Lady's Not for Burning; The King and I.","The Lady of the Camellias; The Lady from the Sea; Landscape of the Body; La Grosse Valise; La Plume de ma Tante; The Last Analysis; The Latent Heterosexual; Leave it to Jane; Lenny; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1952; Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1968; The Little Foxes; Little Murders; The Lark; The Last of Mrs. Lincoln; Last of the Red Hot Lovers; Leave it to Jane; The Lion in Winter.","A Little Night Music; London Assurance; On Borrowed Time; Look Homeward, Angel; Lovers and Other Strangers; Lute Song; Luther; Lincoln Center: American Ballet Theatre; Look Back in Anger; Loot; The Love of Four Colonels; Lord Pengo; The Little Foxes.","Madam, Will You Walk; Mademoiselle Colombe; Maggie Flynn; The Magic Show; Malcolm; Mame; The Man in the Glass Booth; Man of La Mancha; Marcel Marceau; Macbeth; The Madwoman of Chaillot; Maggie; The Magic and the Loss; Make a Wish; Mamba's Daughters; APA at the Phoenix fundraising pamphlet; A Man for all Seasons; Marathon '33.","Martha Graham; Medea; The Member of the Wedding; Mark Twain Tonight; Antony and Cleopatra; The Matchmaker; Me and Juliet; Metropolitan Opera; A Midsummer Night's Dream; The Mighty Gents; Middle of the Night; Milk and Honey; The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore; Mineola; The Miracle Worker.","Miss Lonelyhearts; Molly; Moonchildren; Morning, Noon and Night; The Mother of us all; Much Ado About Nothing; Mixed Doubles; My Fair Lady; My 3 Angels; Misalliance; Mister Johnson; Monique; A Month in the Country; The Moon is Blue; The Most Happy Fella; Mother Courage and her Children; Mrs. McThing; The Music Man; My Fair Lady.","Forests of the Night (Dublin); Trouble in Tahiti / Down in the Valley; The Great Campaign; The Greenfield Christmas Tree; Kittiwake Island; Kilgo Run; Cumberland Fair; Giants in the Earth; The Great Campaign; Little Orchestra Society; Lemonade Opera; The Lowland Sea; The Playboy of the Western World; Pygmalion; On Hemlock Brook; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre presents its 25th anniversary program; National Theatre Conference; The Old Vic Theatre Company; Habimah; The Great Western Union; The Annual Spring Musicale at George School; Of Love Remembered.","Rhapsody; The First Crocus; Everywhere I Roam; Kittiwake Island; Promised Valley; The Sixteenth Annual Dance Concert of the Steffi Nossen School; Spring Opera Night; This Fallow Ground; The Ramapo Lyric Festival; Town Hall - The Little Orchestra Society, Inc.; Virginia Overture Hi Song Daisy Lee; The Waldorf School Spring Festival; Forests of the Night performed at the Weathervane Community Playhouse; Cumberland Fair; Children's Theatre at the 92nd St. YM and YWHA; Central High School Vocal Music Department - Festival of Contemporary Music; University of Denver - Sunday Excursion and Down in the Valley; Canterbury Choral Society - Down in the Valley; Roslyn High School - Americana; Fifth annual conference on American Opera by the Columbia University Student Council; Beatrice and Benedict; Of Love Remembered; Southern Theatre; Spirochete; C.W. Post College - The First Intercollegiate Playwriting Festival; Gallantry.","Two issues of Opera News; Occidental College Music Department - A Festival of Twentieth Century Music; Dublin University Players - Vacant Lot; Beatrice and Benedict; The Orchestra of America; Stadium Concerts Review; Nobody's Earnest.","Nobody's Earnest; Close-Up: A collection of photographs by L. Arnold Weissberger publication; Promised Valley; Forests of the Night; An Evening of Contemporary American Opera; Giants in the Earth.","The National Council of the Metropolitan Opera Association Regional Auditions Finals; The Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre; The New Dance Group; New York City Ballet; The New York City Center Light Opera Company;  New York City Center of Music and Drama; New York City Opera Company; New York City Theatre Company; No Time for Sergeants; The Natural Look; Nature of the Crime; New Faces of 1962; The New Music Hall of Israel; New York State Theater - Annie Get Your Gun; Next Time I'll Sing to You; Nikolais Dance Theatre; No, No, Nanette; No Place to be Somebody; No Time for Sergeants.","Not Now, Darling; No Time for Sergeants; Narrow Road to the Deep North; New York State Theater - Kind Lear.","Oakdale musical theatre; The Odd Couple; Of Love Remembered; Oh What a Lovely War; Old Times; Oliver!; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever; Ondine; On Stage; Orpheus Descending; The Observer film exhibition program; Oh Men! Oh Women!; Oklahoma; Old Acquaintance; Ondine; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' so Sad; On the Town; On Whitman Avenue; Otherwise Engaged.","Oxford University