Series IV.1 Folder 11 contains confidential case notes and is closed to researchers until 2030.
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
Unique time-based media items have been reformatted and are available onsite via links in the container list. Commercial materials are not routinely digitized.
The Hudson Guild Records document the institution from its origins in the 1890s, when it organized clubs for Chelsea boys, to its work a century later, when it provided a wide range of social services to West Side residents. They offer a unique view of the first wave of the settlement house movement in America, and document social conditions, demographic change, political activity, and philanthropy in New York City.
The origins and early history of Hudson Guild House are best documented in Series 1 and III. Board of Directors minutes show the development of programs by John Lovejoy Elliott and his associates from 1896 to 1911, and are supplemented by annual reports reviewing a wide range of settlement activities for scattered years from 1910 through the 1920s. Unfortunately, there is a major gap in the Board of Directors minutes from 1911 to 1938. News clippings and promotional materials in Series III, items contained in scrapbooks in Series V, and reports in Series IV partially fill this gap. The resumed chronology of Board of Directors minutes provides the most comprehensive view of Hudson Guild activities from the late 1930s through the 1970s. These minutes are complemented by Hudson Guild Council files which document the attitudes and level of involvement of the settlement's neighbors in its day to day functioning and programs during the 1960s and 1970s.
The beginning stages of urban renewal in Chelsea and its impact on the Hudson Guild community are documented by records in Series II and III. These include records of other community organizations with which the settlement was affiliated during the 1950s and 1960s. Series IV contains proposals and reports which provide insight on the development of settlement policies and programs in response to demographic changes in the neighborhood during the same period. Researchers should also see the Dan Carpenter Papers for more information on this period.
All of these records are complemented by audio-visual materials including photoprints, slides and motion picture film showing a variety of activities at Hudson Guild from the early 1900s to the 1990s.
Additional archival materials related to the Hudson Guild Records are included in the Dan Carpenter Papers, as well as in the archival collections of the Ethical Culture Society.
This collection is arranged in seven series.
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.
Series IV.1 Folder 11 contains confidential case notes and is closed to researchers until 2030.
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
Unique time-based media items have been reformatted and are available onsite via links in the container list. Commercial materials are not routinely digitized.
Reproductions may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Hudson Guild records; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
Source of acquisition--Teachers College. Method of acquisition--Transfer; Date of acquisition--June 2007.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Finding aid prepared by James Moske of LaGuardia and Wagner Archives of LaGuardia Community College, the City University of New York for Special Collections, Milbank Memorial Library, Teachers College, Columbia University
Records processed, James Moske of LaGuardia and Wagner Archives December 1996. Collection is processed to folder level.
2008-11-14 File created.
2008-11-14 xml document instance created by Patrick Lawlor
2009-05-28 xml document instance created by Catherine N. Carson
2014-04-09 XML document instance created by Catherine C. Ricciardi
2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.
During the late 1800s the West Side Manhattan neighborhood of Chelsea was transformed from an uncrowded residential area for wealthy and middle-class property owners to a bustling community where tens of thousands of immigrant families lived and worked. These new Chelsea residents were predominantly Irish and Greek, but also included Italians and Germans, as well as African-American migrants from the south. They rented apartments in hastily constructed tenement buildings or in former one-family townhouses newly subdivided and refashioned as rooming houses. They took jobs as freight handlers, longshoremen, and factory workers in the , shipping and industrial area that sprang up west of Tenth Avenue and along the waterfront. In their leisure hours they established benevolent societies and fraternal organizations, attended.local churches, and participated in the thriving popular culture of the theaters and dance halls on 23rd Street and 6th Avenue.
But even as working class culture flourished in Chelsea, the dense population exacerbated a host of problems. Poverty, hunger, disease, crime, decrepit housing and unsanitary streets were pervasive here as elsewhere in New York, and in rapidly growing cities across the country. Such conditions dimmed the hopes of many immigrants. They also alarmed many wealthy and middle- class Americans who perceived in them threats to moral order, political stability and cultural progress. Early attempts to ameliorate conditions in a changing urban society included the creation of charity organizations, industrial training schools, and church missions.
