Skip to main content

(5) Faculty and Staff, 1860-1965, undated

 Series

Scope and Contents

From the Record Group:

The Madison Kuhn collection consists of materials accumulated by Kuhn during his tenure as University Historian. This collection, which was drawn from his reference files, constitutes only a small portion of the total documentation which he donated to the Archives. A large number of manuscript materials have been transferred, based on their provenance, to other University Archives collections. This collection deals largely, but not exclusively, with the history of Michigan State University. Most of the records document the period 1855 to 1955. The bulk of the collection was originally organized in a single alphabetical subject file. To facilitate reference, the records have been divided into fourteen series relating to the following topics: University Activities, Non-University Activities, University Organizations, Non-University Organizations, Faculty and Staff, Alumni, Non-University People, University Buildings and Facilities, University Publications, Miscellaneous University-Related Records, Miscellaneous Non-University-Related Records, and Student Term Papers. In most cases, Kuhn's subject headings have been retained. Record types are indicated in the container listing only when one or two types predominate in a folder. His research notes and bibliography remain in their original order while the correspondence, scrapbook, and manuscript map series have been arranged chronologically. The series relating to "activities" consists of materials dealing with specific events not expressly identified with a particular organization. Generally, they include programs and/or brochures for both social and academic functions (for example, concerts, dances, dinners, lectures, special courses and extension work). The subject files relating to "organizations" may contain bylaws, reports, meeting minutes, newsletters, pamphlets, and membership lists. The university organizations consist largely of student run clubs involved in extracurricular activities, but also include faculty committees and service organizations of the university. Of particular interest in the "non-University organizations" series is an extensive collection of material relating to the MSC (Michigan State College) Post of the American Legion covering the years 1945 to 1950. Records primarily documenting the activities of individuals are found in the three subject files concerning "faculty and staff," "alumni," and "people not directly connected with the University." These files may consist of correspondence, newspaper clippings, publications, and biographical information. "Faculty and staff" include individuals who taught and/or served in an administrative capacity at Michigan State; "alumni," people who attended the university for any length of time, regardless of whether they eventually graduated. Materials in both series focus on the individuals' experiences at Michigan State and/or later accomplishments. Of particular significance in the files relating to non-university people are photocopies of the correspondence of several Michigan governors which discuss appropriations, agriculture, and other issues relating to Michigan State University. The "buildings and facilities" records document the planning, construction, and utilization of various university buildings. Two East Lansing buildings, People's Church and the city's oldest house, are also included. The correspondence, research notes, and bibliographic files are the only records in the collection which Kuhn himself created. His correspondence consists of exchanges with alumni, faculty, and staff which relate to research for his book on the history of the university, as well as contacts for the acquisition of materials relating to Michigan State. The research notes are of special value since they refer to the information on the university found in many different periodicals and newspapers. A listing of Kuhn's subject headings is given in the inventory. The extensive bibliographic file is divided into books, newspapers and periodicals and includes a year-by-year file of the Lansing Republican covering the period 1870 to 1893. Series 16 consists of twelve manuscript maps. Eight of the maps deal with a series of land grants in the Lansing area offered to the Executive Committee of the Michigan Agricultural Society in 1855. A 1940 map of the Lansing area shows the specific location of each grant. The remaining maps are of land owned by the university: the college lands, college farm, college swamp land and a survey of the college lawn. Series 17 contains 18 scrapbooks. Most were compiled by MAC (Michigan Agricultural College, now Michigan State) students and depict campus life and activities from 1870 to 1948. Five scrapbooks of newspaper clippings relate to the Samuel Johnson case, an 1889 dispute between Johnson, a professor of agriculture, and his students over problems of discipline. One documents the activities of the Natural History Society for the years 1876 to 1886.

Series 18 consists of volumes that primarily relate to the early history of the university. There are various account books and ledgers, faculty meeting minutes, inventories, student examinations, and copybooks of faculty correspondence. The volume series also contains membership lists and records of the Michigan State Agricultural Society and the Michigan Farmers Institutes. Series 19 consists of photographs including an oversize volume of campus photographs given to Franklin Wells in 1894. There is also a carte de visite of the Class of 1876 and senior photographs used in yearbooks for 1936, 1937 and 1940. There are also prints and corresponding negatives of Michigan State College from 1946 to 1947. Images include student activities and clubs including Student Veterans Wives League, Winged Spartans, and Spartan Wives, International Club activities as well as water carnival, dances, and ROTC. There also photographs of buildings including the canoe shelter, temporary classroom, interiors of Quonset huts, barrack apartment housing, and the sculptor working on the Physics and Astronomy building exterior artwork. Other topics include drama/ theater productions, human ecology activities, arrival of the Pershing tank, homecoming, and short courses.

Dates

  • Creation: 1860-1965, undated

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research. Grades are restricted and noted in finding aid.

Extent

From the Record Group: 14.2 Cubic Feet (, 57 volumes on shelf)

Language of Materials

From the Record Group: English

Repository Details

Part of the University Archives and Historical Collections Repository

Contact:
Conrad Hall
943 Conrad Road, Room 101
East Lansing MI 48824 US
517-355-2330