Summary Information
John S. Bordner Papers circa 1895-circa 1997
- Bordner, John S., 1877-1959
Mss 292; Audio 254A; PH 4679; M78-474; M86-088; M99-037
3.2 cubic feet (8 archives boxes) and 1 tape recording; plus additions of 1.2 cubic feet, 87 photographs, and 55 negatives
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)
Professional and personal papers of John S. Bordner, a prominent Wisconsin agriculturalist who was a county agricultural agent in St. Joseph County, Indiana, 1912-1919, who directed the Wisconsin Land Economic Inventory, and who maintained a lifelong interest in cooperatives. Included is correspondence, writings, financial records, recorded reminiscences, other papers, and photographs. English
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00292 ↑ Bookmark this ↑
Biography/History
John Serenus Bordner was born to John Bordner and Catherine Dohmer Bordner in York Township, Elkhart County, Indiana on February 23, 1877. He attended country schools in Indiana until the age of 18. In 1904, he received an A.B. from the University of Indiana where he majored in biology. After his graduation, Bordner taught biology in the Elwood, Indiana, high school for two years. One of his students in Elwood was Wendell Willkie, the Republican presidential candidate in 1940. In 1908, Bordner received his Ph.D. in plant physiology from the University of Michigan. During his university career, Bordner became an ardent follower of the Danish philosopher Bishop Grundtvig, a leader in the folk school and cooperative movement.
After receiving his doctorate, Bordner returned to his farm home in northern Indiana where he operated a plant and animal breeding station. Between 1908 and 1913, he specialized in corn hybridization. Because of his opposition to the regimentation he found in secondary schools, Bordner started a folk school in 1908. He ran the school for two years, receiving both local and national attention.
In 1912, Bordner became the county agricultural agent for St. Joseph County, Indiana. One of the first county agents in the country, Bordner served in this capacity until 1919. One of his first projects was to conduct a land inventory of St. Joseph County. The purpose of the survey was to determine which lands were most suitable for farming and the best types of crops to grow. In 1917, he organized the first county-wide Farm Bureau Cooperative in St. Joseph County. After seven years of work as a pioneer county agent, Bordner, in 1919, moved to a 260-acre farm near Glen Flora, Rusk County, Wisconsin.
In 1924, Bordner became the director of the Land Economic Inventory Division of the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture. Bordner occupied that post for twenty years, until his automatic (at age seventy) retirement in 1947. Due to Bordner's efforts, Wisconsin achieved the most complete land inventory in the country. Under Bordner's direction, the inventory compiled statistics on land use and drew up an enormous number of land use maps indicating soil types and the crops which could be best grown on them. The maps were very complete and detailed, showing both man-made (roads) and natural (springs, beaver dams) features.
Bordner was also largely responsible for the planting of an extensive white pine forest in Bayfield County. When Bordner became the land inventory director, there were about 1,000,000 barren acres in that county. Although local citizens said nothing worthwhile could grow there, Bordner tested the land and discovered white pine roots of timber long since felled by loggers. As a result, the federal government planted 55,000 acres of pine there. By the time of his retirement, the tract was yielding timber.
Bordner was a strong advocate of cooperatives throughout his life. He was the leading sponsor and first president of the Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association, which was incorporated in 1936. The Association, under Bordner's leadership, organized Crestwood, a cooperative housing project in Madison. The project consisted of about 50 homes, every one of which faced a park area. Bordner believed that such a rustic environment was far better for children to grow up in than the crowded conditions of many cities.
Bordner was active in many other cooperatives as well. At various times in his life he was a member and patron of the Ladysmith (Wisconsin) Milk Producers Cooperative, the Madison Oil Cooperative, the Madison Cleaners Cooperative, the Madison Consumers Cooperative Dairy, and the Insurance Cooperative Agency.
After his retirement Bordner devoted much of his time to studying the effect of sunspots and other solar phenomena on the weather and crop yields. He established the “Weather Forecasting Service” at his home in Crestwood, and in 1949 published a pamphlet entitled Sun, Energy and Weather.
Bordner married Stanta Dora Lung in June 1908. They had two children, Jean and Virginia Catherine. Bordner died in Madison on October 28, 1959 at the age of 82.
