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.
Two folders, Box 5, folder 11, and Box 33, folder 3, are restricted until 2032.
The J. Max and Ruth Clement Bond Papers consist of the personal and professional writings, correspondence, photographs, and financial and legal records of the couple. Of particular interest are Max Bond's professional documents and reports, and correspondence related to education in, and United States assistance to, African nations, especially Liberia and Nyasaland (present-day Malawi). The collection also includes a large amount of printed material related not only to Max Bond's career with the University of Liberia, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and the US Department of State, but also to the couple's wide commitment to civil rights, political activism, and various community organizations. Among these printed materials, particularly well represented organizations are the African-American Institute and the many women's organizations with which Ruth Bond worked, including the Association of American Foreign Service Women, Church Women United, and International Women's Year, 1975.
This collection is arranged in six 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.
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.
Two folders, Box 5, folder 11, and Box 33, folder 3, are restricted until 2032.
Single photocopies 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); J. Max and Ruth Clement Bond Papers; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
J. Max Bond, Jr. Papers at Avery Architecture and Fine Arts Archives, Columbia University Library
No accruals are expected
Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
Source of acquisition--Jane Clement Bond. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--2008.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
The processing of this collection was made possible by a grant from the Mellon Foundation
Papers processed Daniel Callahan (Columbia 2012), Liane Carlson (Columbia 2013), Jean-Christophe Cloutier (Columbia 2013), Lindsay Gibson (Columbia 2015), Asheesh Siddique (Columbia 2015), Simon Taylor (Columbia 2013), and Aaron Winslow (Columbia 2014) 2010.
Finding aid written Daniel Callahan (Columbia 2012), Liane Carlson (Columbia 2013), Jean-Christophe Cloutier (Columbia 2013), Lindsay Gibson (Columbia 2015), Asheesh Siddique (Columbia 2015), Simon Taylor (Columbia 2013), and Aaron Winslow (Columbia 2014) 07/--/2010.
2010-09-16 File created.
2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.
James Max Bond, Sr. and Ruth Elizabeth Clement Bond, husband and wife, both hailed from prominent and well-educated African-American families.
J. Max Bond, Sr., State Department and United States Agency for International Development (USAID) official and president of the University of Liberia, was born in Nashville, Tennessee on September 15, 1902. His father, James M. Bond (1863-1929), a Congressional Minister and community leader served as the first director of the Kentucky Commission on Interracial Cooperation. After graduating from the Oberlin College Theological Seminary in 1893, James Bond married Jane A. Browne, who was also a graduate of Oberlin. Together they had six children, including Max Sr.
Ruth Elizabeth Clement was born in Louisville, Kentucky on May 22, 1904. Her father, George Clinton Clement was a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; in 1946 her mother, Emma Clarissa Williams Clement, became the first African-American woman to be named American Mother of the Year. Both of Ruth's parents were graduates of Livingstone College and her father also had an LL.D. from Wilberforce University. Ruth was one of seven children.
Max Sr. graduated from the High School Department of Simmons University in Louisville, Kentucky in 1921 and attended the Lincoln Institute. After graduation, he moved to Chicago, where, from 1922 to 1926, he earned his B.P.E. from George Williams College (known today as Roosevelt University). While pursuing his degree, Max also worked as the director of the Oakland School Playground from 1923 until 1925. From 1926 to 1928 he was employed as physical education director at the Pittsburgh YMCA, before earning an M.A. in Education and Educational Administration at the University of Pittsburgh in 1930. Between 1929 and 1931 Max also served as the director of the Kentucky Interracial Commission.
Ruth, like her parents, attended Livingstone College, but received both her B.A. (1925) and an M.A. (1930) from Northwestern University where she majored in English Literature and Sociology. In the years between acquiring her degrees, Ruth taught English at Louisville Central High School and from 1930 to 1932 she was head of the English Department at Kentucky State College.