In London, a similar increase in social problems led reformers in 1884 to establish the first. settlement house, Toynbee Hall. The settlement model, originally distinguished by a commitment on the part of its college-educated volunteers to "settle" in working class communities in order to confront their problems first-hand and to contribute to the moral uplift of their neighbors, was quickly imported to the United States. In 1886 Stanton Coit, a devotee of Felix Adler's Ethical Culture movement and early observer of the experiment at Toynbee Hall, founded The Neighborhood Guild (later renamed University Settlement) on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Over the next several decades scores of settlement houses were established in cities across the country, staffed largely by recent college graduates, many of them young women eager to take an active role in public life. American settlements sponsored such programs as kindergartens, day care, social clubs, health clinics, visiting nurses, summer camps, arts education and vocational training. They provided bases of operation for sociologists, journalists, and other researchers of urban conditions. Many settlements provided forums for public debate of political issues, and galvanized popular opinion in support of progressive social legislation.
In March of 1895 John Lovejoy Elliott, another Felix Adler protégé inspired by the settlement model, rented rooms on West 25th Street and encouraged a small group of local boys to form a club under his leadership. Elliott, an Illinois native educated at Cornell University and in.Germany, had recently moved to New York to work with Adler in building the Ethical Culture movement. His Chelsea boys' club was successful, and others were soon formed for girls and adults under the guidance of Elliott and his Ethical Culture associates. In June of 1897 Hudson 2 Guild was legally incorporated, and programs including a kindergarten, vocational training, athletics, and a library were established by a growing staff of volunteers. The popularity of Hudson Guild programs prompted the settlement to move several times in its first decade. Eventually a permanent Hudson Guild building was erected at 436 West 27th Street. Its five stories housed a library, print shop, club rooms, and baths. Though Hudson Guild did not provide living quarters for settlement house "residents" in the conventional sense, many staff members, including John Elliott, made their homes in Chelsea.
The 1910 Annual Report of Hudson Guild describes the institution's work as an "attempt..to get the people of the district themselves to be the social workers and the regenerators of their own neighborhood.. The purpose of the Guild is to bring about active co-operation between different individuals and different classes for a single aim --that aim being an attempt to learn how to live. in a city." Public involvement in neighborhood regeneration was fostered through the sponsorship of a "District Committee" comprised of block representatives who reported on housing, health and social conditions in the neighborhood and worked collectively to improve them. Hudson Guild supported campaigns that led to the creation of Chelsea Park in 1907, and a public bathhouse in 1915. Hudson Guild also promoted the democratic participation of its members in running the settlement itself through a "Clubs Council" that determined many institutional policies and programs.
Vocational training was one area of concern to Chelsea residents. In 1912 Hudson Guild collaborated with a typographer's union local and a business association of printers to establish a printer training program. This very successful enterprise was later incorporated into New York's public school system. During World War I, food shortages and inflation made it difficult for many families to make ends meet. Hudson Guild sponsored a cooperative store to ease the economic burden on Chelsea residents. Other popular activities in the settlement's early years were summer outings and camping trips to area beaches, parks and campgrounds, including an Ethical Culture Society facility in Orange County. In 1917 Hudson Guild secured its own permanent home for country programs when it purchased several hundred wooded acres in New Jersey's Watchung Mountains. At its new "Hudson Guild Farm" the settlement began the cultivation of environmental education and camping programs that continued to flourish over seventy-five years later.
