Search

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Subjects Poets Remove constraint Subjects: Poets

Search Results

Barrett Minor Literary collection, 1802/1944

0.5 Cubic Feet
Abstract Or Scope

McDonell asks the merchants to forward his enclosed letters (not present) to Lord Selkirk and two to New York.

1 result

Barrett Minor Literary collection, 1802/1944 0.5 Cubic Feet

Collection of documentaries on Anne Spencer's garden, 2008

2 Cassettes 2 VHS tapes
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains two VHS tapes titled "Anne Spencer: Echoes from the Garden" and a segment from "Garden story with Rebecca Frischkorn" titled "Anne Spencer Garden." The documentaries focus on the impact and importance of Spencer's garden to herself, her community, and other artists and writers.

1 result

Collection of documentaries on Anne Spencer's garden, 2008 2 Cassettes 2 VHS tapes

Flame & Frost poem, 1971

0.03 Cubic Feet 1 letter-sized file folder
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains a handwritten poem written by Joan St. C. Crane based on her experiences of compiling the works of poet Robert Frost. It was written at the University of Virginia in the Fall of 1971. Alongside the poem in the collection is a catalogue card outlining the work's title, author, and subject matter.

1 result

Flame & Frost poem, 1971 0.03 Cubic Feet 1 letter-sized file folder

George and Ellen Frost collection of Robert Frost materials, 1919/1962

0.2 Cubic Feet One letter-sized half-width document box
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains letters, Christmas cards, a magazine, a family genealogy, a book, and other ephemera relating to Robert Frost, compiled by his cousin, George Frost, and his wife, Ellen. The content spans the period from 1919 to 1962. There are four manuscript letters sent by Robert Frost to either Ellen or George: Robert to Ellen, 1919; Robert to George, 1938; Robert to Ellen, 1951; Robert to "Mrs. Frost," 1939. The envelope for a 1938 letter to George Frost from Robert is included, but contains no letter. Also present is a 1939 letter to Ellen Frost from Kathleen J. Morrison, who was charged with "taking care of Robert's letters for him [that] winter" and an undated and unmarked postcard of the Frost family farmhouse in New Hampshire. In addition to the correspondence, there is a Dartmouth College Alumni Magazine dated March 1959 featuring Robert Frost on its cover, sixteen printed Christmas greeting poems by Frost, dating from 1934 to 1962, a funeral notice for Elinor Frost, letters from publishers inviting George and Ellen to readings of Frost's poetry, a handwritten Frost family genealogy, and a signed copy of "New Hampshire," a 1955 poem by Frost.

1 result

George and Ellen Frost collection of Robert Frost materials, 1919/1962 0.2 Cubic Feet One letter-sized half-width document box

Louis H. Draper Artist Archives (VA-04), 1945/2005

37.5 Linear Feet 170 boxes; 6,605 items
Abstract Or Scope
The extensive collection documents the life and work of Richmond-born photographer and educator Louis Draper (1935–2002). Manuscript and photographic materials document Draper's experience and work as an African American photographer, including his recognition of his photography as a form of "engaged resistance" that not only bore witness to leaders of the civil rights movement, but also offered a richer and more diverse perspective of African American life than provided by the mainstream media. In 1963, he was a founding member of the Kamoinge Workshop, a collective of African American photographers, and the collection includes significant materials from the early years of the Kamoinge Workshop and document his perspective on the professional challenges that he and the collective confronted in the process of finding publications that would publish photographs of African Americans made by African Americans. His photographs of significant 20th-century artists, writers, musicians, and performers reflect the wide array of personal connections that Draper made after moving to New York from Richmond, Virginia in 1957. Printed photographs and contact sheets in Draper's archive show a broad view of city life and the everyday interactions between people and also offer a unique vision of African American neighborhoods in the 1960s and 1970s.

Langston Hughes photograph, 1943

.03 Cubic Feet 1 letter folder
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains a single black-and-white photograph of Langston Hughes, noted American poet and leader of the Harlem Renaissance.

1 result

Langston Hughes photograph, 1943 .03 Cubic Feet 1 letter folder

William Cullen Bryant papers, 1872

.03 Cubic Feet
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains a letter from William Cullen Bryant, American poet, journalist, and longtime editor of the New York Evening Post, to Elizabeth Oakes Smith, poet and essayist. In 1872 Bryant made a speech in New York on May 22 at the dedication of John Quincey Adams Ward's statue of Shakespeare on the Mall in Central Park. Here, a week after the speech, Bryant acknowledges Mrs. Oakes Smith's praise: "I completed it in the hope that it might not altogether displease such judges as yourself, and having succeeded in that, my ambition is fully gratified."

3 results

William Cullen Bryant letter to Elizabeth Oakes Smith addition (ViU-2022-0070), 1872 0.04 Cubic Feet One folder (Barrett boxes vault) Folder 1

William Cullen Bryant papers, 1872 .03 Cubic Feet

McDonald Clarke collection, 1815/1837

0.16 Cubic Feet Four legal file folders
Abstract Or Scope

This collection of McDonald Clarke papers contains one autograph poem titled "Midnight" from 1815, an undated manuscript poem fragment beginning "They tell me we shall never meet" from Clarke's Afara; receipts for the sale of books to William Gowans from Clarke dated October 28, 1837, and from Francis G. Dorr, dated October 25, 1837; and an undated lithograph of the head and upper torso of Clarke.

1 result

McDonald Clarke collection, 1815/1837 0.16 Cubic Feet Four legal file folders

Robert Anbian papers, 1974/2022

5.35 Cubic Feet 13 document boxes, one medium oversized flat box
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains the papers of poet, author, publisher, and political activist Robert White Anbian (1949-2022). Anbian graduated from the University of Virginia in 1971, after which he spent three years in Niger with the Peace Corps from 1974 to 1977. He then relocated to San Francisco, where he worked as a writer and poet until his death. From 1985 to 1996, Robert served as the editor of the monthly Film Arts Foundation magazine, Release Print, and the publicist for an independent filmmaker education and advocacy group. He founded his own publishing house, Night Horn Books. Anbian published three poetry collections: WE Parts 1 & 2 (Night Horn Books, 1999), Antinostalgia (Ruddy Duck Press, 1992), and Bohemian Airs & Other Kêfs (Night Horn Books, 1982).

1 result

Robert Anbian papers, 1974/2022 5.35 Cubic Feet 13 document boxes, one medium oversized flat box

Academic Departments - Record Group 9

x Linear Feet
Abstract Or Scope

This record group contains materials created by individual academic departments.

2 results

Content Warning

ARVAS is an aggregator of archival resources. ARVAS does not have control of the descriptive language used in our members’ finding aids.

Finding aids may contain historical terms and phrases, reflecting the shared attitudes and values of the community from which they were collected, but are offensive to modern readers. These include demeaning and dehumanizing references to race, ethnicity, and nationality; enslaved or free status; physical or mental ability; religion; sex; and sexual orientation and gender identity.

Many institutions and organizations are in the process of reviewing and revising their descriptive language, with the intent to describe materials in more humanizing, inclusive, and harm-reductive ways. As members revise their descriptive language, their changes will eventually be reflected in their ARVAS finding aids.