In 1931 Max and Ruth Clement married and moved to Los Angeles where Max was enrolled in a doctoral program at the University of Southern California (USC). Although Ruth also began graduate studies at USC, she suspended her formal academic pursuits shortly after the birth of the Bonds' first child in 1933. Max received his Ph.D. in Sociology in 1936 with a dissertation entitled "The Negro in Los Angeles." Upon obtaining his doctorate, Max embarked on a career as an educator. His first position, from 1934-1938, was with the Tennessee Valley Authority as Director of Negro Personnel and Education. Ruth became known for her Tennessee Valley Authority quilt designs, which were sewn by the wives of African-American men who built dams for the TVA in the mid-1930s. Next, Max served as Dean of Dillard University in New Orleans, Louisiana (1938-1940); from 1940-1944 he was employed as as Dean of the School of Education at the Tuskegee Institute (today Tuskegee University).
In 1944 the first of Max and Ruth's foreign sojourns began: Max accepted a job with the US State Department's Inter-American Educational Foundation in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where he served as director of the educational mission and Ruth was on the faculty of L'Ecole Normale de Martissant. The Bonds left Haiti in 1947 when Max was appointed Dean of the Graduate School of Education of Clark Atlanta University. In 1950 the State Department sent the Bonds to Liberia, where Max, following a reorganization of the University of Liberia, became the university's first President and Ruth headed the English Department. The Bonds enjoyed a close working relationship with Liberian President William Tubman.
Max's stint in Liberia lasted until 1955, at which point he began his work as an official in the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Max's first appointment was as Education Advisor to Afghanistan's Minister of Education; next he took up a similar role in Tunisia. Just as he had done in Liberia, Max played a role in the reorganization of Kabul University and the University of Tunis. In 1960 the Bonds returned to the United States, taking up residence in Washington, D.C. briefly, before spending a year in Sierra Leone. Max's final tour of duty was in Nyasaland (now Malawi), where he organized teacher training programs. Following his retirement in 1966, Max joined Ruth in becoming active in community issues in the D.C. area. During the 1960s Ruth served as President of the African-American Women's Association, and in 1978 she was part of a National Council of Negro Women fact-finding mission that studied the role of women in Senegal, Togo, and the Ivory Coast.
Other educators in the extended Clement and Bond families included Ruth's brother, Rufus Early Clement, and Max Sr.'s brother, Horace Mann Bond. Rufus E. Clement was a long-time president of Atlanta University. Horace Bond, author of The Education of the Negro in American Social Order, served as the first African-American President of Lincoln University, as well as the head of the Bureau of Education and Social Research at Atlanta University. He also co-founded the Africa-America Institute, an organization with which Max Sr. and Ruth were closely involved.
The Bonds had three children, all of whom followed their parents' educational lead. Jane Emma Clement Bond (b. 1933), who received her Ph.D. from University College, London University, became a professor of European History and Modern France at Baruch College; J. Max Bond, Jr. (1935-2009), an architect and Columbia University professor, was a graduate of Harvard University; and George Clement Bond (b. 1936), obtained his Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and was the Director of the Institute for African Studies at Columbia University, as well as a Professor of Anthropology at Teachers College.
Max died in 1991and Ruth in 2005.
This series contains correspondence pertaining to J. Max Bond's career as a member of United States Agency for International Development (US AID) and the United States Foreign Service, Ruth Bond's affiliation and leadership of various women's organizations, letters from the immediate and extended family, and a few Bond family financial and legal materials.
General Correspondence includes letters to and from a wide variety of professional associates and Bond family members, as well as more occasional correspondents. Amongst the general correspondence can be found letters and cards from Ruth's brother, Rufus Clement, and sister, Abbie; Max's brothers Gilbert and Horace; and a number of nephews, nieces, and other extended family members, including Georgia State Senator Julian Bond. This correspondence has been arranged chronologically by decade, and runs from the 1930s through the 1990s.
Correspondence from the immediate family includes letters to and from sons Max Jr. and George, and daughter Jane. This material, the majority written during the late 1950s and 1960s, contains extensive correspondence pertaining to Max's and George's secondary and university education, and many of these letters are copies written by Max Sr. to his sons from his various USAID and Foreign Service postings. Because much of the correspondence is addressed to both George and Max, Jr., their correspondence has been generally kept together, with the exception of a large group of letters addresses specifically to Max Jr. The Jane Bond correspondence primarily contains letters to her parents from the 1950s through the 1990s. The Max Bond, Jr. and George Bond correspondence, as well as the Jane Bond correspondence has been organized chronologically by decade.