Players - The Alchemist King Lear; Operation Sidewinder.","Philemon; Paint Your Wagon; Pal Joey; Park; Peg; Lord Pengo; A Penny for a Song; Philadelphia, Here I Come!; Photo Finish; The Physicists; Pacific Overtures; A Passage to India; The Passion of Josef D.; A Patriot for Me; The Paul Taylor Dance Company; Peter Pan.","Pilobolus dance theatre; The Pirates of Penzance; Players; The Playroom; Plaza Suite; Picnic; The Pinter Plays - The Dumbwaiter and the Collection; Paint Your Wagon; Plain and Fancy; The Playhouse Company; The Plumstead Playhouse - Our Town; The Ponder Heart; Poor Richard; Porgy and Bess; Portrait of a Queen; The Prescott Proposals; King Lear at Brandeis University; The Price.","The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Prescott Proposals; Private Lives; Promenade; Purlie; Pygmalion; Purple Dust; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; The Potting Shed; The Private Ear and the Public Eye; The Promise; Promises, Promises.","The Rainmaker; The Rape of Lucretia; The Rat Race; The Red Mill; The Rehearsal; The Reluctant Debutante; Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center; The Right Honourable Gentleman; The Robber Bridegroom; Rabelais; A Raisin in the Sun; The Real Inspector Hound After Magritte; Red Roses for Me; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker; Rhinoceros; Ring Round the Moon; The Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center - Yerma.","Ceremonial Tribute to Robert Emmet Sherwood (at ANTA Theatre); Romulus; Rosa; The Rose Tattoo; Ross; The Royal Family; Ruth Draper; The Rockland Foundation; Rooms; The Rose Tattoo; The Rothschilds; The Royal Hunt of the Sun; The Runner Stumbles; The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker.","Sandhog; Saint Joan; Say Darling; A Scent of Flowers; The School for Scandal; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Seventeen; The Seven Year Itch; 1776; Shakespeare in Harlem; She Loves Me; Shenandoah; Shelter; The Saint of Bleecker Street; Salvation; The School for Wives; Seascape; Second Threshold; The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild; Shadow of a Star; The Shadow Box; Sheep on the Runway; Sherlock Holmes; Shakespeare Festival.","Show Boat; Shoestring Revue; The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window; Side by Side by Sondheim; Skyscraper; Sleuth; The Soldier; South Pacific; Stars in Your Eyes; The Sleepers' Den; Silk Stockings; Sing Me No Lullaby; Slapstick Tragedy; Slow Dance on the Killing Ground; Soldiers; Spofford; Staircase.","The Star Spangled Girl; Sticks and Bones; Story Theatre; Stop the World I Want to Get Off; The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse Johnson; The Subject was Roses; Sugar; The Sunshine Boys; Sweet Bird of Youth; A Streetcar Named Desire; Street Scene; Sunday Breakfast; Sunrise at Campobello; The Square Root of Wonderful; Sweet Charity; Summertree.","Tamburlaine the Great; The Taming of the Shrew; A Taste of Honey; Tea and Sympathy; The Teahouse of the August Moon; That Championship Season; Thieves Carnival; Third Person; The Threepenny Opera; Tchin-Tchin; Telemachus Clay; A Temporary Island; The Tenth Man; A Texas Trilogy; Theater 1969; 3 for Tonight.","Ti-Coo; Tiger at the Gates; The Time of the Cuckoo; Top Banana; Touchstone; Traveler without Luggage; Travesties; Treemonisha; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald; Two by Two; The Actors Studio Theatre productions 1963-1964; Those That Play the Clowns; Tiger Tiger Burning Bright; Tiny Alice; Town Hall; A Tree Grows in Brooklyn; Time Limit!; The Trip to Bountiful; Two on the Aisle; Two Gentlemen of Verona;","Under Milk Wood; Ulysses; The Unknown Soldier and His Wife; U.S.A.","Very Good Eddie; Vivat! Vivat Regina!; The Visit; Visit to a Small Planet; Via Galactica; A View from the Bridge.","Waiting for Godot; Wait a Minim!; The Way of the World; West Side Story; Who am I?; Who to Love; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; Wait Until Dark; Walking Happy; Where's Charley?; The Whole World Over; Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?; Wilson in the Promise Land; The Winslow Boy; Witness for the Prosecution; The World of Gunter Grass; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.","The Zulu and the Zayda; The Young and Fair; Zorba; Your Own Thing; You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running; You're a Good Man Charlie Brown; Ziegfeld Follies of 1931.","Promised Valley; The Great Campaign; Theatre Arts magazine (June 1947); Utah Centennial; Utah Symphony Orchestra.","Series 7: Writings, Reviews, Publications (1933-1988) is arranged alphabetically by title and includes writings by Sundgaard that are not scripts. The writings include drafts, outlines, articles, essays, and