During the 1920s Hudson Guild cultural programs were expanded with the formation of the Cellar Players, a theater group which performed in the settlement basement, and with the creation of music and art departments. A strong emphasis was placed on health care through medical, dental and maternity clinics. Such low-cost programs were essential to Chelsea residents whose incomes were reduced with the onset of the 1930s depression. In addition to causing widespread. unemployment and hunger, the economic collapse exacerbated a longstanding housing crisis in New York. From its inception the settlement movement had advocated the regulation and improvement of tenements, and settlement leaders including John L. Elliott were among the. earliest proponents of government-funded housing construction and management. Hudson Guild itself had helped form the Chelsea Homes Corporation which in 1915 sponsored "model 3 tenements" providing clean, affordable homes to Chelsea families. Soon after the passage of the United States Housing Act in 1937, Hudson Guild established the Chelsea Association for Planning and Action to galvanize community support for public housing construction on the West Side. Demolition to make room for the first Chelsea housing project was started in 1942, but the work was soon interrupted because of the financial pressures of the Second World War. The project was finally completed in 1947 and was named for John L. Elliott, whose death in 1943 brought Hudson Guild's first era to a close.
H. Daniel "Dan" Carpenter, an Ohio native who had first come to Hudson Guild in 1931 as boys' club worker, succeeded Elliott as Head Worker (the title was soon changed to Executive '" Director). Under Carpenter's leadership during the war years Hudson Guild hosted USO activities, sponsored social programs for Coast Guard men temporarily encamped in the open field created by the halted public housing construction, cultivated food in "Victory Gardens" at the New Jersey farm, and initiated a veterans consultation service to help returning servicemen adjust to life at home. After the war new programs for senior citizens were created, as well as a child care center and mental health clinic.
During the 1950s New York's Puerto Rican population increased dramatically, and many thousands of these new immigrants settled on the West Side. Hudson Guild staff members, including Dan Carpenter, traveled to Puerto Rico to learn about the culture of the settlement's new neighbors. Spanish speakers were added to the staff, and programs oriented to the new community, such as English language instruction, were instituted. One frustrating episode in this period was a collaboration with the controversial, pugnacious community organizer Saul Alinsky. The Chelsea Citizen Participation Project, co-sponsored by Hudson Guild and Alinsky's Industrial Areas Foundation, succeeded in convening a "Chelsea Community Council" comprised of representatives from dozens of local organizations eager to participate in the planning of additional urban renewal and social service activities for the neighborhood. Unfortunately, disagreements arose among members regarding the Council's internal organization and policies, and an acrimonious public debate culminated in the dissolution of the Council in 1960.
Despite this setback, Hudson Guild continued to work for low and middle-income housing in Chelsea, supporting the International Ladies Garment Workers Union-sponsored Penn Station South Co-ops, and collaborating with the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) in the development of community centers at its Fulton Houses and Chelsea Houses projects. This collaboration led to the replacement of the old Hudson Guild building with a facility in the bottom floors of NYCHA's Chelsea Houses Extension. Opened in 1968, the new Hudson Guild included a gymnasium, theater, and art gallery. From its public housing base the settlement continued to provide its traditional range of social services, as well as expanding its work with children and teens through participation in such federally-funded programs as Neighborhood Youth Corps, Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA) and Head Start.
Dan Carpenter retired in 1973 and was succeeded by R. Edward Lee, a former Hudson Guild group worker with additional settlement experience at Goddard-Riverside Neighborhood House. Lee, and his successors during the late 1970s and 1980s, oversaw the growth of programs in vocational guidance, narcotics counseling, homeless counseling and shelter, and a highly successful Hudson Guild Theater that produced several plays which went on to Broadway. After celebrating its centennial in 1995 under the leadership of Executive Director Janice McGuire, Hudson Guild continued to provide needed social services to Chelsea residents.
Folders within each subseries arranged alphabetically. Documents arranged chronologically.
Includes agendas, minutes, and reports.
Box 1 Folder 1
Box 1 Folder 2
Box 32 Folder 3
Box 32 Folder 4
Box 1 Folder 5
Box 1 Folder 6
Box 1 Folder 7-9
Box 32 Folder 10
Box 1 Folder 11-12
Box 1 Folder 13
Box 32 Folder 14
Box 1 Folder 15-18
Box 2 Folder 19
Box 2 Folder 20
Box 32 Folder 21
Box 2 Folder 22-23
Box 2 Folder 24
Box 2 Folder 25-26
Box 2 Folder 27
Box 3 Folder 28
Includes correspondence, membership lists, meeting notes.