Scope and Content Note
The materials document Bordner’s personal life through extensive correspondence, reminiscences, financial records, notes, and writings; his interest in the First Congregational Church of Madison; and his interest in retirement in solar phenomena, weather, and its impact on agriculture. His papers include extensive correspondence with his daughter Jean and his wife, Stanta.
The materials concerning his professional activities document his early life as a county agricultural agent with field notes and clippings, but focus on his role as director of the Wisconsin Land Economic Inventory (1924-1947) and on the founding and development of the Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association (1936-1955), which organized the Crestwood housing development in Madison. Included are maps of Crestwood, newsletters, reports, correspondence, and financial records. The collection contains files on other Wisconsin cooperatives, related conventions and seminars, and extensive educational materials about the American cooperative movement, particularly the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Arrangement of the Materials
This collection was received in multiple parts from the donor(s) and is organized into 5 major parts. These materials have not been physically interfiled and researchers might need to consult more than one part to locate similar materials.
Administrative/Restriction Information
Presented by Virginia Bordner Martinson, Madison, Wisconsin; Mrs. John S. Bordner, Madison, Wisconsin; and Gayle J. Martinson, Madison, Wisconsin. Accession Number: M64-367, M78-474, M86-088, M99-037
Original Collection processed by C. Bowie (archives intern) and Joanne Hohler, April 18, 1974.
Contents List
Mss 292
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Part 1 (Mss 292, Audio 254A): Original Collection, 1903-19593.2 cubic feet (8 archives boxes) and 1 tape recording The John S. Bordner Papers contain both personal and professional materials including correspondence; subject files relating to Bordner's many interests and activities; copies and drafts of essays, articles and pamphlets; research notes and data; news clippings; magazine clippings; financial and tax records; reminiscences and biographical material; press releases; religious and church materials; maps and tables; various programs and notebooks; birth, marriage, and school records; and miscellaneous materials. The papers are organized into two main series, PERSONAL PAPERS and PROFESSIONAL PAPERS. The PERSONAL PAPERS are divided into seven subseries; the PROFESSIONAL PAPERS into fifteen. The PERSONAL PAPERS contain reminiscences and biographical material; incoming correspondence; financial and tax records; family records; and church and religious materials. In addition there are copies of Bordner's Ph.D. thesis and miscellaneous materials. The personal history materials include news clippings about Bordner's retirement and his obituary. There are also reminiscences written by Bordner in 1956-1957, described by him as “the story of my life in short episodes and not as a chronological narration.” Incoming personal correspondence, the second subseries, constitutes about half of the personal papers. It is organized by subject and chronologically thereunder. The majority of the correspondence is composed of letters and cards from Bordner's daughter Jean to her family during the period 1936-1948. Most of the other correspondence deals with the mortgage on and condition of Bordner's farm land in Rusk County between 1939 and 1947. There is also a small folder of incoming correspondence for Bordner's wife and some miscellaneous correspondence. Included in the financial records subseries are real estate receipts for Bordner's property in Dane and Rusk Counties. There are also copies of his income tax returns for the late 1930s and early 1940s and some miscellaneous receipts. The family records include retirement records, Bordner's birth certificate and marriage record, and a 1926 grade school transcript for Jean Bordner. The church affairs/religious materials contain some correspondence and a financial report about the First Congregational Church of Madison, of which Bordner was a member. There are also various study guides, Christmas messages from the Bordner family, notes, and miscellaneous items. The thesis subseries contains original drafts of Bordner's 1908 Ph.D. thesis as well as a reprint of it. The miscellaneous papers include programs, a partially completed daily calendar for 1950, a humorous “arrest” warrant, and an original poem by Jean Bordner (circa 1925). The PROFESSIONAL PAPERS contain general correspondence and other subseries on Bordner's activities and interests. The subseries which follow the correspondence are filed in a more or less chronological order, beginning with material on Bordner's days as a county agricultural agent in Indiana. Subsequent subseries contain materials on the Wisconsin Land Economic Inventory; the Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association; Wisconsin cooperatives; national/ out of state cooperatives; the 1935 state religious conference on the cooperative way of living; Kagawa day in Madison (1936); various other seminars/conventions on cooperatives; educational materials on cooperatives; the Tennessee Valley Authority; the sun and the weather; philosophical essays written after Bordner's retirement; general economic developments; and miscellaneous materials. The general correspondence covers the period 1934-52, with a few scattered items from 1929, 1954 and 1958. There is no correspondence for the years 1948 and 1953. The largest segment of the correspondence is for the period 1935-39. The correspondence is organized chronologically and alphabetically thereunder. The materials dealing with Bordner's days as an Indiana county agricultural agent include news clippings, a field notebook of sketches and agricultural information and a pamphlet on rural life compiled by Bordner. The Wisconsin Land Economic Inventory subseries includes a variety of articles, papers and speeches by Bordner. There are also materials indicating the general purposes of the Land Economic Inventory, subject files on various topics ranging from cranberry marshes to assistance to veterans, some correspondence regarding an agricultural bulletin (organized chronologically), county maps, statistics relative to Wisconsin, and miscellaneous materials. The Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association subseries contains general correspondence for 1936-38, 1940, 1945-46 (organized chronologically); materials relating to the establishment, organization and history of the Association and its Crestwood project; financial records and audits. In addition there are maps and directories of Crestwood, various subject files, some directors' newsletters and reports, general information on cooperative housing in the United States and Europe, and miscellaneous items. Included in the Wisconsin cooperatives subseries are materials on six different Wisconsin cooperatives. There is also general information about the Rural Electrification Administration in Wisconsin as well as reports on farm and oil cooperatives in the state and a 1935 mailing list of Wisconsin cooperatives. The national/out-of-state cooperatives subseries contains scattered material on two national cooperatives and three state or local cooperative organizations. The subseries dealing with the 1935 state religious conference on the cooperative way of living contains correspondence (organized chronologically) and files on planning, the conference program, and mailing lists. The Kagawa Day subseries is organized similarly to that on the 1935 state religious conference and, in addition, contains materials on Toyohiko Kagawa and his teachings and maps of Japan. The subseries on other cooperative seminars/conventions includes files on eight such conventions or seminars, most of which took place in the middle or late 1930s. Half of these conferences were held in Wisconsin. The educational materials subseries contains general educational materials on cooperatives, lesson plans, bibliographies of cooperative literature and published articles by Bordner. In addition there are notes on cooperatives, handbooks on Wisconsin cooperatives, information on overseas cooperatives and news clippings describing opposition to cooperatives. The TVA subseries contains pamphlets giving general information on the project and describing its accomplishments. There are also press releases and speeches and articles by TVA director Arthur Morgan. The sun and weather subseries includes numerous article drafts, drafts of and a copy of Bordner's 1949 pamphlet Sun, Energy and Weather, tables, charts, and maps. It also contains two folders of the correspondence of State Forester Williams Morris on sunspots and the forest fire hazard, scientific news clippings, a folder on planetary behavior, a manuscript on radiant energy and animal ecology, and miscellaneous materials. The philosophical essays subseries contains copies of two general papers written by Bordner after his retirement. The subseries dealing with general economic developments contains reports, news clippings, and magazine articles on economic trends and problems in the U.S. and other countries. The miscellaneous subseries includes scattered information on a wide variety of subjects covering the period 1934-1957.
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Series: Personal Papers
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Subseries: Personal History
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Box
1
Folder
1
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Biographical information, obituary, 1947, 1959
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Box
8
Folder
1
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Drafts of reminiscences, 1956-1957
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Audio 254A
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Reminiscences, March 2, 1956: Available online. : Concerning his experiences with the farm movement in Wisconsin in the early 1900s.