short stories. Both unpublished and published material is included. There are some books. Also present is research material created by Sundgaard for different projects. One project was a syphilis related research project for a possible book that Sundgaard undertook with O.C. Wenger. Another project represented is research of deafness conducted by Sundgaard in Hermann, Missouri.","Short story published by Norske Tidende of Brooklyn.","Article in Living magazine.","John Brown for Erich Hawkins; Forty-Second Street.","Written for the Federal Writers' Project New Orleans.","Text for film written with and for Anton Refregier.","Correspondence, ephemera on Hermann, Missouri.","Report written for Dr. Edna Levine of New York University and deafness research. Includes photographs.","\"Postwar Relaxation, a Story\" article by Sundgaard.","Articles \"The Realtors\" and \"The Lesson of the Potato\".","Speech written for Lyndon B. Johnson in 1948, at the request of Buck Hood, editor of Austin \"Item\". It was recorded and broadcast over cotton fields from a helicopter.","Unpublished, music by Alec Wilder.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Scenario for a film commissioned by Jed Harris.","Cassette recording of interview with Rudolph Friml, aged 93, made in Hollywood July 24, 1973. He talked of Otto Harbach and his career in the theatre.","Article published in International Musician \"Opera in America\".","Issue of The New Yorker containing a review for \"Everywhere I Roam\".","Three issues of The New Yorker containing the articles \"Reruns of the Mind\", \"Money\", and \"Ken\".","During 1939 Sundgaard was working with the Writer's Project in Louisiana and Harper's had asked him to do a book about O.C. Wenger, USPHS chief who was campaigner against syphilis. Because of disagreements with Wenger about what form the book should take i.e., fiction vs. documentary, it was never written.","\"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in Modern American Reader; \"Equinox\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1941; \"Mid-Passage\" in The Best One Act Plays of 1943; \"The Picnic\" in the Best One Act Plays of 1944; \"Virginia Overture\" in American Scenes.","About Unesco; \"Footsteps of Greatness…along the Lincoln Heritage Trail\" in Vista; \"Writing with Kurt Weill\" in The Dramatists Guild Quarterly; New Masses.","\"Gallantry\" review in Time and The New Yorker; Sundgaard featured in a survey in the Saturday Review; \"Jazz Hot and Cold\" in The Atlantic; \"The Librettist - Secret Service Man\" in International Musician.","The New Talent; Story; Accent; Icarus; Medallion (includes art work by Will Eisner).","Two issues of Manuscript; The New Talent; The Lance.","Story; three issues of Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Scope; author's copy of The New Talent.","Voices: A Journal of Poetry; Everybody's Digest.","Indian Johnny; Autumn of a Virgin; Will You Please Let Me Tell the Story!","Tury; The Invader.","The Gun; The Apple Tree; Elgin Tubbs; Beckley and his Uncle Hamp; Journey to Duluth.","I am Strong as a Horse; The Drifter; The Two of us in Texas; Hot Air, Fiddlesticks and Baloney.","The Skerry Island Country Store; The Blessing of Dreams; Swimming to Damascus; A Child is Born.","Tramp, Tramp, Tramp; Rasmus and the Flying Viking; The White City; The Singer; Change at Jamaica; A Lost Identity.","Series 8: Audio Recordings (1955-1980s) is arranged by size and consists of four boxes that include audio cassette tapes, reel-to-reel audio recordings, and vinyl records. The material includes recordings from productions or songs that Sundgaard wrote, and records featuring Sundgaard's children's books.","\"Noa Noa\" and other songs from musical of Gauguin based on Agee film script, lyrics by Sundgaard, music by D.K. Lee; Chet Baker interview; Maurice Jarre playing piano for Montparnasse music; Montparnasse first version; Montparnasse second version; Michel Legrand singing possible songs for Montparnasse (April 1970);  Michel Legrand Montparnasse song ideas; University of North Dakota - Giants in the Earth act I; Giants in the Earth act II; Giants in the Earth act III; The Truth About Windmills - orchestra reading of score; The Truth About Windmills - tape made from performances at Avon, New York October 1973; Kittiwake Island; unlabeled, unboxed 7\".","Montparnasse - music by Maurice Jarre, lyrics by Arnold Sundgaard; Gallantry at Columbia University Open Workshop; Buddy Biloxi re-recorded at CBS (1973) jazz musical; Forests of the Night at Gate Theatre in Dublin (1965); Nobody's Earnest demo.","Contains 11 cassette tapes and two 3\" reel to reel tapes. Tapes contain recordings of the Brigham soundtrack, The Sun and the Moon, Chet Baker, Alec Wilder suite no. 2, Kittiwake Island, eulogy to Robert Porterfield and the Tony awards, Truth About Windmills, Eddie Sauter and O Wonderous Earth, Montparnasse, various songs written by Sundgaard.","An Axe, an Apple, and  a Buckskin Jacket: A Christmas Story; Columbia University Bicentennial Album; Songs of the South; Bing Crosby tells and sings How Lovely is Christmas; Young Abe Lincoln; Brigham; Down in the Valley; How Lovely is Christmas."