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GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee | Title: GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee Records, 1968-1971 Quantity: 1.2 c.f. (3 archives boxes) and 6 photographs Call Number: Mss 486; PH Mss 486 Abstract: Records of the GI Civil Liberties Committee, an organization (1968-1971?) which defended the constitutional liberties of members of the military who opposed U.S. involvement in the war in Vietnam. Included are correspondence, press materials, and research files on the legal cases with which GICLDC was involved. The legal files consist of military forms, statements and affidavits, clippings, letters of support and other correspondence (including two letters from Bella S. Abzug and George S. McGovern). They best represent the case of the members of GIs United Against the War in Vietnam known as the “Fort Jackson 8.” Also present are good records of the litigation concerning Edmund Jurenas, Joseph D. Miles, and Allen Myers. Internal correspondence is generally routine, though it includes interesting exchanges between the national staff and lawyer Leonard B. Boudin, numerous individual soldiers, and committee sponsor Ruth Gage-Colby. |
Gibault, Michèle | Title: Michèle Gibault Papers, 1969-1977 Quantity: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box) Call Number: Mss 564 Abstract: Photocopied documents collected by Michèle Gibault, professor at the Universite de Picardie, Amiens, France, during the course of her research on the GI anti-Vietnam war resistance movement in the United States and in Europe. Included are manuscripts of articles and essays, position and program papers, letters, applications for residence and work permits, newsletters and drafts, press releases, and transcripts of interviews. Some of the material is in French, as Paris and Sweden were two areas of concentration for American deserters and resisters. |
Gibbon, Irene, 1898- | Title: Oral History Interview with Irene Gibbon, 1978 August 29 Quantity: 2 tape recordings Call Number: Tape 707A Abstract: Tape-recorded interview, August 29, 1978, conducted by David C. Tambo of the Historical Society with Irene Gibbon, Dodgeville, Wisconsin, concerning her experiences as a VISTA worker organizing self-help projects in Butler County, Kentucky, in 1968-1969. |
Gibbs Family | Title: Gibbs Family Papers, 1762-1918 Quantity: 1.6 c.f. (3 archives boxes and 1 flat box), 3 reels of microfilm (35mm), 11 photographs, and 50 drawings Call Number: U.S. Mss Y; Micro 1117; PH 3696; PH 3697 Abstract: Papers of the Gibbs family of Rhode Island and Connecticut, consisting of chronological family and business correspondence for several members of the family, including George Gibbs (II, III, IV, V), Laura Wolcott Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott (her father), and Oliver Wolcott Gibbs. For George Gibbs III there is correspondence and business papers concerning his trip to China in 1796, a collection of minerals sold to Yale University, and family affairs. For George IV, ethnologist and geologist, there is correspondence on scientific concerns, social and economic conditions of Oregon and Washington Territory at the time of the gold rush; political letters discussing important men and events of the day and the Mexican and Civil wars, photographs and drawings, and various reports to George B. McClellan on the geological and ethnographic character of Washington Territory. From scientist Oliver Wolcott Gibbs there are letters to his family and friend William H. Channing concerning European scientists of the period and the political unrest which led to the Revolution of 1848. For George Gibbs V there is a 1918 diary concerning his work in Russia with the Railroad Commission. |
Gilberts, Alberts, 1895- | Title: Arnold Gilberts Papers, 1930-1934 Quantity: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box) Call Number: Eau Claire Mss C Abstract: Papers of Gilberts, president of the Wisconsin chapter of the Farmers' Holiday Association, which was started in Iowa during the Depression by Milo Reno as an “organized refusal to deliver the products of the farm at less than production costs.” Correspondence and minutes of meetings and conferences, 1932-1933, are mainly concerned with the farmers' strike in October and November of 1933 and with Gilberts' 1932 primary campaign on the Progressive ticket as candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives from Wisconsin's 9th District. |
Gilbertson, Mel, (Milburn A.), 1923-1998 | Title: Mel Gilbertson Papers Physical Description: 0.4 cubic feet Call Number: MSS 098 Abstract: Milburn A. “Mel” Gilbertson (1923-1998) worked for the City of La Crosse, Wis., for 35 years, and he retired in 1983 as the supervisor the La Crosse City Water Department. This collection includes some personal papers and labor union materials from the Building and Service Employees International Union, Local 180, and the National Association of Power Engineers, La Crosse #8. The bulk of the collection is made up of papers from the La Crosse City Water Utility and contains correspondence, employee salary lists, and reports including a report on the electrification of the La Crosse Waterworks (1923). Photographs (1912-1961) show the construction of the main pumphouse (1912), the interior of pumphouse, and well flow at La Crosse well #2. |