Note: Some correspondence, both professional and occasionally personal, can also be found in the Subseries II.1: Country and Regional, 1939-1990.
Box 1 Folder 1 to 11
Box 2 Folder 1 to 9
Box 3 Folder 1 to 8
Box 4 Folder 1 to 2
Box 4 Folder 3
Box 4 Folder 4 to 11
Box 5 Folder 1 to 7
Box 5 Folder 8
Box 5 Folder 9 to 10
Box 5 Folder 11
Restricted until 2032
Box 6 Folder 1 to 7
Box 7 Folder 1 to 3
Box 7 Folder 4
Box 7 Folder 5
Box 7 Folder 6 to 11
Box 8 Folder 1
Box 8 Folder 2
Box 8 Folder 3
Box 8 Folder 4
Box 8 Folder 5
Box 8 Folder 6
Box 8 Folder 7 to 12
Box 9 Folder 1
Box 9 Folder 2 to 6
Box 9 Folder 7
Box 9 Folder 8 to 9
Box 9 Folder 10
Box 9 Folder 11
Box 10 Folder 1 to 3
Box 10 Folder 4 to 6
Box 10 Folder 7
Box 10 Folder 8 to 11
Box 11 Folder 1
Box 11 Folder 2
Box 11 Folder 3 to 4
Box 11 Folder 5
Box 11 Folder 6
Box 12 Folder 1
Box 12 Folder 2 to 6
Included here are reports, documents, and printed materials related to the countries in which the Bonds worked and toured, and their various interests and avocations. The material in this series is arranged alphabetically.
The bulk of the material in this subseries is related to the countries and regions in which Max Bond worked while employed by the United States Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Materials include reports—many of which were written by Max Bond—correspondence, printed material and ephemera. Printed materials include a small collection of Liberian newspapers, several broadsides of Liberian government proclamations, pamphlets, newspapers, and brochures—published by various African states as well as the US State Department. Also here are Ruth Bond's notes and report of her trip to West Africa in 1978. The trip, a feasibility study, was sponsored by the International Division of the National Council of Negro Women. Some correspondence, both professional and occasionally personal, can also be found here.
Box 11 Folder 7
Box 11 Folder 8
Box 11 Folder 9
Box 11 Folder 10
Box 13 Folder 1
Box 13 Folder 2
Box 13 Folder 3
Box 13 Folder 4
Box 13 Folder 5 to 7
Box 13 Folder 8
Box 41 Folder 1
Box 13 Folder 9
Box 13 Folder 10
Box 13 Folder 11
Box 14 Folder 1
Box 14 Folder 2 to 3
Box 14 Folder 4
Box 14 Folder 5
Box 14 Folder 6
Box 14 Folder 7
Box 14 Folder 8
Box 14 Folder 9
Box 14 Folder 10
Box 14 Folder 11
Box 15 Folder 1
Box 15 Folder 2 to 3
Box 15 Folder 4
Box 15 Folder 5
Box 15 Folder 6
Box 15 Folder 7
Box 15 Folder 8
Box 41 Folder 2
Box 41 Folder 3
Box 15 Folder 9
Box 15 Folder 10
Box 15 Folder 11
Box 16 Folder 1
Box 16 Folder 2
Box 16 Folder 3
Box 16 Folder 4
Box 16 Folder 5
Box 16 Folder 6
Box 16 Folder 7
Box 16 Folder 8
Box 41 Folder 4
Box 16 Folder 9
Box 16 Folder 10
Box 16 Folder 11
Box 17 Folder 1
Box 17 Folder 2
Box 17 Folder 3
Box 17 Folder 4
Box 17 Folder 5
Box 17 Folder 6
Box 17 Folder 7
Box 17 Folder 8
Box 17 Folder 9
Box 17 Folder 10
Box 17 Folder 11
Box 17 Folder 12
Box 18 Folder 1
Box 18 Folder 2
Box 12 Folder 7 to 8
Box 12 Folder 9
Box 12 Folder 10
Box 12 Folder 11
Box 12 Folder 12
Box 12 Folder 13
This subseries features an eclectic mix of personal and vocational interests of both Max and Ruth Bond. Included are materials produced by or regarding the extended Bond-Clement family. Areas of vocational interest comprise the Tennessee Valley Association, the Tuskegee Institute, various educational topics and the Washington, DC community.