Box 3 Folder 1
Box 3 Folder 2
Box 3 Folder 3
Box 3 Folder 4
Box 3 Folder 5
Box 3 Folder 6
Box 3 Folder 7
Box 3 Folder 8
Box 3 Folder 9
Box 3 Folder 10
Box 3 Folder 11
Box 3 Folder 12
Box 3 Folder 13
Box 3 Folder 14
Box 3 Folder 15
Box 3 Folder 16
Box 3 Folder 17
Box 3 Folder 18
Box 3 Folder 19
Box 3 Folder 20
Box 3 Folder 21
Box 3 Folder 22
Box 3 Folder 23
Box 3 Folder 24
Box 3 Folder 25
Box 3 Folder 26
Box 3 Folder 27
Box 3 Folder 28
Box 3 Folder 29
Box 3 Folder 30
Box 3 Folder 31
Box 3 Folder 32
Box 3 Folder 33
Box 3 Folder 3
Box 3 Folder 35
Box 3 Folder 36
Box 3 Folder 37
Box 3 Folder 38
Box 3 Folder 39
Box 3 Folder 40
Box 3 Folder 41
Box 3 Folder 42
Box 3 Folder 43
Box 3 Folder 44
Box 3 Folder 45
Box 3 Folder 46
Includes meeting agendas, minutes, and appended correspondence and reports for monthly board minutes a well as the settlement's annual meeting.
Box 33 Folder 1-3
Box 33 Folder 4
Box 5 Folder 5-15
1945-1955
Box 6 Folder 16-22
1956-1962
Box 7 Folder 23-29
1963-1969
Box 8 Folder 30-39
1970-1979
Box 8 Folder 40-55
Box 49 Folder 56-58
1996-1998
Files on community and professional organizations with which Hudson Guild collaborated, and general subject files. Folders arranged alphabetically. Documents arranged chronologically.
Box 9 Folder 1
Box 9 Folder 2
Box 9 Folder 3
Box 34 Folder 4
Box 34 Folder 5
Box 9 Folder 6
Box 9 Folder 7
Box 9 Folder 8
Box 34 Folder 9
Box 34 Folder 10
Box 34 Folder 11
Box 9 Folder 12-13
Box 34 Folder 14
Box 9 Folder 15
Box 34 Folder 16
Box 9 Folder 17
Box 34 Folder 18
Box 9 Folder 19
Box 9 Folder 20
Box 9 Folder 21
Box 10 Folder 22-24
Box 10 Folder 25
Box 10 Folder 26
Box 34 Folder 27
Box 34 Folder 28
Box 10 Folder 29
Box 10 Folder 30
Box 10 Folder 31
Box 10 Folder 32
Box 10 Folder 33
Box 11 Folder 34
Box 34 Folder 35
Box 11 Folder 36-37
Box 11 Folder 38
Box 11 Folder 39
Box 11 Folder 40
Box 34 Folder 41
Box 11 Folder 42
Box 35 Folder 43
Box 11 Folder 44
Box 35 Folder 45
Box 11 Folder 46
Box 11 Folder 47
Box 35 Folder 48
Box 11 Folder 49
Box 11 Folder 50
Box 12 Folder 51
Box 12 Folder 52
Box 12 Folder 53
Box 12 Folder 54
Box 12 Folder 55
Box 35 Folder 56
Box 12 Folder 57
Box 12 Folder 58
Box 12 Folder 59
Box 12 Folder 60
Box 12 Folder 61
Box 35 Folder 62
Box 12 Folder 63
Box 35 Folder 64
Box 12 Folder 65
Box 12 Folder 66
Folders in each subseries arranged alphabetically. Documents arranged chronologically.