Gilkey, George R., 1909-1974 | Title: George R. Gilkey Papers, 1886-1910, 1959-1974 Quantity: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box) and 3 reels of microfilm (35mm) Call Number: Stevens Point Mss AI; Stevens Point Micro 16; Micro 839 Abstract: Papers of Gilkey, a Merrill, Wis., businessman and local historian, including correspondence, writings, research notes, and other papers related to his research on the history of Merrill and Lincoln County and on lumbering in that area. Present are biographies of early residents, and papers by and about Gilkey's father, George L. Gilkey, which include several short accounts of hunting. |
Gill, Winnifred Stone, 1878-1941 | Title: Winnifred Stone Gill Papers, 1924-1941 Quantity: 3.1 c.f. (6 archives boxes, 2 flat boxes, and 1 card file box) Call Number: Wis Mss US Abstract: Papers of Winnifred Stone Gill, a Madison, Wisconsin genealogist. Included are miscellaneous genealogies, research notes, and queries that Mrs. Gill used in her genealogical column in the Wisconsin State Journal, 1935-1940. |
Gillespie, Noel Alexander, 1904-1955 | Title: Noel A. Gillespie Papers, 1891-1955, 1970-1972 Quantity: 3.2 c.f. (9 archives boxes) and 1 reel of microfilm (35mm) Call Number: Wis Mss UR; Micro 447 Abstract: Papers of Noel A. Gillespie, a British anesthetist who became a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin. Included is correspondence by and relating to Dr. Albert Schweitzer, 1922-1952; letters from T. E. Lawrence, 1913-1921; and letters and diaries of Gillespie's mother, Emily Rieder, lecturer on the Middle East and on women's and humanitarian movements. Gillespie worked with Schweitzer in Africa in 1924 and wrote detailed letters to his mother during his months there. Also included are letters, 1970-1972, between editor William C. Haygood and scholars, mainly in Switzerland, concerning Schweitzer-Gillespie letters in the possession of the Wisconsin Historical Society and other institutions; including various publications relating to Schweitzer archives and societies. |
Gillin, John Lewis, 1871-1958 | Title: John L. Gillin Papers, 1926-1949 Quantity: 8.2 c.f. (21 archives boxes) Call Number: Wis Mss VF Abstract: Papers of John L. Gillin, a University of Wisconsin professor, author, and consultant in the field of sociology, known particularly for his studies of penal systems and criminology. The collection includes several hundred letters concerned with these subjects, 1927-1949; notes made during his observations of foreign prison systems, 1927-1940; unpublished manuscripts for his autobiography; and three unpublished works on social maladjustment. The bulk of the collection, however, is composed of the case files of criminals compiled by Gillin and his assistants at the Wisconsin State Prison at Waupun from 1930 to 1935, which were the basic research sources used in his publication The Wisconsin Prisoner (1936). |
Gilman Relief Workers | Title: Gilman Relief Workers Records, 1932-1964 Quantity: 1.0 c.f. (1 archives box and 1 flat box) Call Number: River Falls Mss EN Abstract: Records of the Gilman Relief Workers, a women's charitable organization based in Spring Valley (Wis.), consisting of minute books documenting the group's membership and activities, and a scrapbook containing notes of thanks from beneficiaries of the group's work. |
Gilmore, Gordon L., 1908- | Title: Gordon L. Gilmore Papers, 1946-1973 Quantity: 2.0 c.f. (5 archives boxes) and 1 film Call Number: U.S. Mss 168AF; DC 780 Abstract: Papers of a public relations executive for Trans World Airlines, Inc., consisting primarily of administrative records, publicity and promotional material, and publications. The administrative records include reports, public relations manuals and handbooks, studies of corporate image, and working papers prepared to publicize the proposed Pan Am-TWA merger in 1962. In the publicity files are plans, brochures, correspondence, and press releases describing various inaugural flights and major anniversary celebrations. Included here is a promotional film featuring Lady Bird Johnson. The publications file, which is rather fragmentary, contains samples of various TWA titles. The remainder of the collection consists of correspondence, speeches to college and business audiences, and memorabilia including a journal describing his 1959 trip to East Africa. |
Gilmour, Stephen C. | Title: Stephen C. Gilmour Family Genealogies, 1868-1934, 1977-1988 Quantity: 1.4 c.f. (4 archive boxes), 47 photographs, and 3 negatives Call Number: M2003-049 Abstract: Research papers, 1868-1988 (bulk 1977-1985), of Stephen Gilmour, consisting of his genealogical research of the Campbell family, Scottish immigrants who moved to Dane County in the early nineteenth century. Among the family names documented are Campbell, Thomas, Thompson, Patton, Jones, Collins, Walton, Anderson, Phillips, and Magill. His book, A Pioneer Family of Dane County, Wisconsin, was published in 1986 after Gilmour’s death and is included in the collection. The collection also includes photographs and negatives of family members and dwellings, mostly undated. |
