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Comic Books

Ardan Tim L’Audace. This is a french comic book dated from 1949-1958. Tim and his black sidekick, Salam, are ‘do-good’ adventurers who travel the earth from one adventure to the next.
Bill Kraker. Bill Kraker, is a comic book of a Spanish version of Tarzan, accompanied by his two black sidekicks, Togui and Dringo. The comic appears to date from the 1950’ and only ran for less than a year.
Bibi Fricotin. This is a french comic book originally produced after World War II and then reproduced in the 1970’s. The comic features a white boy, Bibi Fricotin, and his black friend, Razibus Zouzou. They are constantly getting into and out of trouble as they experience adventures together all over the world. The earlier issues are dedicated to 68 issues ranging from the 1940’s to the 1970’s.

Black Superheroes, Sidekicks, and Characters Comic Book Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000561
  • Collection

These comics were created in countries that were ruled by colonial powers in Africa, namely Italy, France, Belgium, and Spain. The comics are both individual copies and bound volumes with numerous copies. They date from around 1926 to 1973.

Africana Studies - Oversize

3-1: Nuestro Mundo - Atlas Ilustrado by Bimbo

3-2: Bilder Aus Aller Welt

3-3: Visual Aids depicting daily life in Africa, 11 posters

3-4: Collection of Victorian Era scraps - A collection of 50 with African diaspora themes

3-5: 4 Original Ballots from the first Democratic Election in South Africa

3-6: 4 posters depicting daily life in the Caribbean

3-7: Newspaper Advertisements with special focus on Black subjects, from Europe in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century

3-8: A collection of trade card posters that may have also served as teaching aids.

  • Includes Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Egypt, Haiti, Mexico, Morocco, Panama, Paraguay, Persia, Peru, Turkey, Uruguay, Norway, Russia, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Abyssinia, Liberia, Transylvania, Canada, Switzerland, Siam (Thailand), Japan, India, Korea, Australia.

Cards and Chromo Albums for Africana Studies

2-1: Cards depicting various subjects from multiple European companies; gift of the Buffalo History Museum

2-2: Portrait Trading Stamps; set of 25 stamps portraying Africa, produced by Aunt Hannah's bread

2-3: Nations/Colonies in Africa, 48 cards; Africa Colonial Map collection plus cards depicting colonies in Africa, by various European companies

2-4: African Colonies by Chocolat Poulain Orange, 6 cards

2-5: Notas de un Explorador by Jaimie Box, 36 cards

2-6: African Types by Baydex, 24 cards

2-7: Children of Africa, 6 cards; Biscuits Pernot, 7 cards

2-8: The Lavazza Collection- Africa, 42 cards

2-9: Clarence Brooks and Company, 4 cards. John Sinclair Limited, 3 cards; cards commemorate radio favorites Layton and Johnstone, Leslie Hutchinson and Alexander and Mose. Imperial Tobacco, 2 cards; cards commemorate Coleridge-Taylor and Paul Robeson.

2-10: Ogdens Picturesque People of the empire, 5 Cards; Anstie’s Gold Flake, 2 Cards; Duke Cigarettes, 2 Cards

2-11: Emilio Salgari, 2 cards; Chocolat Poulain, 2 cards; Imperial Tobacco, 6 cards on mining

2-12: Anco, 3 cards on Belgisch Congo; RICQLES, 2 cards; Chocolat Chardonnier, 2 cards

2-13: A La Villa De Mantes, 4 cards on Africa; Kemmerich, 1 card; Chocolat Juncosa, 2 cards on Natural History

2-14: Africa, miscellaneous companies; collection of cards united by the depiction of one shared theme Africa, daily life and inhabitants

2-15: Racial Stereotypes, miscellaneous companies; collection of cards produced by various companies united by the shared theme of depictions of racial stereotypes

2-16: Juvenile and youth depiction, miscellaneous companies

2-17: Belgisch Congo by Antoine Coppens (Anco)

2-18: Mit Carl Hagenbeck auf Tierfang by Eckstein-Halpaus, circa 1929

2-19: L' Afrique by Chocolat Pupier

2-20: Chasse Jacht by Kwatta

Africana Studies - Teaching Aids

1-1: Historic Battles by Cox International

1-2: Naturaleza y Color by EdiVersa

1-3: Chromos Poste Internationale by Kwatta

1-4: Le Tour de Monde en 120 Images by Menier, circa 1956

1-5: Images Du Monde by Le Lion

1-6: Les Races Humaines by Jacques Superchocolat

1-7: La Faune Africaine by t'Koffiemoleken

1-8: Propaganda Tools; consists of 120 stickers depicting French colonies and 16 notebook covers depicting key figures of the
Italian Republic

1-9: Propaganda Tools; School Supplies- consists of 18 notebooks, 1 Report Card, 1 Lunch Bag.

1-10: Razas Humanas by Editorial Brugera, S.A.

1-11: Habilidad y Destreza by Eduardo Rodriguez

1-12: Selva Misteriosa a los Abismos del Mar by Eduardo Rodriguez

1-13: Razas Habitantes del Mundo

1-14: Popoli, Continenti, Costumi

1-15: De Bonte Wereld by Theodorus Niemeijer, circa 1935

1-16: Fauna Flor Congo I by Cote D'Or Chocolade, circa 1883

1-17: Fauna Flor Congo II by Cote D'Or Chocolade, circa 1883

1-18: Military Uniforms of the British Empires Overseas by John Player and Sons.

1-19: Mit Reichelt um die Welt by Otto Reichelt

1-20: Le Tour de Monde en 80 Jours by Chocolat Aiglon

Africana Studies Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000559
  • Collection
  • 1883-1956; Undated

This collection encompasses a number of resources obtained with the support of A&M's Africana Studies Program.

Box 1, Teaching Aids, consists of chromo card albums that were published in continental Europe by various companies to garner support for the continuation of the control over colonies across Africa and Asia. Also, many of these albums intend to educate on the natural resources of the colonies and their indigenous inhabitants.

Box 2, Cards and Chromo Albums, consists of cards produced by various European companies that depict the African lifestyle and diaspora. Some cards also depict many stereotypes widely held by mainland European society. Also included are albums that may have been intended to educate the collector on topics such as the fauna of Africa, and the practice of hunting.