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Mss 292
Box
8
Folder
1
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Transcription of recorded reminiscences
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Subseries: Personal Correspondence
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Letters and cards from daughter Jean
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Box
1
Folder
2
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1926 February 1 item
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Box
1
Folder
3
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1936 October-December
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Box
1
Folder
4
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1937
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Box
1
Folder
5
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1938
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Box
1
Folder
6
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1939
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Box
1
Folder
7
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1940
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Box
1
Folder
8
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1941
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Box
1
Folder
9
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1942 January-July
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Box
1
Folder
10
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1943 September-December
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Box
1
Folder
11
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1944
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Box
1
Folder
12
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1945 January-November
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Box
1
Folder
13
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1946
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Box
1
Folder
14
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1947
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Box
1
Folder
15
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1948 January 1 item
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Box
1
Folder
16
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Incoming correspondence, mortgage on Rusk County farm land, 1939-1946
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Box
1
Folder
17
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Letters - from Mrs. Vern Davis on Rusk County farm land, 1943-1947
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Box
1
Folder
18
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Incoming correspondence, Mrs. Bordner, 1937, 1940-1941, 1948
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Box
1
Folder
19
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Miscellaneous incoming correspondence, 1928, 1937-1938, 1940-1941, 1944, 1947, 1954, undated
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Subseries: Financial Records
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Box
1
Folder
20
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Rusk County farm property, deeds, circulars, 1936-1937, 1940, 1945, undated
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Box
1
Folder
21
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Real estate tax receipts and statements, 1940-1946
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Box
1
Folder
22
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Wisconsin income tax returns, 1938-1939, 1941-1946, 1948
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Box
2
Folder
1
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Federal income tax returns, 1939-1940, 1944, 1947-1948
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Box
2
Folder
2
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Miscellaneous receipts and statements, 1941, 1944, 1947
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Subseries: Family Records
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Box
2
Folder
3
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Birth certificate, marriage record, 1946 Photostats
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Box
2
Folder
4
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Grade school transcript, Jean Bordner, 1926
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Box
2
Folder
5
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Retirement papers, 1947
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Subseries: Church Affairs/Religious Materials
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Box
2
Folder
6
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Correspondence, First Congregational Church of Madison, 1935
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Box
2
Folder
7
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Cooperative economics, 1935
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Box
2
Folder
8
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Missions seminar, 1955
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Box
2
Folder
9
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Financial report, First Congregational Church, 1956
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Box
2
Folder
10
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Christmas messages, 1953
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Box
2
Folder
11
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Study leaflets, China, Puerto Rico, Mexico, 1948-1950
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Box
2
Folder
12
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World peace, 1950-1952, undated
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Box
2
Folder
13
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Christian social action, 1957-1958, undated
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Box
2
Folder
14
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Study guides, Stewardship, World Task, Worship, 1955, 1958, undated
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Box
2
Folder
15
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Evangelism, spiritual life, 1956, 1958-1959, undated
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Box
2
Folder
16
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Notes
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Box
2
Folder
17
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Miscellaneous
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Box
2
Folder
18
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Subseries: Thesis: drafts and reprint of Ph.D. thesis, 1908
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Subseries: Miscellaneous
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Box
2
Folder
19
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Original poem, Jean Bordner, circa 1925
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Box
2
Folder
20
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Programs, brochures, 1903, 1936, 1940, 1943-1944
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Box
2
Folder
21
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Humorous “arrest warrant,” 1944
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Box
2
Folder
22
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Daily calendar, 1950
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Series: Professional Papers
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Subseries: General Correspondence