Max Bond's clipping folders, which contained un-annotated newspaper and magazine articles primarily from mainstream media sources such as theNew York Times,theWashington Post, Time, The New RepublicandThe Nation,and mostly dating from the late 1960s and early 1970s, were not retained. Selected folder headings, created by Max Bond, give an indication of the subjects that he collected: "Africa," "African Jewelry," "Art-Theatre-Agriculture," "Black Colleges," "Black Education," "Black Intelligence," "Black Male Crisis," "Black Politicians," "Black Power," "Black Related Recent Current," "Black Vote," "Black and White Together Movements," "Blacks/Africa," "Blacks in Nixon's Employ," "Church," "Civil Rights," "Criminals," "Grenada's Rape-Rush's Rule," "Impeachment," "Indians + Other Minorities," "Rev Jackson," "Jaworski," "Job Discrimination," "Justice Dpmt. Violation," "Kent State," "Martin L King," "Medicare," "Myth + Sham," "NAACP," "Negro + Other Leaders," "Nixon-Agnew + Hiss," "Outstanding Blacks/Black Leaders," "Panthers," "Police Brutality," "Politics Reagan's Fall," "RACIAL: Whites + Blacks," "South African White Churches," "Snow 1987," "Student Protest Groups," "Wallace of Alabama," "What Citizens Should Know," and "Wine + Foods."
Box 12 Folder 14
Box 12 Folder 15
Box 12 Folder 16
Box 12 Folder 17
Box 12 Folder 18
Box 12 Folder 19
Box 18 Folder 3
Box 18 Folder 4
Box 18 Folder 5
Box 18 Folder 6
Box 18 Folder 7
Box 18 Folder 8
Box 18 Folder 9
Box 42
Box 41 Folder 5
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
Box 18 Folder 17
Box 18 Folder 18
Box 18 Folder 19
Box 18 Folder 20
Box 18 Folder 21
Box 18 Folder 22
Box 18 Folder 23
Box 18 Folder 24
Box 18 Folder 25
Box 18 Folder 26
Box 18 Folder 27
Box 18 Folder 28
Box 18 Folder 29
Box 18 Folder 30
Box 18 Folder 31
Box 18 Folder 32
Box 18 Folder 33
Box 18 Folder 34
Box 18 Folder 35
Box 18 Folder 36
Box 18 Folder 37
Box 18 Folder 38
Box 19 Folder 1
Box 19 Folder 2
Box 19 Folder 3
Box 19 Folder 4
Box 19 Folder 5
Box 19 Folder 6
Box 19 Folder 7
Box 19 Folder 8
Box 19 Folder 9
Manuscript drafts and notes by J. Max Bond make up the bulk of this series. Subject matter, largely concerning civil rights, the Black Panthers, and the Nixon administration, dates most of the manuscripts to the late 1960s-1970s. Where possible, drafts of the same manuscript have been grouped together and organized alphabetically, using the original titles; however, lack of dates makes it impossible to ascertain the chronological order of the drafts. A small amount of material in this series is by Ruth Bond and included here is her Master's thesis. The material is arranged alphabetically.
Note: Most reports written by J. Max Bond, Sr. and Ruth Clement Bond can be found in Subseries II.1: Country and Regional, 1939-1990.