Box 3, Oversize Items, consists of more Chromo trade albums, teaching aids, ballots, and posters.

African Publications Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000558
  • Collection
  • 1959-1965

This collection was developed for Africana Studies scholars interested in research on the continent of Africa. The materials consist of African publications between circa 1959-1965 from countries that include Zambia and parts of East Africa.

African American Scrapbook

The charcoal images are as follows:
A barefoot African American family, mother, father, and eight children in period rural dress standing in front of a portion of a ramshackle cabin with a split wood shingle roof.
A longer view of the family, a bit scattered in front of a full view of the cabin.
Mother and daughter inside the cabin in front of a wall covered with newspaper.
Mother sitting outside the cabin, shown from the exterior chimney end.
Mother and son by a well in a wooded area.
Father and other male workers bailing cotton.

African American Southern Family Scrapbook

  • US TxAM-C C000557
  • Collection
  • 1900

This collection consists of a photo scrapbook with six small charcoal images that depict African-American life in the rural south with an unrelated pictorial on-lay on the upper cover, all tied together with string.

Afro-American Society Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000555
  • Collection
  • 1967-1968

Original black students' association charter. Authored by Ken Lewallen and Antwine Jefferson in Fall 1967-68.

Autograph Letters, Notes and Quotations, and Other Abolitionist Materials

ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed

  • Benjamin Bacon. Bacon was an original member of the Anti-Slavery society.

    ALS to autograph seeker C.L. Farrington (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). October 2, 1873. 1 p.

  • Henry Ward Beecher. Beecher was a social reformer, clergyman, and the brother of Harriet Beecher Stowe.

    Partial ALS, n.p., Undated. 1 p. "It is his way. It does us all good to have someone who piles on the screws - especially when we know at bottom he is most friendly."

  • William Birney. Birney was Union Army general during the Civil War, and was noted for encouraging thousands of free black men to enlist.

    ALS to Lewis Cist (Paris). March 8, 1852. 1 p.

  • Phillips Brooks. Brooks was an Episcopal clergyman and the author of O Little Town of Bethlehem.

    ALS to Mrs. Waters (Boston, Massachusetts). February 3, 1886. 1 p.

  • Blanche K. Bruce. Bruce, the child of plantation owner and his house slave, was the first African-American to serve a full term in the U.S. Senate, representing Mississippi during the Reconstruction era.

    ALS to Harry Hause (Washington, D.C. ), thanking his "host" after a recent visit. November 16, 1886. 2 p.

  • Benjamin Butler. Butler was a Massachusetts politician and Union General.

    ALS to David R. Godwin (Washington, D.C. ). June 12, 1876. 1 p.

  • William Channing

    ALS to Mrs. Chapman (Boston, Massachusetts), apologizing for sending a manuscript he suggests is unworthy of Liberty Bell, the journal of the American Antislavery Society. October 23, 1845. 1 p.

  • David Lee Child. Child was the husband of writer and reformer Lydia Maria Child.

    ALS to J. Bailey, arranging a meeting. n.p., July 17, 1829. 1 p.

  • Thomas Clarkson. Clarkson was one of the most important British abolitionists of the late 18th century.

    ALS to John B. Murray who served as Brigadier General in the Union Army, and later helped establish Memorial Day. (Playford Hall, England), arranging a visit. April 15, 1842. 2 p.

  • Cassius Marcellus Clay

    AQS, "Life, Liberty, and Love". n.p., 1860. 1 p.

  • George H. Cook. Cook was a professor of chemistry at Rutgers University whose geological survey of New Jersey became the predecessor for the U.S. Geological Survey.

    ALS regarding the purchase of a telescope (New Brunswick, New Jersey). August 27, 1863. 2 p.

    ALS (New Brunswick, New Jersey), regarding teaching science to future clergymen. May 3, 1865. 2 p. "I am every day stirred up by their fears lest they should learn something which would render their faith weak or unsound. It is a hard lesson for men to learn that one belongs to the finite the other the infinite…."

  • Daniel De Vinne

    ALS (Rye, New York). April 8, 1850. 2 p.

  • Orville Dewey

    ALS to Elizabeth Arnold (Paris). April 26, 1842. 2 p.

  • G. M. Emerson

    ALS to Joseph Kidder (Boston, Massachusetts). June 27, 1863. 1 p.

  • David Francis

    ALS to Governor Samuel T. Armstrong (Boston, Massachusetts). March 4, 1835. 2 p.

  • William Lloyd Garrison

    Copy of Wendell Phillips letter in Garrison's hand, August 1852. 1 p.

    ALS, responding to an invitation to speak at the New England Woman Suffrage Association. May 10, 1859. 2 p. "Where my hear and heart are in this matter you need no assurance from me, but I dare not, now, give you a positive pledge."

    AQS, "Liberty for each, for all, and for ever!". January 1, 1872.

    Post-mortem examination of Garrison, containing the results of the autopsy and account of the disease leading to his death. 3 p.

  • Joshua R. Giddings

    ALS to anti-slavery politician Charles Sumner, regarding New England delegates to the Peace Convention in Paris. June 8, 1849. 1 p. "Our Free Soil movement is on the advance in this state. Our forces are consolidating, and we are making preparations for the election in October…"

    AQS, n.p., regarding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Undated. "When the Representative of a State is struck down the people feel the blow."

    With one additional ALS.

  • Francis Gillette

    Letter sent from Gillette to an unknown woman, seeking her services as a school teacher for a recently built school in Bloomfield, Connecticut. July 25, 1851.

  • Sarah and Angelina Grimke, and Theodore Dwight Weld

    Three Autographs on one page, n.p., Undated (circa the 1870s). RARE

  • R. R. Gurley. Gurley was a Clergyman and the U.S. Commissioner to Liberia.

    ALS (Washington, D.C.). August 24, 1832. 1 p.

  • R. G. Hazard

    ALS to William Pitt Fessenden, July 28, 1864. 2 p.

  • Thomas Wentworth Higginson

    ALS, regarding hymns. July 23, 1908. 2 p.

  • Samuel Gridley Howe

    ALS (Boston, Massachusetts) June 7, circa the 1870s. 1 p.