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Box
2
Folder
23
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1929-1934 2 items
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1935-1939
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Box
2
Folder
24
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Alanne-Crews
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Box
2
Folder
25
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Edwards-Halonen
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Box
2
Folder
26
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Hammerschmidt-Knapp
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Box
2
Folder
27
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Ladwig-Voltz
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Box
3
Folder
1
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Warbasse-Wood
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Box
3
Folder
2
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1940-1944, Bird-Warbasse
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Box
3
Folder
3
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1945-1947, Black-Wisconsin Association of Cooperatives
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Box
3
Folder
4
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1949-1952, Derlinger-Munch
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Box
3
Folder
5
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1954, 1958 2 items
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Box
3
Folder
6
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Undated general correspondence
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Subseries: St. Joseph County, Indiana, Agricultural Agent
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Box
3
Folder
7
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Field notebook, 1913-1919
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Box
3
Folder
8
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“Rural Life Progress Report,” pamphlet, compiled by Bordner, 1918
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Subseries: Wisconsin Land Economic Inventory
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Box
3
Folder
9
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General purposes, 1938, undated
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Box
3
Folder
10
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“And Where Do We Go From Here,” 1928
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Box
3
Folder
11
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“Evaluation of Land In Terms of Human Utilization,” 1930
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Box
3
Folder
12
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“Land Utilization Based on a Land Inventory,” 1930
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Box
3
Folder
13
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“The Use of Wisconsin Land,” 1935
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Box
3
Folder
14
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“Why Soil Erosion,” 1938
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Box
3
Folder
15
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“Theory of Land Use and Taxation,” 1938
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Box
3
Folder
16
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“Rural Change,” 1939
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Box
3
Folder
17
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“Land and Population,” 1939
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Box
3
Folder
18
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“Inventory of Wisconsin Lands,” 1940
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Box
3
Folder
19
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“Trends in Wisconsin Land Use,” 1940, 1942, undated
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Box
3
Folder
20
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“Schools in Northern Counties,” undated
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Box
3
Folder
21
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“When Is a Wilderness Despoiled,” undated
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Box
3
Folder
22
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“Land, Its Use and Appraisal,” undated
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Box
3
Folder
23
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Tenancy and the rural church, 1937
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Box
3
Folder
24
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Cut-over area of Wisconsin, 1939, undated
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Box
3
Folder
25
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Roadside Development Council, 1940
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Box
4
Folder
1
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Farm size, 1940, undated
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Box
4
Folder
2
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Assistance to veterans, 1946, undated
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Box
4
Folder
3
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Correspondence regarding bulletin #238, December 1943-May 1944
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Box
4
Folder
4
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Cranberry marshes, 1947, undated
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Box
4
Folder
5
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Postwar food supplies, 1947, undated
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Box
4
Folder
6
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Press releases, 1947
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Box
4
Folder
7
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Recreation in Wisconsin, 1937, 1951, undated
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Box
4
Folder
8
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Forage crops, pasture lands, undated
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Box
4
Folder
9
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Rural planning, undated
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Box
4
Folder
10
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Trees and erosion, undated
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Box
4
Folder
11
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WPA Land Mapping Project, undated
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Box
4
Folder
12
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Wisconsin area and population statistics, undated
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Box
4
Folder
13
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County maps, undated
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Box
4
Folder
14
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Miscellaneous materials, 1947, undated
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Subseries: Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association
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General correspondence
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Box
4
Folder
15
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1936-1938
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Box
4
Folder
16
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1940, 1945-1946 2 items