Ginzburg, Ralph | Title: Ralph Ginzburg Papers, 1848-1964 Quantity: 9.0 c.f. (23 archives boxes), 42 photographs, and 5 negatives Call Number: Mss 862; PH Mss 862 Abstract: Papers, mainly 1873-1915, of Ginzburg, an author, journalist, and publisher, solely consisting of material related to research on Anthony Comstock and the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. It contains research notes; copies of material gathered for research, such as newspaper articles, arrest blotters, and bibliographies; and some original materials, including correspondence, interview transcripts, and photographs. Comstock (1844-1915) was an anti-vice reformer and the main proponent of the 1873 federal laws, commonly known as the Comstock Laws, which ban obscene publications from the mails. Included in the collection are many original files of Theodore Schroeder, a civil liberties lawyer, a founder of the Free Speech League, and defender of many people prosecuted under the Comstock laws. The collection also contains the arrest journal, 1940-1942, of Harry Kahan, an agent for the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. This collection documents the work and procedures of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice and later anti-vice societies; the personality and background of Anthony Comstock; and the effect anti-obscenity laws had on those prosecuted, those doing the prosecuting, and society at large. There is also some information on John Sumner, who followed Comstock as director of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. Prominent correspondents and persons documented in the collection include De Robigne M. Bennett, Ida Craddock, Edward Foote, Emma Goldman, Moses Harman, Ezra Heywood, Ben Reitman, Margaret and William Sanger, George Bernard Shaw, Upton Sinclair, Lincoln Steffens, and activists in the Free Thought movement. The papers also document Comstock's efforts to suppress abortion, contraceptives, gambling, and many works of art, literature, and theater. |
Girard, Frank | Title: Frank Girard Collected Papers, 1916-1996 Quantity: 2.8 c.f. (2 record center cartons and 2 archives boxes) and 39 tape recordings Call Number: M2004-125 Abstract: Papers, mainly 1932-1972, related to the socialist movement in America, the bulk of which consists of correspondence between members of various organizations regarding common problems and materials related to Benson Perry and Frank Girard’s 1991 book The Socialist Labor Party: A Short History. Much of the material was accumulated by Perry through his involvement with socialist groups, especially in the Philadelphia area. The collection traces the evolution of an offshoot of Section Philadelphia of the Socialist Labor Party (SLP) as it and other splinter groups organized the Socialist Committee of Correspondence, eventually renamed Socialist Reconstruction, a loose federation of the various dissenting SLP sections. Also documented is the breakdown of Socialist Reconstruction and the development of the Philadelphia branch into an organization known as Philadelphia Solidarity. |
Girl Scouts of the United States of America. River Falls Council (Wis.) | Title: Girl Scouts of the United States of America. River Falls Council: Records, 1929-1950, 1965-1976 Quantity: 2.4 c.f. (5 archives boxes and 1 flat box) Call Number: River Falls Mss BU Abstract: Records concerning girl scouting in River Falls, Wisconsin, including scrapbooks, printed materials, individual members' records, and materials documenting merit badge projects and other activities. |
Gissler, Sig | Title: Sig Gissler Papers, 1967-1993 Quantity: 2.2 c.f. (1 record center carton and 4 archives boxes), 8 tape recordings, 23 photographs, and 35 transparencies Call Number: M96-251 Abstract: Papers of journalist Sig Gissler, editor at the Milwaukee Journal from 1967 until 1993 when he became an associate professor at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. The papers document Mr. Gissler’s career and include information about the Journal's guidelines and policies on covering controversial issues such as abortion and race relations; ethical issues in newspaper reporting; strategic planning by Journal executives; labor relations at the paper; the changing nature of newspapers and newspaper readers and the Journal's reaction to these changes. |
Gitlin, Todd, 1943-; Hollander, Nanci, 1943?- |
Title: Todd Gitlin and Nanci Hollander Papers, 1961-1970 Quantity: 0.8 c.f. (2 archives boxes) Call Number: Mss 254 Abstract: Papers of student activists Todd Gitlin and Nanci Hollander including correspondence and subject files relating to his leadership of student peace and protest groups at Harvard and her participation in similar groups at the University of Michigan. Material on his presidency of SDS may be found in the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) records, though this collection does include a draft and related correspondence and papers for Uptown: Poor Whites in Chicago (1970), which was based on their involvement with SDS's Jobs or Income Now project (JOIN). Much of the correspondence concerns TOCSIN, a disarmament organization at Harvard, its involvement with Turn Toward Peace, the Washington Action demonstration, and the senatorial campaign of H. Stuart Hughes in 1962. Prominent correspondents include Cyrus Eaton, Sanford Gottlieb, Jerome Grossman, Hubert H. Humphrey, Jacob K. Javits, Robert Kastenmeier, David Riesman, C. P. Snow, U Thant, and James A. Wechsler. |