    Invitation from the Perkins Institution for the Blind, announcing a meeting of the Trustees. Embossed to be read like Braille. Obituary from the Providence Journal included.

    With three additional ALS.

  • William Jackson

  • William Jay

    ALS, thanking an anonymous man for a ticket and discussing introduction for a speaker (Sumner). November 23, 1854. 1 p.

    ALS, discussing lot rentals. (New York). December 19, 1835. 1 p.

  • Oliver Johnson

    Autograph Poem Signed, "The Peace of God", n.p., Undated. 2 p.

    AQS, "God is wrath, even as he is love". (New York). January 8, 1886. 1 p.

    ALS to Rev. William Hayes Ward (Orange, New Jersey) pleading for work. February 2, 1879. 4 p. "I tell you frankly that I am in a dire strait. I have struggled hard for almost three years to get my paper on a paying basis…I look now into the faces of my dear wife and child with anxiety much as I never before experienced…".

    ALS to Thomas Wentworth Higginson (New York), regarding abolitionist Moncure Conway. October 6, 1885. 3 p. "I very much regret my inability to join in person the good company of friends and admirers of Mr. Moncure D. Conway, over which you are called to preside on Friday evening next. I greatly honor him for his high position in the world of thought and am moreover deeply indebted to him for light and inspiration upon many important subjects. In point of fidelity to his convictions and the boldness with which he has uttered them, he has set an example worthy of general imitation. I am glad he has returned to his native land, and I desire to lend my voice to the chorus of welcome that will greet him on the occasion to which I have referred. May his light still increase in brightness, and his hand grow strong for the work before him."

    AQS, "Thanks be to God! Not a slave in all the Land!" (Clifton Springs). September 15, 1889. 1 p.

    ALS to an anonymous Charles, discussing a speech that was sent but was incomplete. 1 p.

    ALS, of payment sent for an article, (New York). December 31, 1866. 1 p.

  • Jean Kina. Kina was a Haitian revolutionary leader and former slave.

    Note Signed, warrant for rations. September 12, 1795. Exceptionally rare autograph.
    Winslow Lewis.

    ALS, request for letter to see someone in London. Envelope addressed to Winslow Lewis. March 1872. 1 p.

    Invitation and ALS, expressing his father's inability to accept an invitation due to being absent from the city. May 7, 1872. 1 p.

  • J. L. Lovejoy

    ALS, Cincinnati, Ohio, October 28, 1839. 1 p.

  • Zachary Macaulay

    ALS, regarding the disposition of an estate. Macaulay was the leader of a Parliamentary effort to end slavery in Britain. October 10, 1823. 4 p.

  • Samuel May

    ALS to H.W. Clarke, regarding Civil War relief efforts. (Syracuse, New York). March 10, 1863. 2 p.

    Copy of a letter from Samuel May, (Syracuse, New York). January 8, 1866. 1 p.

  • James M. McKim

    ALS. 2 p.

  • Edward Joy Morris

    Note signed, regarding a Whig gathering Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 18, 1844. 1 p.
    ALS, giving dates of his service in Congress (Washington, D.C.). February 8, 1858. 1 p.

    Letter signed (possibly clerically), thanking an unidentified woman for a likeness of her husband, who gave Morris advice during his time in Liberia. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). August 9, 1863. 1 p.

    Letter signed (possibly clerically), mentioning favorable news regarding diplomatic appointments to Liberia. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). May 22, 1866. 1 p.

  • Theodore Parker

    ALS to Miss H.E. Horn regarding Goethe (West Roxbury, Massachusetts). October 15, 1846. 3 p.

    Two additional ALS, three ANS, and one cabinet card.