Box 19 Folder 10
Box 19 Folder 11
Box 19 Folder 12 to 16
Box 19 Folder 17
Box 19 Folder 18
Box 19 Folder 19
Box 19 Folder 20 to 21
Box 19 Folder 22 to 23
Box 19 Folder 24
Box 19 Folder 25
Box 19 Folder 26
Box 19 Folder 27
Box 19 Folder 28
Box 19 Folder 29 to 33
Box 20 Folder 1 to 6
Box 20 Folder 7
Box 20 Folder 8
Box 20 Folder 9 to 10
Box 20 Folder 11 to 16
Box 20 Folder 17 to 19
Box 20 Folder 20 to 22
Box 20 Folder 23
Box 20 Folder 24
Box 20 Folder 25
Box 20 Folder 26
Box 20 Folder 27 to 28
Box 21 Folder 1 to 5
Box 21 Folder 6
Box 21 Folder 7
Box 21 Folder 8
Box 21 Folder 9
Box 21 Folder 10
Box 21 Folder 11
Box 21 Folder 12
Box 21 Folder 13
Box 21 Folder 14
Box 21 Folder 15 to 16
Newsletters, correspondence, notes, minutes, and photographs, related to the many organizations to which the Bonds belonged, make up the bulk of this, the largest series in the collection. The material comprising this series was scattered throughout the holdings with no discernable order. Documents, therefore, were gathered from across the collection and arranged chronologically by decade and, where appropriate, by years. At times, documents from different organizations were found nested together. Generally these stray documents have been left where they were found; for example, the Association of American Foreign Service Women (AAFSW) folders also contain material related to the Africa-America Institute (AAI) and other organizations. These cases reflect the very strong ties, both in terms of shared personnel and subject matter, between the organizations to which the Bonds belonged. In addition, the Bonds frequently received a very small amount of literature—often only a single document—from a vast array of organizations. The material related to these organizations has been grouped together within the General Organizations folders and arranged chronologically. Within the General Organizations folders there is much material dedicated to Women's groups.
The Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington (BGCGW: also known as Eastern Branch Boys' Club of Greater Washington) and its affiliate, the Women's Auxiliary Board (WAB), in which Max and Ruth Bond held leadership roles respectively, represent the single largest organizations within the series. Reflecting their organizational structure, the material relating to both groups has been kept together. The WAB's President's Book contains a representative assortment of documents related to this organization between 1970 and 1975, including a history, minutes, photograph albums, and materials regarding receptions for other organizations—especially those organizations associated with the Bonds.
The Association of American Foreign Service Women (AAFSW) was strongly involved in the BGCGW/WAB. Although the AAFSW and WAB were two distinct organizations, many AAFSW members came to occupy leading roles in the WABGC. The AAFSW—and, through it, BGCGW/WAB— was also affiliated with the National Council of Women of the United States (NCWUS); Ruth Bond held a number of roles within each organization and the materials here reflect that involvement.
Also within this series is material regarding the Africa-America Institute (AAI) and its African Scholarship Program of American Universities (ASPAU). The primary aim of the AAI was to facilitate the education and training of Africans studying in the United States by providing both financial support in the form of scholarships and a social, cultural, and legal support network. During the 1960s and early 1970s—the period of the Max and Ruth Bond's greatest involvement in the organization—the ASPAU was responsible for the selection, placement, funding, training, and orientation of students; Max and Ruth Bond were active in the selection and placement of scholarship students.
Material regarding the African-American Scholars Council (AASC) can be found within the AAI material. Although the two organizations were not officially aligned, the AASC was founded by James L. Hope, who had previously run the AAI's scholarship program. Also within the AAI documents are materials relating to the Hospitality and Information Service (THIS) for Diplomatic Residents and Families, as well as the Student Counseling Service and its subsidiary organizations, including the African-American Women's Council.
Of general note, the Washington Women's Council is the successor of African-American Wives Group. It is through Church Women United that Ruth Bond became involved with the Bicentennial celebrations of 1976.