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Box
4
Folder
17
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Establishment, organization, 1936, undated
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Box
4
Folder
18
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History, 1939, undated
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Box
8
Folder
2
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Financial records, audits, annual statements, 1937-1942, 1946-1947, 1951, undated
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Box
4
Folder
19
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Newsletters, 1937, 1938, undated
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Box
4
Folder
20
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Federal Housing Administration, 1936-1937, undated
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Box
4
Folder
21
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Building construction, Crestwood, 1937, undated
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Box
4
Folder
22
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Utility installation, Crestwood, undated
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Box
4
Folder
23
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Layout maps, Crestwood, 1937, undated
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Box
8
Folder
3
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Surveyor's map of Crestwood subdivision, 1937
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Box
4
Folder
24
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Crestwood Christmases, 1938, 1941
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Box
4
Folder
25
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Stockholders meeting, 1941
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Box
4
Folder
26
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Crestwood directories, 1947, undated
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Box
4
Folder
27
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Parks and recreation, 1942, 1945, 1951, 1953-1955
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Box
4
Folder
28
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Board of Directors report, 1951
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Box
4
Folder
29
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Glen Oaks, 1951
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Box
4
Folder
30
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Cooperative housing, United States, Europe, 1937, undated
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Box
4
Folder
31
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Miscellaneous, 1936-1938, 1950-1951, undated
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Subseries: Wisconsin Cooperatives
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Box
5
Folder
1
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Rural Electrification Administration, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1947, undated
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Box
5
Folder
2
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Oil cooperatives in Wisconsin, 1933-1935
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Box
5
Folder
3
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Farmer cooperatives in Wisconsin, 1941
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Box
5
Folder
4
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Mailing list of Wisconsin cooperatives, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
5
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Waukegan Cooperative Trading Company, circa 1935
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Box
5
Folder
6
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Central Cooperative Wholesale, 1936-1937, undated
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Box
5
Folder
7
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Insurance Cooperative Agency, 1937, 1945-1946, 1949, 1953, undated
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Box
5
Folder
8
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Madison Consumers Cooperative, 1942, undated
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Box
5
Folder
9
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Dairyland Power Cooperative, 1947, 1953, undated
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Box
5
Folder
10
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Madison Consumers League, constitution and bylaws, undated
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Subseries: National/Out-of-State Cooperatives
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Box
5
Folder
11
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The Cooperative League of the U.S.A., 1935
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Box
5
Folder
12
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Indiana Farm Bureau Cooperative Association, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
13
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Westchester Federation of Consumers Clubs, 1939
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Box
5
Folder
14
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Farmers Union programs, Louisiana, North Dakota, 1939
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Box
5
Folder
15
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Cooperative Health Federation of America, undated
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Subseries: , 1935 state religious conference on the Cooperative Way of Living
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Box
5
Folder
16
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General correspondence, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
17
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Planning, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
18
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Program, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
19
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Mailing lists, 1935
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Subseries: Kagawa Day in Madison, 1936
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Box
5
Folder
20
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General correspondence, 1936
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Box
5
Folder
21
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Planning and publicity, 1936
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Box
5
Folder
22
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Program, 1936
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Box
5
Folder
23
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Mailing lists, 1936
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Box
5
Folder
24
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Federal Council of Churches and Kagawa, 1936, 1938
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Box
5
Folder
25
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Kagawa teachings, 1936, 1938, undated
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Box
5
Folder
26
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Japan, maps, undated
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Subseries: Seminars/Conventions on Cooperatives
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Box
5
Folder
27
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Northern League Convention, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
28