  • William W. Patton

    ALS, answering his sister, who was evidently skeptical of the anti-slavery movement's methods (New York). September 16, 1839. 4 p.
    Transcript: "Dear Sister,
    Dr. Bates a few moments ago handed me your letter & I hasten to reply. And this I do the more readily because I feel confident that a satisfactory answer can be given to your questions. You wish to know, what good all this agitating will do?
    I could first ask what good cause or what great moral reform action ever succeeded without agitation. How did our Savior & the apostles endeavor to propagate the gospel? Was it not by traveling extensively over the known world & promulgating the truth? Was it not by rebuking sin everywhere & under all forms - proclaiming the utter wickedness of the human heart - denouncing idolatry as folly & wickedness & holding up the cross as the only hope of a lost world? They spoke the truth also sternly & made no compromise with wrong. In rebuking the Jews for their treatment of the Savior they said, whom 'ye have take by wicked hands have crucified and slain' 'But ye denied the Holy One & the Just & desired a murder to be granted unto you.' And while the church followed their example, almost miraculous success attended their efforts.
    Again when Papacy threw her mantle of gloom over the church - when a deathlike stupor had seized the disciples of the cross, what aroused them, save the trumpet tones of Luther & his associates, spurning with indignation the idea of Papal supremacy & infallibility. They awoke the plebian & the senator - the peasant & the king - how? By agitation. And the happy results we feel every day.
    Alcohol had slain its thousands - the drunkards hell was fast filling up. We were branded abroad as a nation of drunkards. How is it that such a change as we now see has been wrought? Why is it that one state after another is prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor & we stand far in advance of the rest of the world on this subject? It has been accomplished by agitation.
    Nearly one millions of slaves groaned beneath West Indian bondage & the slave traders covered the ocean, sailing under the flags of all civilized nations yet not a voice uttered warning or rebuke; but now how different the sight. The freeman lifts his free arms to heaven & thanks his God & the abolitionists of England the lash is beneath his feet, & the chain rent asunder falls to the ground. And how was this brought to pass. By the agitation of such men as Wilberforce, Clarkson & Sharpe. Years did they agitate, & now God has brought about the result.
    And now, shall we follow the path which Experience points out, or (monstrous anomaly) leave sin to cure itself.
    But permit me to mention of our plans & opinions. First, we believe the slaveholder has a conscience, aye a conscience, slumbering though it may be. This conscience we would address. We would show him that though he may not distinctly be aware of it, yet in reality he is robbing his fellow man - treading under foot precious rights & [curtailing love on many such]. Do you say, that he will not hear & is only enraged; so does the rum seller stop his ears or assail you in his rage when you tell him, he is filling up the drunkards grave, & feeding the fires of the drunkards hell. But in his cooler moments, his conscience will whisper, it is all true. Is it right so to speak to the rum seller & to hope for beneficial results, then is it right thus to address the slaveholder & equally to anticipate the time when Slavery's expiring groan shall scare be heard for the songs of the emancipated.
    Secondly. We believe, if we can convince the slaveholders that free labor is far more profitable to the South than is slave labor, that their self interest will liberate the slaves. To establish this position we have a mass of overwhelming arguments & facts.
    Thirdly. We believe that the South has a sense & a deep sense of honor. What then will she do, when a worlds scorn shall scathe her. When to be a slaveholder shall be as counted a foul spot on a mans character. Lynching & bowie knives will ill contend against the brand of shame. Was not Robinson acquitted of the murder of Helen Jewett & yet he dared not, he could not reside in this city. Why? Because every body believed him quietly & infamy had marked him as her own.
    Fourthly. We believe that the South wishes to live securely. Therefore we point her to a nation of enemies growing up in her midst. We mention her hopeless condition in case of a war & thus wish to show that it is always unsafe to do wrong.
    'Why then do you labor at the North?' Because in several of the so called free states slaves are yet held. Because a burning, withering prejudice is bowing the colored man to the earth, blighting his hopes for time & often for eternity. Because the free colored man is shut out of our schools & our colleges & put in a place of degradation in the courts of God! Because no mechanic will take him for an apprentice & no merchant receives him as a clerk. Because if the colored man was elevated & it was seen that he could hold stations of honor & respectability such a grief of universal condemnation would go forth against slavery as will cause it to vanish from the earth. Because several of the nominally free states permit slaveholders from the South to hold slaves within their bounds for 6 or 9 months, & others lay heavy fines & imprisonment upon those who aid the panting fugitive. Because the North has the majority in Congress & hence the power & obligation to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, in Florida, also to break up the slave trade between the states, which is the main thing that renders slavery profitable in Delaware, Maryland & Virginia, which being removed these states would be forced to emancipate their slaves. Because the Northern church has palliated this crime & failed to rebuke it, while at the same time it has influence sufficient to cause its members at the South to renounce slavery. (See my last letter about communing with slaveholders) Because in a word, slaveholders as a general thing will never listen to us, as long as so many uphold them at the North.
    But says, the objector, 'I have seen a great deal of quarreling & disturbance arise from so much agitation.' Well, what then. This is not denied, but what does it prove? That it is wrong to continue because incidental disturbances arise? Why then did not Paul stop when he was mobbed wherever he went? Why did Peter & John continue so fanatical, when they were scourged for Christs sake? Did not Christ tell us to expect trouble whenever truth grappled with error. Math. X:34,6. Could we expect a system which is so bored by the civil passions of the heart to be given up without a severe & protracted struggle?
    Such is my answer, given as briefly as possible, to your questions. Had I time, I might sustain my position by many more arguments. But I have tried to be brief. If my answer is not satisfactory to Miss Bonny & others, please as soon as possible specify wherein I have failed. I have not undertaken to show how bad slavery is, inasmuch as I took it for granted that she allowed its wickedness. Therefore my attention has been confined to a general statement of our plan & the reasons for it. May God teach us all right that we may do what is well pleasing to him. For it matters little whether we have mans condemnation or not, so long as the smile your Savior is on us. Mother sends her love. I have had a cold for 4 weeks. The Dr. forbids to sing or speak much. The Plans look quite well & has one pedal to another alongside of it. Last Wednesday I went on to Uncle Mag office & on Saturday brough[t] Ludlow, & Aunt Catharine home. Had a very pleasant time there & got most well of my cold, but was put almost entirely [back by singing & talking yesterday (Sabbath).] Write soon."

    AQS, "He that doeth good is of God; but he that doeth evil hath not seen God" (Chicago, Illinois). February 14, 1877. 1 p.

    With one additional ALS.

  • Wendell Phillips

    AQS, "Count that day lost / Whose low descended sun / Sees at the thy hand / No worthy action done / These lines John Brown taught to each his children." September 1871. 1 p.

    Four additional AQS, two ANS, two ALS, and a Cabinet card.

  • Parker Pillsbury

    ALS (Concord, New Hampshire). September 8, 1896. 2 p. "I joined Mr. Garrison in the tenth year of his warfare, and I hope and think he would say I never deserted him in any of his finest battles on whatever field. And I hope ere long to meet him under other and brighter skies, to renew our conquests upward and onward…"

  • A. M. Powell

    ANS, on Office of the National Anti-Slavery Standard stationary (New York). June 26, 1866. 1 p.

  • F.B. Sanborn

    ANS (Boston, Massachusetts) January 11, 1910. 1 p.

  • Gerrit Smith

    An 1864 Note Signed, three ALS (one mounted on an acidic page from the autograph album), and an 1848 printed speech on land reform. (5 items total)

  • Henry B. Stanton

    ALS, sending a manuscript for publication. October 17, 1844.

    ALS, n.p., Undated. 1 p. "…why would it not be a good plan for some of our New York stump orators to 'change works' with some of yours? Some of your Conscience Whigs can do great good, very great good, in the central & western parts of this state. They would have great influence with the Whigs of this region. In return for them, let some of your Barnburners go there. Their noble enthusiasm would wear off prejudices which you Whigs have to contend, and they might make deep inroads upon Hunkerism in Massachusetts…"

  • Thaddeus Stevens

    ALS, February 17, 1861. 1 p.

  • Alvan Stewart

    ALS, from an early political abolitionist regarding his publication and the legal assault on slavery. June 16, 1845. "I did not receive your letter until Saturday night & I hasten to answer it. The Argument I delivered in eleven hours before the Sup. Court of N. Jersey I think eminently calculated for lawyers [?] & those wise men constructing society courts the muse who[?] and the exponents of the law & Constitution. It covers all the questions under the federal Constitution as well as N. Jersey, I have had lawyers men who were my political enemies order fifty of these. The Argument will be as I understand 45 to 50 compact pages, & are $125.00 at per thousands at the office. In fact it is altogether the most labored production of my life, & covers our entire question, under all aspects, as my adversaries compelled me by their attacks to give a history of & define the Liberty party - its objects, aims, the course of slavery in different ages, demonstrating the declaration of independence a practicality & showing condition of slave states, as compared with free, showing 6 millions ruined, 3 of Black & 3 of poor Southern whites…"

  • P. F. Streeter

    ALS (Baltimore, Maryland). August 22, 1861. 4 p. "This city is quiet, but feelings are bitter, and the secessionists believe 'Old Jeff' [Jefferson Davis] will be here before long. I do not agree with them. Troops are beginning to arrive and encamp on our hills. A great hospital is to be established here. These things will create some activity. As to my own prospects, they are not very bright. I shall lose many secession pupils, and some will not be able to send; but I hope to have some new ones, and enough to justify me in going on."