Includes administrative memos, annual reports, constitution and by-laws, publicity materials, membership lists, news clippings, promotional materials, publications, staff manuals
Box 13 Folder 1
Box 36 Folder 2
Box 13 Folder 3
Box 13 Folder 4
Box 13 Folder 5
Box 13 Folder 6
Box 13 Folder 7-9
Box 13 Folder 10
Box 36 Folder 11
Box 13 Folder 12
Box 13 Folder 13
Box 13 Folder 14
Box 13 Folder 15
Box 13 Folder 16
Box 13 Folder 17
Box 36 Folder 18
Box 13 Folder 19
Box 36 Folder 20
Box 13 Folder 21
Box 13 Folder 22
Box 13 Folder 23
Box 13 Folder 24
Box 13 Folder 25
Box 36 Folder 26
Box 36 Folder 27
Box 13 Folder 28
Box 14 Folder 29
Box 14 Folder 30
Box 14 Folder 31
1945
Box 36 Folder 32-37
Box 14 Folder 38
1974
Box 14 Folder 39
Box 14 Folder 40
Box 14 Folder 41
Box 14 Folder 42
Box 14 Folder 43
Box 14 Folder 44
Box 37 Folder 45
Box 14 Folder 46
Box 14 Folder 47
Box 14 Folder 48
Box 37 Folder 49-50
Box 14 Folder 51-52
Box 15 Folder 53
Box 45 Folder 54-58
Box 15 Folder 59
Box 37 Folder 60
Box 15 Folder 61
Box 45 Folder 62
Box 15 Folder 63
Box 15 Folder 64
Box 37 Folder 65
Box 15 Folder 66
Box 37 Folder 67
Box 15 Folder 68
Box 15 Folder 69
Box 15 Folder 70
Box 15 Folder 71
Box 15 Folder 72
Box 15 Folder 73
Box 37 Folder 74-75
Box 37 Folder 76
Box 15 Folder 77
Box 15 Folder 78
Box 37 Folder 79
Includes committee files, memos, minutes and Membership.
Box 16 Folder 1
Box 38 Folder 2
Box 16 Folder 3
Box 16 Folder 4
Box 16 Folder 5
Box 38 Folder 6
Box 38 Folder 7
Box 16 Folder 8
Box 38 Folder 9
Box 16 Folder 10-16
1960-1970
Box 17 Folder 17-22
1971-1976
Includes annual and special reports, directories and periodicals published under Hudson Guild auspices.
Box 18 Folder 1
Box 18 Folder 2-7
Box 18 Folder 8
Box 18 Folder 9
Box 18 Folder 10
Box 18 Folder 11
Box 18 Folder 12
Box 18 Folder 13
Box 18 Folder 14
Box 18 Folder 15
Box 18 Folder 16-18
Box 19 Folder 19-23
Box 19 Folder 24
Box 19 Folder 25
Box 19 Folder 26-28
Box 59 Folder 29
Folders in each subseries arranged alphabetically. Documents arranged chronologically.
Includes correspondence, memos, reports, statistical and narrative reports, news clippings, proposals, flyers and announcements. Folder 11 contains confidential case notes and is closed to researchers until 2030.
Box 20 Folder 1
Box 20 Folder 2
Box 20 Folder 3
Box 20 Folder 4
Box 20 Folder 5-6
Box 20 Folder 7
Box 20 Folder 8
Box 20 Folder 9
Box 20 Folder 10
Box 49 Folder 11
[restricted until 2030]
Box 20 Folder 12
Box 20 Folder 13
Box 39 Folder 15
Box 20 Folder 16
Box 21 Folder 17
Box 21 Folder 18
Box 21 Folder 19
Box 21 Folder 20
Box 39 Folder 21
Box 39 Folder 22
Box 21 Folder 23
Box 21 Folder 24
Box 21 Folder 25
Box 21 Folder 26-27
Box 1 Folder 28
Box 21 Folder 29
Box 21 Folder 30
Box 21 Folder 31
Box 21 Folder 32
Box 21 Folder 33
Box 21 Folder 34
Box 39 Folder 35
Box 22 Folder 36
Box 22 Folder 37
Box 22 Folder 38
Box 22 Folder 39
Box 22 Folder 40
Box 22 Folder 41
Box 22 Folder 42
Box 22 Folder 43
Box 22 Folder 44
Box 39 Folder 45
Box 22 Folder 46
Box 39 Folder 47
Box 22 Folder 48
Box 22 Folder 49
Box 22 Folder 50
Box 39 Folder 51
Box 22 Folder 52
Box 22 Folder 53
Includes correspondence, memos, reports, statistical and narrative reports, news clippings, proposals, flyers and announcements.