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract id=\"aspace_81b1393c5a8bb601d6b50fdcc01513d0\" label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Arnold Sundgaard papers includes materials created and collected by Arnold Sundgaard. The collection is divided into eight series: Correspondence; Musical Scores; Newspaper Clippings; Photographs; Playscripts; Programs and Posters; Writings, Reviews, Publications; and Audio Recordings."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc id=\"aspace_4e8da7bbdb61d3efe004415f7a003934\"\u003eMap Case 22.4\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Map Case 22.4"],"names_coll_ssim":["Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"names_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)","Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"corpname_ssim":["George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center","Federal Theatre Project (U.S.)"],"persname_ssim":["Sundgaard, Arnold, 1909-2006"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":527,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-04T07:14:00.013Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifgm_repositories_2_resources_344"}},{"id":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings","creator":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Ball, Arthur","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Clippings of 38 feature articles, by Arthur Ball, from the \u003cem\u003eParkersburg Sunday News\u003c/em\u003e. Articles of Wood, Wirt, Jackson, Kanawha, Ritchie, and Calhoun counties concerning agriculture, prominent citizens, industries, flood control, C.C.C. Camp, Flint deposit, coal, oil, and gas fields, Civil War, mounds, antiques and heirlooms; Charles G. Slack Collection in Marietta College Library, and Hall family.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987","ead_ssi":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987","_root_":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987","_nest_parent_":"wvmturhc_repositories_2_resources_2987","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/WVU/repositories_2_resources_2987.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.wvu.edu/ark:/99999/197029","title_ssm":["Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings"],"title_tesim":["Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings"],"unitdate_ssm":["1934-1937"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1934-1937"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["A\u0026M 0674","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2987"],"text":["A\u0026M 0674","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2987","Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings","No special access restriction applies.","Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. For more information, please see the  Permissions and Copyright page  on the West Virginia and Regional History Center website.","Clippings of 38 feature articles, by Arthur Ball, from the  Parkersburg Sunday News . Articles of Wood, Wirt, Jackson, Kanawha, Ritchie, and Calhoun counties concerning agriculture, prominent citizens, industries, flood control, C.C.C. Camp, Flint deposit, coal, oil, and gas fields, Civil War, mounds, antiques and heirlooms; Charles G. Slack Collection in Marietta College Library, and Hall family.","West Virginia and Regional History Center / West Virginia University / 1549 University Avenue / P.O. Box 6069 / Morgantown, WV 26506-6069 / Phone: 304-293-3536  / URL: https://wvrhc.lib.wvu.edu/","West Virginia and Regional History Center","Ball, Arthur","English"],"unitid_tesim":["A\u0026M 0674","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/2/resources/2987"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings"],"collection_title_tesim":["Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings"],"collection_ssim":["Arthur Ball, Journalist, Newspaper Article Clippings"],"repository_ssm":["West Virginia and Regional History Center"],"repository_ssim":["West Virginia and Regional History Center"],"creator_ssm":["Ball, Arthur"],"creator_ssim":["Ball, Arthur"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Ball, Arthur"],"creators_ssim":["Ball, Arthur"],"access_terms_ssm":["Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. 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