  • Charles Sumner

    Newspaper clipping discussing a dispute.

    Autograph Manuscript outline of studies in history. 3 p.

    Document Signed, regarding a railroad. February 5, 1845. 1 p.

    Autograph Quotation, "Whether on the gallows high, or in the battle's van, the fittest place for a man to die, is where he dies for man." n.p. Undated.

    Four additional ANS, and one photo with a clipped signature affixed.

  • Lewis Tappan

    ALS, regarding a case before the Presbytery. February 26, 1841. 1 p.

  • George Thompson

    ALS to Oliver Johnson, July 13, 1865, 2 p.
    Clipped signature and AQS "To America!" (Salem, Massachusetts). December 6, 1850. (tipped on the left side onto acidic paper)

  • Francis Todd

    Letter from Todd to an attorney regarding a transaction of $1000 in Newbury Port. June 11, 1842.

  • John Weiss. Unitarian minister

    ALS, to a younger unidentified colleague (New York). November 21, 1852. 4 p. "My Dear Friend,
    I have been trying very hard to think that I can come to Washington, for I should like to do it. But I am forced to decline it, for a variety of reasons which press upon me. Rev. Bowen will have left us, and no one will take his place at present: so that the entire responsibility of study will come upon me. If I preach at all away from home, it will be for Rev. Bowen's installation at Williamsburg. Then, the journey and preaching would use me up for a week: a thing not to be considered, if any one were here to take care of the [evening] Sunday. The besetting difficulties are too great even for my strong desire to come.
    I rejoice that you are going to be settled at Washington: and I have no doubt that you can say there just what you please. My advice to you would be to go on as you have begun, making your Anti-slavery occasionally, at timely moments, just as strong as you have made it previous to your call. The most that a man can desire is to have the liberty to speak a timely word at some conjuncture which enhances its meaning and prevents it from being spent upon the air. If a man waits for the chances which must inevitably occur in our legislation, and so long as the power of slavery seeks its opportunity, he will have the satisfaction of bearing his testimony at the most useful moment for his own conscience and for the cause of truth. All else, relating to any special topic, is comparatively aimless, lacking the time's enforcement - which justifies it from the charge of dilettantism and superfluity of independence by bringing the evil up to be hit, and marking every hit a palpable one. Particularly in Washington, where people hear of effects being produced by speaking strongly to the point at some critical moment, I should judge it to be the best cause for the preacher of anti-slavery truth to watch the providential chances, and concentrate this special moral energy of his upon the evil when it has a '[name].'
    Let me desire for you every success and spiritual blessing, and though distant from us may you yet feel the sympathy of all who believe as you do, who will be ready to countenance for you, and who will feel strengthened by your efforts."

    With one additional ALS.

  • Elizur Wright

    ALS, regarding becoming an auxiliary to the National Liberal League. August 31, 1880. 2 p.

  • Other letters

    Ones addressed to famous autograph collectors Lewis Cist and William Buell Sprague, are from Francis Gillette (Senator from Conn.); William Jackson; William Jay (2 letters); Winslow Lewis; J. C. Lovejoy; James Miller McKim (2 ALS); A.M. Powell; and Francis Todd.

Abolitionists' Archive

  • US TxAM-C C000553
  • Collection
  • 1795-1910; Undated

The collection contains over 100 rare letters, autograph quotations, and photographs from 50 major figures in the American antislavery struggle, including several rare autographs from key British abolitionists. Many of the individuals noted provided selfless support, financially, morally, and wrote on behalf of the abolishment of the 'peculiar' institution of slavery. Some of the well-known abolitionists include Henry Ward Beecher, Blanche K. Bruce, William Channing, William Lloyd Garrison, Joshua R. Giddings, the Grimke sisters, Gerrit Smith, Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner, and Lewis Tappan, one of the leading financial supporters of the Amistad Africans.

The collection contains photographs and newspaper clippings of these 50 prominent abolitionists.

Gigi Edgley Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000548
  • Collection
  • 1999

This collection consists of "Durka Returns", a script for Episode 15, Season 1 of the joint Australian-American television series Farscape (1999-2003). The episode, originally released in 1999, is notable for introducing the character Chiana, played by Gigi Edgley. It was written by Rockne S. O'Bannon and Grant McAloon.

The script was originally the property of Edgley's, and has been heavily marked up with her acting notes and edits. It is inscribed to Jeremy Brett, to whom it was given in early 2023.