Box 23 Folder 1-1
Box 39 Folder 3
Box 39 Folder 4
Box 40 Folder 5
Box 40 Folder 6
Box 23 Folder 7
Box 23 Folder 8
Box 23 Folder 9
Box 23 Folder 10
Box 23 Folder 11-12
Box 40 Folder 13
Box 23 Folder 14
Box 23 Folder 15
Box 40 Folder 16
Box 23 Folder 17
Box 24 Folder 18
Box 24 Folder 19
Box 24 Folder 20
Box 40 Folder 21
Box 24 Folder 22
Box 24 Folder 23
Includes correspondence, memos, reports, statistical and narrative reports, news clippings, proposals, flyers and announcements.
Box 24 Folder 1-2
Box 24 Folder 3
Box 40 Folder 4
Box 24 Folder 5
Box 40 Folder 6
Box 40 Folder 7
Box 24 Folder 8
Box 24 Folder 9
Box 40 Folder 10
Box 24 Folder 11
Includes correspondence, memos, reports, statistical and narrative reports, news clippings, proposals, flyers and announcements.
Box 25 Folder 1
Box 25 Folder 2
Box 25 Folder 3
Box 25 Folder 4
Box 25 Folder 5
Box 25 Folder 6
Box 25 Folder 7
Box 25 Folder 8
1975
Box 26 Folder 9-11
1976-1978
Box 41 Folder 12
1981-1982
Box 42 Folder 13
1982-1983
Box 43 Folder 14
1983-1987
Box 27 Folder 18
Box 27 Folder 19-20
Chronologically compiled scrapbooks contain correspondence and memos, news clippings, photographs, program fliers and announcements.
Box 46 Folder 1
Box 47 Folder 2
Box 47 Folder 3
Box 48 Folder 4
Box 28 Folder 5-7
Box 29 Folder 8-10
Box 30 Folder 11
Box 30 Folder 12
Box 30 Folder 13
Box 30 Folder 14
Box 30 Folder 15
Black and white and color photoprints, negatives and transparencies. Subjects include settlement staff and program participants, neighborhood scenes, settlement buildings, and camp.
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25000-25008
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25009-25028
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25029-25050
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25051-25058
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25059-25063
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25064-25088
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25089-25093
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25094-25111
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25112-25123
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25124-25138
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25139-25153
Box P25000-P25168 Folder 25154-25168
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25169-25185
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25186-25200
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25201-25213
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25214-25219
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25220-25233
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25234-25248
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25249-25250
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25251-25267
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25268-25290
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25291-25292
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25293-25296
Box P25169-P25307 Folder 25297-25307
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25308
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25309-25314
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25315-25329
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25330-25341
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25342-25354
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25355-25363
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 24364-25375
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25376-25387
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25388-25407
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25408-25428
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25429-25442
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25443-25459
Box P25308-P25468 Folder 25460-25468
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25469
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25470
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25471-25505
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25506
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25507-25518
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25519-25538
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25539-25557
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25558-25579
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25580-25581
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25582-25608
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25609-25628
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25629-25647
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25648-25662
Box P25469-25677 Folder 25663-25677
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25678-25697
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25698-25712
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25713-25732
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25733-25755
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25756-25774
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25775-25795
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25796-25819
Box P25678-25829 Folder 25820-25829
Folder 25830-25834
This material is missing and is unavailable.
Folder 25835-25859
This material is missing and is unavailable.
