MAN. Manuscript Collections
Found in 600 Collections and/or Records:
Kemp family manuscript collection
This collection contains the correspondence and financial, legal, and genealogical records of the Kemp family, especially that of Thomas and John W. Kemp.
Kenneth Elsworth Stewart collection
King family papers
This collection contains the papers, deeds, correspondence, and receipts of various members of the King family and others.
Klots family papers
This collection is primarily the incoming correspondence of Agnes Klots (1879-1936) written to her by her husband Alfred Partridge Klots (1875-1939) and their son Trafford Partridge Klots (1913-1976), both of whom were internationally known artists.
Klots family papers supplement
This collection consists of exhibition catalogs, newspaper clippings, photographic materials, some correspondence, and two scrapbooks related to the Klots family. It primarily contains materials focusing on Trafford Partridge Klots' (1913-1976) career as an artist, spanning from the 1950s to the 1970s.
Ladies Relief of the Free Summer Excursion Society manuscript collection
This collection contains annual reports for the Free Summer Excursion Society and a minute book for the Ladies Relief.
Larry C. Rodda collection
This collection contains the public and private papers of Baltimore artist Lawrence C. Rodda (1902-1989).
Larry Kamanitz collection
This collection contains manuscript items, photographs, and ephemera related to anti-Vietnam War efforts and 1960s political culture. There are also prints by Baltimore political activist and artist Thomas Lewis, a member of the Baltimore Four and Catonsville Nine.
Latrobe-Swann family manuscript collection
Contains the personal correspondence of members of the Latrobe and Swann families. The majority of these letters were written to Ellen Penrose Swann Latrobe from her sons, Sherlock and Thomas Swann III.
Laurence Ewald, Jr. papers
Contains predominantly project files of Laurence Ewald’s architectural work in Baltimore and Harford Counties and Baltimore, Maryland from the 1930’s to the 1970’s. Ewald’s work was mainly residential, and documentation for most projects consists of specifications, contracts, and correspondence.