Websites with information:
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/allRMC.html
http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/r/rmc/afram.html
Finding aids:
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM08084BMT.html
http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=rmc;cc=rmc;rgn=Entire20%25Finding20%25Aid
;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=RMM08084BMT.xml;focusrgn=allscopecontent
[0134] A. Helen Anderson Collection, 1950-1969, M016
Location: Special Collections & Archives, Penrose Library, University of Denver, 2150 East Evans Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80208
Description: A. Helen Anderson (1891-1975) served as Director of Publications for Denver Public Schools, Denver, CO, from 1929 to 1956. The A. Helen Anderson Collection consists of newspaper clippings, editorials, and correspondence assembled during her tenure as Director of Publications. These materials cover attacks on the public schools and other controversies during the McCarthy Era of the 1950's, as well as busing and desegregation in the Denver Public Schools during the 1960's. The collection also includes correspondence regarding the National Council for American Education, and its organizer Allen Zoll, 1950-1953, and a bibliography of materials concerning attacks on public education.
Websites with information:
http://library.du.edu/collections-archives/specialcollections/collection-list.html
http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/scguides.cfm
Finding aids:
http://digital.library.du.edu/findingaids/view?docId=ead/m016.xml
http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/Anderson/
[0135] Jack Anderson papers, 1930-2004 (Bulk, 1969-2004), MS2001
Location: Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University, 2130 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20052
Description: This collection includes articles, correspondence, index cards, book manuscripts, notes, government documents, legal documents, reports, scripts, photographs, drawings, audiovisual recordings, and artifacts that document the professional and, to a lesser extent, personal life of investigative journalist Jack Anderson (1922-2005). Topics of particular interest represented in Anderson's columns include fugitive Nazis, the activities of the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover, and the Liberty Lobby and other far-right organizations. Files on anti-Semitism, Richard Arens, Harry Byrd, Willis Carto, Roy Cohn, Communism, Richard Cotten, James Eastland, Alger FBI Files—Hiss, Fluoridation, Barry Goldwater, Hate, Jesse Helms, J. Edgar Hoover, Craig Hosmer, House Un-American Activities Committee, H.L. Hunt, John Birch Society, Jack Kemp, Ku Klux Klan, Fulton Lewis, Liberty Lobby, Life Line, Trent Lott, Joseph McCarthy, Militia movement, National Youth Alliance, Nazi underground - South America, Nazis, Neo-Nazis, Oliver North, Otto Otepka, Wright Patman, Pearson v. McCarthy files, Right-wing literature, Right wing infiltration, Right wing, Robertson ("Pat") v. McCloskey, Gerald L.K. Smith, John Stennis, Herman Talmadge, The Right, Strom Thurmond, John G. Tower, James Utt, Richard Viguerie, George Wallace, Francis Parker Yockey, and Allen Zoll.
Websites with information:
https://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title
http://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title
Finding aid:
http://library.gwu.edu/ead/ms2001.xml
[0135a] James Austin Anderson papers, 1898-1941, MSS.0078 [digital collection]
Location: W.S. Hoole Special Collections Library, The University of Alabama, Mary Harmon Bryant Hall, 500 Hackberry Lane, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266
Description: James Austin Anderson (1871-1941) was postmaster of Tuscaloosa and the first archivist of the University of Alabama. The collection consists of copies of newspaper clippings and information about Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and its people. The category Tuscaloosa Ku Klux Klan contains copies of Reconstruction and the Klan, compiled by James A. Anderson, circa 1930, and the chapter "In Tuscaloosa," from When the Ku Klux Rode, by Eyre Damer, 1912.
Finding aid:
http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/legacy/u0003_0000078.xml
[0136] James Douglas Anderson Papers, 1854-[1888-1948]-1951, THS 379
Location: Tennessee Historical Society, Tennessee State Library and Archives, 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312
Description: Anderson (1867-1948), a southern Democrat, was a reporter and editorial writer who believed in the superiority of the white race and was firmly dedicated to the continuance of strict racial purity. He was opposed to the New Deal programs of Franklin Roosevelt, federal aid to public schools, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the League of Nations, woman's suffrage, Northern behavior toward the South, the proposed repeal of the poll tax, and the deterioration of society in general. The papers consist of articles, correspondence, a diary, memoirs, accounts, genealogical data, legal documents, pictures, court records, land records, newspaper contributions, and notes on various subjects. Correspondents include Theodore G. Bilbo. Also included are newsletters from the Economic Council and the Pennsylvania Sons of the American Revolution. Contains a copy of Anderson's article "Abraham Lincoln and White Supremacy" (1945).
Finding aids:
http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf
http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf
http://state.tn.us/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf
[0137] Mary Anderson papers, 1918-1960
Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138
Description: Mary Anderson (1872-1964) was director of the Women's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor from 1920 to 1944. This collection consists mainly of correspondence with labor leaders and others on such topics as equal rights, protective legislation, organization of women workers, and Women's Bureau activities; also correspondence and printed material concerning right-wing accusations of Communist infiltration of women's organizations, and blacklisting of Anderson and others by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Section 2. Accusations of Radicalism (frames 188-395 of the microfilm edition), consists of correspondence, plus some clippings and pamphlets, relating mainly to two episodes: the publication of a pair of articles in Henry Ford's Dearborn Independent in March 1924 [Ford, "Are Women's Clubs 'Used' by Bolshevists?" Dearborn Independent, March 15, 1924, p. 2 [reprinted in Antifeminism in America: a reader: a collection of readings from the literature of the opponents to U.S. feminism, 1848 to the present, edited with introductions by Angela Howard and Sasha Ranaé Adams Tarrant (New York, Garland Pub., 2000)]; "Why Don't Women Investigate Propaganda?" Dearborn Independent, March 22, 1924, p. 1] alleging vast radical influence upon American women's organizations and including the statement that Anderson had had the federal government print a "program of Women's and Children's Work" that was "identical with" one proposed by "the director of welfare in Soviet Russia"; and the circulation within the Daughters of the American Revolution of a "blacklist" of alleged radicals in which Anderson was listed as a "socialist."
Reference:
Directory of Manuscript Collections Related to Federal Judges, 1789-1997. Compiled by Peter A. Wonders (Federal Judicial History Office, Federal Judicial Center, 1998), p. 6, http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.nsf/lookup/judms
dir.pdf/$file/judmsdir.pdf and http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.nsf/f385048e0431aa3c8525679e0055d35c/2
aca63df6e927c7485256a870045907f/$FILE/JudMsDir.pdf
Websites with information:
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