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Indiana seminar on consumers cooperation, 1935-1936
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Box
5
Folder
29
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Economics of Brotherhood conference, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
30
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Wisconsin Cooperative Club, 1935
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Box
5
Folder
31
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Wisconsin Institute of Cooperative Economics, 1935-1936
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Box
6
Folder
1
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Anders Hedberg program on cooperation, 1935
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Box
6
Folder
2
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School of Living Conference, 1937
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Box
6
Folder
3
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Wisconsin Association of Cooperatives, 1956
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Subseries: Educational Materials on Cooperatives
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Box
6
Folder
4
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General educational materials, 1933, 1935-1937, 1946, undated
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Box
6
Folder
5
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Lesson plans and instructional materials, 1936, 1941, 1946, undated
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Box
6
Folder
6
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Handbooks on cooperatives and cooperation, undated
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Box
6
Folder
7
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Articles by Bordner on cooperation, 1936, undated
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Box
6
Folder
8
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Bibliographies of cooperative literature, 1935, undated
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Box
6
Folder
9
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Notes on cooperatives, undated
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Box
6
Folder
10
|
Opposition to cooperatives, 1936, undated
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|
Box
6
Folder
11
|
Cooperatives overseas, undated
|
|
|
Subseries: Tennessee Valley Authority
|
|
Box
6
Folder
12
|
General information, 1933-1934, undated
|
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Box
6
Folder
13
|
Accomplishments, 1934-1935, 1941, 1947, undated
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Box
6
Folder
14
|
Press releases, 1933-1934, 1939, 1940
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|
Box
6
Folder
15
|
Arthur Morgan, speeches, articles, 1933-1934
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|
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Subseries: The Sun and the Weather
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Box
6
Folder
16
|
Drafts of Sun, Energy and Weather, 1949
|
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Box
6
Folder
17
|
Sunspots and crops, article drafts, notes, 1948, undated
|
|
Box
6
Folder
18-19
|
Sunspots and climatic conditions, article drafts, 1947, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
1
|
General correspondence of William Morris (forester of Land Economic Inventory) on sunspots, 1945-1948
|
|
Box
7
Folder
2
|
Correspondence of William Morris regarding article on forest fires and the sunspot cycle, 1946-1947
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|
Box
7
Folder
3
|
Sunspot cycle charts, 1834-1944
|
|
Box
7
Folder
4
|
Precipitation tables for Wisconsin, 1837-1950
|
|
Box
7
Folder
5
|
Runoff tables for Wisconsin, 1914-1948
|
|
Box
7
Folder
6
|
Tables, sunspots, temperature, and rainfall, 1914-1948
|
|
Box
7
Folder
7
|
Water level discharge tables, 1946-4198
|
|
Box
7
Folder
8
|
Ionospheric data, 1949
|
|
Box
7
Folder
9
|
Daily solar indices tables, 1957-1959
|
|
Box
7
Folder
10
|
Zurich sunspot numbers, 1951-1952, 1958
|
|
Box
7
Folder
11
|
Isochrone map, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
12
|
Manuscript, “The Role of Radiant Energy in Animal Ecology,” circa 1947
|
|
Box
7
Folder
13
|
Clement Wragge, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
14
|
Planetary behavior, 1949
|
|
Box
7
Folder
15
|
Miscellaneous clippings on scientific subjects, 1946-1954, undated
|
|
|
Subseries: Philosophical Essays
|
|
Box
7
Folder
16
|
“The Philosopher's Job,” 1945
|
|
Box
7
Folder
17
|
“The World of Tomorrow Through Democratic Gradualism,” 1951
|
|
|
Subseries: General Economic Developments
|
|
Box
7
Folder
18
|
America and postwar economic conditions, 1942, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
19
|
Overseas economic developments, 1946-1947, 1950-1951, 1953-1954, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
20
|
Foundation for the Study of Cycles, 1949
|
|
|
Subseries: Miscellaneous
|
|
Box
7
Folder
21
|
Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation Act, 1934
|
|
Box
7
Folder
22
|
Social Science Research Council, 1935
|
|
Box
7
Folder
23
|
American Society of Planning Officials, 1935
|
|
Box
7
Folder
24
|
Teaching methods, 1936-1938
|
|
Box
7
Folder
25
|
Abraham Lincoln, 1943
|
|
Box
7
Folder
26
|
World government, 1946-1947
|
|
Box
7
Folder
27
|
Atomic bomb control, 1945, 1947
|
|
Box
7
Folder
28
|
Traffic safety, 1951
|
|
Box
7
Folder
29
|
George Washington Carver, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
30
|
Clippings and miscellaneous, 1938, 1941, 1947, 1957, undated
|
|
PH 4679
|
Part 2 (PH 4679): Additions, circa 1913 11 photographs : Photographs related to work Bordner participated in as county agricultural agent in St. Joseph County, Indiana, circa 1913. Images include groups of people inspecting agricultural fields and livestock.
|
|
M78-474
|
Part 3 (M78-474): Additions, 1900-1959 0.6 cubic feet (2 archives boxes) : Includes college notebooks (1900-1904), personal papers while county agent (1914-1919), personal writings, and papers regarding the Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association.
|
|
Box
1
Folder
1
|
County agent, St. Joseph County, South Bend, Indiana – papers, 1913-1919
|
|
Box
1
Folder
2
|
Notes and correspondence from attendance at University of Michigan while studying for Ph.D., 1906-1908
|
|
Box
1
Folder
3-4
|
Notebooks from attendance at Indiana University, 1900-1904
|
|
Box
2
Folder
1
|
Personal papers and writings, 1922-1959, undated
|
|
Box
2
Folder
2
|
Wisconsin Cooperative Housing Association, 1951-1957, undated
|
|
M86-088
|
Part 4 (M86-088): Additions, circa 1895-1956 0.4 cubic feet (1 archives box), 59 photographs, and 55 negatives : Materials, circa 1895-1956, concerning and created by Bordner’s wife, Stanta Lung Bordner. Included are school exercise books, postcards, clippings, photographs of family members, and other items.
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M99-037
|
Part 5 (M99-037): Additions, circa 1997 17 photographs : Photographs, circa 1997, of John Bordner’s cottage, “Brookside,” near Glen Flora, Wisconsin, designed and built by the Bordners circa 1916. The structure is located on Main Creek about a mile from the old townsite of Walrath. Many of the Craftsman-style furnishings in the photographs are original to the cabin, some built by Bordner and others brought from Indiana. All photographs by Gayle Martinson.
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