Box 21 Folder 17 to 21
Box 21 Folder 22 to 24
Box 22 Folder 1 to 7
Box 22 Folder 8
Box 22 Folder 9 to 14
Box 23 Folder 1 to 3
Box 23 Folder 4
Box 23 Folder 5
Box 23 Folder 6
Box 23 Folder 7
Box 42
Box 23 Folder 8
Box 23 Folder 9
Box 23 Folder 10
Box 23 Folder 11
Box 23 Folder 12
Box 23 Folder 13 to 18
Box 24 Folder 1 to 11
Box 40 Folder 1
Box 40 Folder 2
Box 24 Folder 12
Box 24 Folder 13
Box 24 Folder 14
Box 24 Folder 15
Box 24 Folder 16 to 17
Box 25 Folder 1 to 8
Box 25 Folder 9
Box 25 Folder 10 to 15
Box 26 Folder 1 to 8
Box 26 Folder 9
Box 26 Folder 10
Box 26 Folder 11
Box 26 Folder 12
Box 26 Folder 13
Box 26 Folder 14
Box 26 Folder 15
Box 26 Folder 16
Box 40 Folder 3
Box 40 Folder 4
Box 26 Folder 17
Box 26 Folder 18
Box 27 Folder 1
Box 27 Folder 2
Box 27 Folder 3
Box 27 Folder 4 to 16
Box 28 Folder 1 to 6
Box 28 Folder 7
Box 28 Folder 8
Box 28 Folder 9
Box 28 Folder 10 to 11
Box 28 Folder 12
Box 28 Folder 13
Box 28 Folder 14
Box 28 Folder 15 to 17
Box 28 Folder 18
Box 29 Folder 1
Box 29 Folder 2
Box 29 Folder 3
Box 29 Folder 4
Box 29 Folder 5
Box 29 Folder 6
Box 29 Folder 7
Box 29 Folder 8 to 10
Box 29 Folder 11
Box 29 Folder 12
Box 29 Folder 13
Box 29 Folder 14
Box 29 Folder 15 to 17
Box 29 Folder 18
Box 29 Folder 19
Box 29 Folder 20 to 21
1969-1993, (2 Folders)
Box 29 Folder 22
Box 30 Folder 1
Box 30 Folder 2 to 3
Folder 4 to 10
Box 30 Folder 11
Box 30 Folder 12
Box 30 Folder 13
Box 30 Folder 14
Box 30 Folder 15
Box 30 Folder 16
Box 30 Folder 17
Box 30 Folder 18
Box 31 Folder 1
Box 31 Folder 2
Box 31 Folder 3 to 5
Box 31 Folder 6
Box 31 Folder 7 to 12
Box 31 Folder 13
Box 31 Folder 14
Box 31 Folder 15
Box 32 Folder 1 to 3
Box 32 Folder 4 to 5
Box 32 Folder 6
Box 32 Folder 7
Box 32 Folder 8
Box 32 Folder 9 to 10
Family memorabilia, awards and travel ephemera; biographical manuscripts, interviews and notes concerning the Clement-Bond family history; drafts of the Bond children's school papers and documents relating to individual interests; diaries, day books, and journals; and financial files, all of which capture the personal lives of the Bond family, are found here.
The materials in this subseries range across decades and include awards, diplomas, birth certificates, educational and employment documents, clippings, and extended family genealogical and biographical materials, as well as ephemera.
Box 41 Folder 6
Box 32 Folder 11
Box 32 Folder 12 to 13
Box 32 Folder 14
Box 32 Folder 15
Box 32 Folder 16
Box 32 Folder 17
Box 32 Folder 18
Box 33 Folder 1
Box 33 Folder 2
[Restricted until 2032]
Box 33 Folder 3
Box 33 Folder 4
Box 33 Folder 5
Box 33 Folder 6
Box 33 Folder 7 to 9
Box 33 Folder 10
Box 33 Folder 11
Box 33 Folder 12
Box 33 Folder 13
Box 33 Folder 14
Box 33 Folder 15
Box 33 Folder 16
Box 33 Folder 17
Box 33 Folder 18
Box 33 Folder 19
Box 33 Folder 20
Box 33 Folder 21
Box 33 Folder 22
Box 33 Folder 23
Box 33 Folder 24
Box 33 Folder 25
Box 33 Folder 26
Box 33 Folder 27
Box 33 Folder 28
Box 42
Box 41 Folder 7
Box 41 Folder 8
Box 41 Folder 9
Box 41 Folder 10
Box 34 Folder 1
Mapcase 15-M2-1
Moved to mapcase from original location in Box 34 folder 2
Box 34 Folder 3
Box 34 Folder 4
Box 34 Folder 5
Box 34 Folder 6
The bulk of this series is made up of diaries, notebooks and agendas kept by Ruth Clement Bond. Ruth's agendas—her daily appointment books—include appointments, invitations and often phone calls—both personal and professional—and mark her many and varied cultural interests and the extent of her activity with the organizations with which she worked.