Edgley, Gigi, 1977-

Drake Materials

1/1 - Letters From Bryan Scott, 1990
1/2 - Invitation to “The Night of 100 Davids,” July 23, 1991
1/3 - Thank you letter to Drake for a New York Times advertisement, February 4, 1992
1/4 - Best wishes letter to Drake for an upcoming show, June 21, 1992
1/5 - Letter with a check for $20 to donate to an AIDS agency, June 22, 1992
1/6 - Appreciation letter to Drake for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, June 22, 1992
1/7 - Birthday postcard to Drake, June 24, 1992
1/8 - Letters of appreciation for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, June 28, 1992 - August 10, 1992
1/9 - Letter from Joe Watts requesting a copy of The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me to produce for his theatre group, August 15, 1992
1/10 - Letter from Scott Grannan canceling dinner and discussing work and times to meet, August 21, 1992
1/11 - Letter from Paul Boynton requesting Drake's presence in The Actor's Day Book, October 11, 1992
1/12 - Letters of appreciation for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, August 11, 1992 - October 20, 1992
1/13 - Fan letter of appreciation from T.B., November 23, 1992
1/14 - Holiday card to Drake from Philip Reed, December 28, 1992
1/15 - Letter of appreciation from Lindsay Davis, 1992
1/16 - Laughing Matters, 1992
1/17 - Letter from Rev. Charles Urnick describing holiday events and inviting Drake down to visit, January 1, 1993
1/18 - Letters of appreciation for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, October 25, 1992 - January 3, 1993
1/19 - Holiday card from Roger Platizky mentioning teaching a course on "AIDS & Literature", January 4, 1993
1/20 - Letter from Dill Clendenen for the holidays and asking Drake to come to visit, January 5, 1993
1/21 - Letter from J. Oliver inviting Drake for a visit and wishing him happy holidays, January 5, 1993
1/22 - Letters of appreciation, January 6, 1993 - January 19, 1993
1/23 - Letter from Anders Odelius about translating plays into Swedish, January 22, 1993
1/24 - Invitation to Sam's 2nd Annual Equity Fights AIDS Benefit, February 1, 1993
1/25 - Letters of appreciation and invitations to Drake to attend Theatre Productions, February 2, 1993 - March 8, 1993
1/26 - Letters of appreciation from friends about his works, March 8, 1993 - March 31, 1993
1/27 - Letters of appreciation from acquaintances, April 12, 1993 - April 26, 1993
1/28 - Appreciation from fans about Drake's works, April 26, 1993
1/29 - Letters from Rabbi Richard A. Weiss in support of "Opposition to discrimination based on sexual orientation", April 27, 1993
1/30 - Letter to Drake from $3 bill about joining their artistic advisory board, April 27, 1993
1/31 - Letter from The Joan Rivers Show about an enclosed dub of the "Twenty-Something" Show, May 14, 1993
1/32 - Postcard from Bryan from North England, May 17, 1993
1/33 - Letter requesting a contribution from Drake for the Center's Garden Party, May 19, 1993
1/34 - Letter about interviewing Drake for Between the Lines, May 20, 1993
1/35 - Letters of appreciation from fans and old acquaintances, May 1993
1/36 - Letters of appreciation from fans, June 1, 1993 - July 13, 1993
1/37 - Birthday letter to Drake, June 27, 1993
1/38 - Letter of thanks from Celebration Theatre, August 10, 1993
1/39 - Fan letter asking Drake to contribute to the Purple Circuit and Artists Confronting AIDS; contains photos, August 11, 1993
1/40 - Letter and Postcards from fans and acquaintances, July 20, 1993 - September 2, 1993
1/41 - Holiday card from Ed and Jay, 1993
1/42 - Letters from fans regarding "The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me", December 20, 1993 - February 11, 1994
1/43 - Letters from friends wanting to get together, March 7, 1994 - March 8, 1994
1/44 - Interview request for Ten Percent Magazine, March 14, 1994
1/45 - Letters to Drake, March 7, 1994 - March 23, 1994
1/46 - A note about interview issues, April 4, 1994
1/47 - Invitation to a commitment ceremony, April 13, 1994
1/48 - Letters regarding The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, June 19, 1994 - July 11, 1994
1/49 - Letters for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, September 13, 1994 - October 17, 1994
1/50 - Letter from casting director complimenting Drake's performance and asking for a resume, October 3, 1994
1/51 - Letters from friends, May 10, 1994 - October 23, 1994
1/52 - Invitation to join “The Sweater Book”, 1995
1/53 - Letter from Donn Teal, November 16, 1996
1/54 - Letters, Undated
1/55 - Birthday cards to Drake, Undated
1/56 - Holiday cards to Drake, Undated
1/57 - Letters for The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, Undated
1/58 - A birthday card with attached "We Remember" ribbon, Undated
1/59 - "Broadway Cares; Equity Fights AIDS" bumper sticker and "AIDS Awareness" stamp
1/60 - The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me review by William Spencer
1/61 - Birthday card from Drake's grandmother
1/62 - Seattle Gay News payslip, and Colours of Pride business card
1/63 - Note from The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, Undated
1/64 - "Lift the ban" Marguerita party to lift the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy
1/65 - Requests for Drake to contact people, Undated
1/66 - Advertisements for The Arts Castle at the Delaware County Cultural Arts Center and the Danbury Actors Repertory Theatre

David Drake Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000527
  • Collection
  • 1990-1996; Undated

This collection contains letters, postcards, and artwork sent to Drake by his friends and his fans that he compiled over the years.

Drake, David

Manuscripts, Ru - Wol

1-4/1: Rusch, Kristine Kathryn: "Sinner-Saints" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/2: Rusch, Kristine Kathryn: "The Beautiful and the Damned" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/3: Rusch, Kristine Kathryn: "The Questing Mind" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/4: Rysdyk, Leonard: "So Tender and Mild" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/5: Sallis, James: "Ansley's Demons" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/6: Savage, Felicity: "Cyberfate" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/7: Savage, Ron: "Piano Pony" (1993), typescript, undated

1-4/8: Savage, Ron: "Connecticut Nazi" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/9: Seelhammer, Cynthia: "Gentle Horses" (1998), typescript, undated

1-4/10: Shiner, Lewis: "Like the Gentle Rain" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/11: Shunn, D. William: "Kevin 17" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/12: Shunn, D. William: "Celestial Mechanics" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/13: Smeds, Dave: "Short Timer" (1994), typescript, undated

1-4/14: Smith, Dean Wesley: " Jukebox Gifts" (1994), typescript with handwritten comments, undated

1-4/15: Smith, Dean Wesley: "In the Shade of the Slowboat Man" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/16: Smith, Sarah: "Touched by the Bomb" (1993), typescript, undated

1-4/17: Springer, Nancy: "Chasing Butterfly Shadow" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, 1993

1-4/18: Springer, Nancy: "Transcendence" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/19: Stableford, Brian: "Busy Dying" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/20: Stableford, Brian: "The Pipes of Pan" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/21: Steele, Allen: "Shepherd Moon" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, 1992

1-4/22: Steiber, Raymond: "Dry August" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/23: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #1: Outer Cyberspace" (1992), typescript, and typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/24: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #2: Buckymania" (1992), typescript, photocopy of typescript, and faxed copy, undated

1-4/25: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #3: Think of the Prestige" (1992), faxed copy of typescript, undated