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25860-25879
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25880-25892
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25893-25917
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25918-25946
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25947-25954
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25955-25974
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25975-25977
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25978
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25979-25981
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25982
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25983-25998
Box P25860-26038 Folder 25999-26003
Box P25860-26038 Folder 26003-26030
Box P25860-26038 Folder 26031
Box P25860-26038 Folder 26032-26038
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26039
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26040-26062
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26063
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26064-26080
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26081-26086
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26087
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26088
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26089-26096
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26097-26102
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26103-26105
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26106-26123
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26124-26129
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26130-26135
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26136-26150
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26151-26158
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26159
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26160-26168
Box P26039-26192 Folder 26169-26192
Box P26193-26031 Folder 26193-26207
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26208-26234
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26235-26253
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26254-26277
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26278-26293
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26294-26296
Box P26193-26301 Folder 26297-26301
Box P26302-26319 Folder 26302-26307
Box P26302-26319 Folder 26308-26312
Box P26302-26319 Folder 26313-26316
Box P26302-26319 Folder 26317-26319
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26320-26328
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26329-26336
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26337-26355
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26356-26371
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26372-26375
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26376-26397
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26398-26415
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26416-26437
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26438-26459
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26460-26480
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26481-26499
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26500
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26501-26505
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26506-26511
Box P26320-26518 Folder 26512-26518
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26519-26533
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26534-26553
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26554-26576
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26577-26598
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26599-26615
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26616-26641
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26642-26646
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26647-26648
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26649
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26650
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26651-26657
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26658-26674
Box P26519-26684 Folder 26675-26684
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26685-26719
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26720-26747
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26748-26758
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26759-26763
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26764-26770
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26771-26788
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26789
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26790-26791
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26792-26815
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26816-26838
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26839-26847
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26848-26859
Box P26685-26881 Folder 26860-26881
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26882-26895
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26896-26920
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26921-26940
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26941-26960
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26961-26992
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26993-26997
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26998
Box P26882-27039 Folder 26999
Box P26882-27039 Folder 27000
Box P26882-27039 Folder 27001-27012
Box P26882-27039 Folder 27013
Box P26882-27039 Folder 27014-27039
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27040-27047
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27048-27055
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27056-27058
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27086-27098
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27099-27108
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27109
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27100-27113
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27114-27134
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27135-27138
Box P27040-27164 Folder 27139-27164
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27165-27171
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27172-27173
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27174
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27175-27176
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27177
Box P27165-27188 Folder 27178
Box P27165-27188 Folder P27179-27188
Box P27189-27254 Folder 27189-27195
Box P27189-27254 Folder 27196-27206
Box P27189-27254 Folder 27207-27254
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27255
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27256
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27257
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27258
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27259
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27260
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27261
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27262
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27263
Box P27255-27264 Folder 27264
Box 14-L-1 Folder 27265-27281
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28029-28030
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28031
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28032-28033
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28034
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28035-28042
Box P28029-28043 Folder 28043
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28056
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28057
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28058
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28059
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28060
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28061
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28062
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28063
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28064
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28065
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28066
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28067
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28068
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28069
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28070
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28071
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28072
Box P28056-28073 Folder 28073
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28074
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28075
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28076
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28077
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28078
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28079
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28080
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28081
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28082
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28083
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28084
Box P28074-28085 Folder 28085
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28086
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28087
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28088
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28089
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28090
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28091
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28092
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28093
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28094
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28095
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28096
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28097
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28098
Box P28086-28099 Folder 28099
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28100
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28101
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28101
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28103
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28104
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28105
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28106
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28107
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28108
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28109
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28110
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28111
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28112
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28113
Box P28100-28114 Folder 28114
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28115-28142
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28143-28169
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28170-28196
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28197-28223
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28224-28243
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28244
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28225-28258
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28259-28260
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28261
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28262
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28263
Box P28115-28269 Folder 28264-28269
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28270
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28271
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28272
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28273-28277
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28278
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28279-28281
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28282-28284
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28285-28294
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28295-28305
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28306-28309
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28310-28311
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28312-28313
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28314-28316
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28317-28318
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28319-28327
Box P28270-28329 Folder 28328-28329
Box 31
Box 31
Box 31
Box 31
Box 31
Box 31