ARCHIVES, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
Boston Symphony Orchestra
The BSO Archives
Symphony Hall
Boston MA 02115
617-638-9434
Hours of operation: By appointment only
The BSO Archives: Preserving the Treasures of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
Where can you find correspondence between BSO founder Henry Lee Higginson
and Sir George Grove (of music dictionary fame)? reviews of Seiji Ozawa's
very first conducting appearance with the BSO? a program book from the
first BSO concerts in the Berkshires? Serge Koussevitzky's speeches for
the annual opening exercises of the Berkshire Music Center (now the Tanglewood
Music Center)? posters from BSO international tours? newspaper accounts
of Arthur Fiedler's first Esplanade concert in 1929? All this and more
can be found in the Boston Symphony Orchestra Archives at Symphony Hall.
The Archives preserves the orchestra's rich history with documentation
in the form of concert programs, press clippings, posters, photographs,
original letters, paintings, broadcast tapes, recordings and films as
well as the BSO's collection of historic musical instruments.
The
Mary Baker Eddy Library
The Mary Baker Eddy Library houses the largest multi-disciplinary collection
of an American woman ever assembled under one roof. On four floors, state-of-the-art
library and archival facilities feature Mary Baker Eddy's published and
unpublished writings, including thousands of pages of her manuscripts,
letters and correspondence, and related documents.The Library also houses:
- Over 7,000 three-dimensional artifacts
- About 8,000 historic photographs
- Over 400 editions of Mary Baker
Eddy's principal work, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures
- A valuable reference library of 10,000 volumes covering contemporary and
historical issues including spirituality and healing, women in American
religious leadership, and other topics within the Library's areas of
focus.
The Library's collection is publicly available to visitors, scholars
and researchers in the reference library, which includes copies of archival
documents, photographs, and artifacts, as well as a computerized catalogue
of the collection. Access to the original primary source material is also
available by appointment in the research library. For more information
about the archival collection, visit The Library online at http://www.marybakereddylibrary.org
Mass College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences
Institutional Archives
617-732-2803
Massachusetts Historical Society
1154 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02215
(617) 536-1608
The Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS) is a major research library
and manuscript repository. Its holdings encompass millions of rare and
unique documents and artifacts vital to the study of American history,
many of them irreplaceable national treasures. A few examples include
correspondence between John and Abigail Adams, such as her famous "remember
the ladies" letter (view letter); several imprints of the Declaration
of Independence; and the pen that Abraham Lincoln used to sign the Emancipation
Proclamation.
Museum of Fine Arts
Museum Archives
465 Huntington Avenue
Boston MA 02115
617-369-3378
Museum admission is not required for access to the Museum Archives.
The Museum Archives was founded in 1987. The Archives contains more 1,000
cubic feet of historically significant records from the museum's administrative
and curatorial departments dating from 1870 to the present. The Archives
also houses a portion of the archival records from the School of the Museum
of Fine Arts.
Museum School Archives
617-369-3650
Hours of operation: By appointment only.
Simmons College
The Simmons College Archives and Special Collections
300 The Fenway
Boston, MA
617-521-2268
617-521-2440
Email College Archivist claire.goodwin@simmons.edu
Hours of operation:
Monday - Thursday: 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
Friday: by appointment only
Saturday and Sunday: closed
The Simmons College Archives and Special Collections Department was established
in 1974 to collect, preserve, and organize the historic records of Simmons
College. In 1980, the Archives was dedicated to the memory of Colonel
Miriam E. Perry Goll ('30). Simmons College was founded in 1902 "to furnish
to women instruction and training in such branches of art, science, and
industry as may be serviceable in enabling them to acquire a livelihood."
The Archives and Special Collections holdings reflect the unique professional
character of the College and its early commitment to training women in
nursing, secretarial/management work, retailing, library science, social
work, home economics and teaching. The department is open to students,
faculty, alumnae, and other interested researchers.
Wentworth Institute of Technology
The Wentworth Archives
Huntington Avenue
Room 208M on the Mezzanine floor of Beatty Hall
Hours of Operation: Wednesday and Thursday 5:30pm-10:00pm and a half-day
on Saturday.
Established by the Alumni library in 1982 to collect, describe and preserve
the administrative and historically valuable records of the Institute.
The Archives also maintains the official records of the engineering technology
division of ASEE and the Fenway Libraries Online (FLO).
The Archives collections provide information on the Institute's teaching,
faculty, administrators, alumni, campus buildings and development, and
student life. All permanent records received by the Wentworth Archives
are maintained in collections according to who created them whether that
is a college office or department, a faculty member, an association or
a private individual.
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