1-4/26: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #4: Artificial Life" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/27: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #5: Internet" (1993), faxed copy of typescript, undated

1-4/28: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #6 -7" (1993), faxed copies of typescripts, 1992

1-4/29: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #8: Creation Science" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, and faxed copy, 1993

1-4/30: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #11: Spires on the Skyline" (1994), faxed copy of typescript, 1993

1-4/31: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #12 - 13" (1994), typescripts with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/32: Sterling, Bruce: "Science Column #14 - 15" (1994 - 1995), faxed copy of typescripts, 1994

1-4/33: Sterling, Bruce: "The Littlest Jackal" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/34: Taylor, Robert C.: "A Prisoner of History" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/35: Thomas, Michael: "Nightwatch" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/36: Thomas, Michael: "Sometimes a Helix is a Circle" (1999), typescript, undated

1-4/37: Thompson, Jessie: "Angelman" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/38: Thompson, Jessie: "Synechdoche" (1992), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/39: Tiedemann, Mark W.: "The Playground Door" (1993), typescript, undated

1-4/40: Tiedemannm Mark W.: "Psyche" (1998), typescript, undated

1-4/41: Tilton, Lois: "The Twelve Swans" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/42: Tilton, Lois: "Sleep, My Little One" (1993), typescript, undated

1-4/43: Tritten, Larry: "History's Mysteries...Semi-Solved" (1999), typescript, undated

1-4/44: Turtledove, Harry: "Mebodes' Fly" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/45: Turtledove, Harry: "Vermin" (1993), typescript, undated

1-4/46: Turtledove, Harry: "The Seventh Chapter" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/47: Turzillo, Mary A.: "Miranda's Monster" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/48: Turzillo, Mary A.: "Mate" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/49: Tuttle, Lisa: "Meeting the Muse" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/50: Utley, Steven: "Look Away" (1992), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/51: Vamosi, Robert: "With or Without You" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/52: Vaughan, Bill: "The Wall" (1994), typescript, undated

1-4/53: Vukcevich, Ray: "Review: Pirates of the Universe" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/54: Vukcevich, Ray: "White Guys In Space" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/55: Vukcevich, Ray: "A Holiday Junket" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/56: Vukcevich, Ray: "Rejoice" (1999), typescript, undated

1-4/57: Wade, Susan: "Intruders" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/58: Wade, Susan: "A Recent Vintage" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/59: Watson, Ian: "The Amber Room" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/60: Watson, Ian: "The Last Beast Out of the Box" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/61: Watson, Ian: "The Boy Who Lost an Hour, the Girl Who Lost Her Life" (1998), typescript, undated

1-4/62: Watt-Evans, Lawrence: "Spirit Dump" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/63: Webb, Don: "The Evil Miracle" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/64: Weiner, Andrew: "A New Man" (1992), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/65: Weiner, Andrew: "Seeing" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/66: Weiner, Andrew: "The Purple Pill" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/67: Wells, Matthew: "The Auschwitz Circus" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/68: Wentworth, K.D.: "As You Sow" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/69: Wentworth, K.D.: "Tis The Season" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/70: Wentworth, K.D.: "Tall One" (1998), typescript, undated

1-4/71: West, Jake: "Halls of Burning" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/72: West, Michelle Sagara: "Guilty Pleasures" columns (1996 - 1997), typescripts, 1996 - 1997

1-4/73: What, Leslie: "Compatability Clause" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/74: What, Leslie: "Uncle Gorby and the Baggage Ghost" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/75: Wheeler, Deborah: "Javier, Dying in the Land of Flowers" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/76: Whitlock, Dean: "Three Gifts" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/77: Wightman, Wayne and Russo, Richard Paul: "The Idiot's Dream" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/78: Wilber, Rick: "Ice Covers The Hole" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/79: Wilber, Rick: "Where Garagiola Waits" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/80: Wilber, Rick: "Straight Changes" (1998), typescript, undated

1-4/81: Wilhelm, Kate: "Forget Luck" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/82: Williams, Tad: "Monsieur Vergalant's Canard" (1995), typescript, undated

1-4/83: Williams, Walter Jon: "Even As a Broken Mirror...(or) That Bright Names Will Hallow Song" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated (published as "Wall, Stone, Craft")

1-4/84: Williamson, Jack: "Dark Star" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/85: Williamson, Jack: "The Hole in the World" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/86: Williamson, Jack: "The Infinite Career" (1997), typescript (1946 words), and typescript (2180 words), undated

1-4/87: Wilson, F. Paul: "Bugs" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/88: Wilson, Robin: "To the Vector Belong..." (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, 1993

1-4/89: Wilson, Robin: "The Retired Men's Social Club and Ladies Auxiliary" (1996), typescript, 1994

1-4/90: Wilson, Robin: "Faster Than a Speeding Bullet" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-4/91: Winter, Laurel: "Blood Harp" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/92: Winter, Laurel: "Permanent Natural Boy" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/93: Winter, Laurel: "David's Ashes" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/94: Winter, Laurel: "Tomorrow Tea" (1997), typescript, undated

1-4/95: Winter, Laurel: "Fighting Gravity" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-4/96: Wolfe, Gene: "The Legend of Xi Cygnus" (1992), typescript, undated

1-4/97: Wolfe, Gene: "The Man in the Pepper Mill" (1996), typescript, undated

1-4/98: Wolfe, Gene: "No Planets Strike" (1997), typescript, undated

Rusch, Kristine Kathryn

Manuscripts, Gou - Ros

1-3/1: Goulart, Ron: "A Cure for Baldness" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/2: Goulart, Ron: "Why I Never Went Steady With Heather Moon" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/3: Goulart, Ron: "The Curse of the Demon" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/4: Gross, Gordon: "Communion" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/5: Grossbach, Robert: "A Feel for the Game" (1994), typescript, undated

1-3/6: Grossbach, Robert: "Jew on a Chip" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/7: Grossbach, Robert: "Of Scorned Women and Causal Loops" (1999), typescript, undated

1-3/8: Guthridge, George and Berliner, Janet: "Notes Toward a Rumpled Stillskin" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/9: Haldeman, Jack C, II: "By The Sea" (1992), typescript, undated

1-3/10: Haldeman, Jack C., II: "Lonesome Homesick Blues" (1992), typescript, undated