Many of the agendas also include messages, lists of addresses, notes for meetings, notes on various readings or topics of interest to her, and sometimes inserted note cards or invitations. Her notebooks, similarly, include addresses, lists of expenses, and notes on readings or meetings. The diaries and travel journals, while rarely kept on a daily basis, do include many lengthy entries regarding living and traveling abroad.
There are a few notebooks kept by J. Max Bond, Sr. in this series, and both Ruth and Max maintained diaries in 1956, the year that Max was appointed as Education Advisor to Afghanistan's Minister of Education.
Also here are guest books, baby books, passports, driver's licenses and other personal documents.
Box 34 Folder 7
Box 34 Folder 8
Box 34 Folder 9
Box 34 Folder 10
Box 34 Folder 11
Box 34 Folder 12
Box 34 Folder 13
Box 34 Folder 14
Box 34 Folder 15
Box 34 Folder 16
Box 34 Folder 17
Box 35 Folder 1 to 19
Box 35 Folder 20 to 22
Box 36 Folder 1
Box 36 Folder 2
Box 36 Folder 3
Box 36 Folder 4
Box 36 Folder 5
Box 36 Folder 6
Box 36 Folder 7
Box 36 Folder 8
Box 35 Folder 23 to 32
Box 35 Folder 33
Box 35 Folder 34
Box 36 Folder 9
Box 36 Folder 10
Box 36 Folder 11
Box 36 Folder 12 to 17
Box 36 Folder 18
Box 36 Folder 19 to 20
Box 36 Folder 21 to 25
Box 36 Folder 26
Box 36 Folder 27
Box 36 Folder 28 to 29
Box 36 Folder 30
Box 36 Folder 31
Box 34 Folder 18
Box 34 Folder 19
Box 34 Folder 20
Financial documents, including income tax returns, bank account statements and checks, real estate information, receipts and bills, were extensively preserved. Although the financial material spans over sixty years, the bulk of the documents are from the 1950s and 1960s. The banks represented by cancelled checks and monthly statements include: the Alabama Exchange Bank and Tuskegee Institute Savings Bank of Tuskegee, Alabama; the Lincoln Bank & Trust Company of Louisville, Kentucky; Citizens Trust of Atlanta, Georgia; and the Whitney National Bank of New Orleans, Louisiana. Copies of income tax returns, although not inclusive, cover most of the years between 1961 and 1992. Also found here is extensive documentation regarding a rental property owned by the Bonds in Louisville, Kentucky.
Box 37
Box 38
Box 38
Box 38
Box 38
Box 38
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
Box 37
The bulk of the material in this series comprises personal and family photographs, as well as pictures from some of the many events hosted by one of the organizations with which the Bonds were affiliated, especially the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington. Also included are slides and photographs from trips abroad. These photographs, a mix of black and white, and color, were scattered throughout the collection with little discernable order. Most of them were loose and unidentified, yet there were also some albums and a few labeled photographs. Whenever possible, photographs found in the same location have been kept together. Easily identifiable material was arranged according to the people featured and the nature of the event.
Box 39 Folder 1
Box 39 Folder 2
Box 39 Folder 3 to 4
Box 39 Folder 5
Box 41 Folder 11
Box 39 Folder 6 to 7
Box 39 Folder 8
Box 39 Folder 9 to 10
Box 39 Folder 11
Box 39 Folder 12
Box 41 Folder 12
Box 39 Folder 13
Box 39 Folder 14
Box 39 Folder 15 to 16
Box 39 Folder 17
(Some Labeled)