1-3/11: Haldeman, Joe: "Graves" (1992), typescript, undated

1-3/12: Hand, Elizabeth: "Last Summer at Mars Hill" (1994), typescript with handwritten copyedits, undated

1-3/13: Hartlep, Eric: "The Seven Beds" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/14: Hightower, Lynn S.: "Point Man" (1993), typescript, 1991

1-3/15: Hodgson, Pamela D.: "The Canterbury Path" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/16: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Airborn" (1996), typescript (19.1k words), undated

1-3/17: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Airborn" (1996), typescript (19.5k words), undated

1-3/18: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Here We Come A-Wandering" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/19: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Key Signatures" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/20: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Manna" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/21: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "The World Within" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/22: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Gone to Heaven Shouting" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/23: Hoffman, Nina Kiriki: "Sweet Nothings" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/24: Hooper, Jacquelyn: "Acheter" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/25: Hooper, Jacquelyn: "Home on the Range" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/26: Jeapes, Ben: "Pages Out Of Order" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/27: Jensen, Jan Lars: "The Pacific Front" (1998), typescript with handwritten copyedits, undated

1-3/28: Julian, Astrid: "Blowup" (1996), typescript first draft with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/29: Julian, Astrid: "Blowup" (1996), typescript second draft with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/30: Julian, Astrid: "Blowup" (1996), typescript with handwritten copyedits, undated

1-3/31: Kadleckova, Vilma: "Longing for Blood" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/32: Kale, Bonita: "Miracle in a Small Village" (1992), typescript, undated

1-3/33: Kale, Bonita: "Annie's Shelter" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/34: Kelly, James Patrick: "Why the Bridge Stopped Singing" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/35: Kessel, John: "Books" columns (1993 - 1995), typescripts, some with handwritten edits, 1993 - 1995

1-3/36: Killheffer, Robert K.J.: "Books Column: September 1994" (1994), typescript and faxed copy, 1994

1-3/37: Killheffer, Robert K.J.: "Books Column: December 1994" (1994), typescript and faxed copy, and correspondence, 1994

1-3/38: Killheffer, Robert K.J.: "Books Column: February 1995" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits and faxed copy, 1994

1-3/39: Killheffer, Robert K.J.: "Books Columns: April - June 1995" (1995), typescripts with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/40: Killheffer, Robert K.J.: "Books Columns: September 1995 - February 1996" (1995 - 1996), faxed copies of typescripts, 1995

1-3/41: Kittredge, Mary: "Her House in Order" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/42: Koja, Kathe: "Lady Lazarus" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/43: Koja, Kathe and Malzberg, Barry N.: "Orleans, Rheims, Friction: Fire" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/44: Koman, Victor: "Bootstrap Enterprise" (1992), typescript, undated

1-3/45: Kraus, Stephen: "White Walls" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/46: Laidlaw, Marc: "Natural Engines", typescript, undated - not published in F&SF

1-3/47: Lawson, James: "Gagrito" (1993), typescript, undated

1-3/48: Lee, Mary Soon: "Ebb Tide" (1995), typescript, undated

1-3/49: Lee, Mary Soon: "Monstrosity" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/50: Lee, Mary Soon: "Ex Terra, Ex Astris", typescript, undated - not published in F&SF

1-3/51: Lee, Mary Soon: "Universal Grammar", typescript, undated - not published in F&SF

1-3/52: Lee, Rand B.: "Still Life with Doves" (1993), 1992

1-3/53: Lee, Rand B.: "The Green Man" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, 1993

1-3/54: Lee, Rand B.: "The Pearl" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-3/55: Lee, Tanith: "The Mermaid" (1991), typescript, undated (photocopy) - not published in F&SF

1-3/56: Lee, Tanith: "Ondralume" (1992), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/57: Lee, Tanith: "Three Beasts" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/58: Lee, Tanith: "The Reason for Not Going to the Ball (A Letter to Cinderella from Her Stepmother)" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/59: Le Guin, Ursula K.: "Solitude" (1994), typescript, undated

1-3/60: Lethem, Jonathan, Kessel, John, and Kelly, James Patrick: "The True History of the End of the World" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/61: Lethem, Jonathan and MacDonald, Angus: "The Edge of the Bed of Forever" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/62: Levy, Robert J.: "New Horizons in Stickball" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/63: Levy, Robert J.: "Every Day Different" (1996), typescript, 1995

1-3/64: Levy, Robert J.: "Jack Stacey, A.S.B.R." (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/65: Libling, Michael: "Sitters" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/66: Libling, Michael: "Mosquito League" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/67: Patterson, Kent: "That Cruel Pale Exclusion" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits (under old title "Oh, Babe, It Ain't No Illusion that Cruel Pauli Exclusion is Ruling Out My Love For You"), undated

1-3/68: Patterson, Kent and Oltian, Jerry: "Dutchman's Gold" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/69: Pendleton, Michaelene: "Rising Star" (1993), typescript, undated

1-3/70: Perry, Steve: "Just Ask" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/71: Perry, Steve: "What the Dormouse Said" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/72: Perry, Steve: "A Few Minutes in Granddaddy's Old House on Black Bottom Bayou" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/73: Platt, Charles: "Trading Data with Dead and Digital" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/74: Reed, Kit: "The Singing Marine" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/75: Reed, Kit: "Rajmahal" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/76: Reed, Kit: "Unlimited" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/77: Reed, Robert: "The Dragons of Springplace" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/78: Reed, Robert: "Graffiti" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/79: Reed, Robert: "To Church with Mr. Multhiford" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/80: Reitan, Eric: "Faerie Storm" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/81: Resnick, Mike: "The Roosevelt Dispatches" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/82: Resnick, Mike: "Forgotten Treasures" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/83: Resnick, Mike: "Forgotten Treasures #2" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/84: Resnick, Mike: "The Gefilte Fish Girl" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/85: Resnick, Mike: "Card Shark" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/86: Resnick, Mike: "Forgotten Treasures #3" (1998), typescript, undated

1-3/87: Resnick, Mike: "Redchapel" (2000), outline, 1996 (faxed copy)

1-3/88: Resnick, Mike and DiChario, Nicholas A.: "Birdie" (1994), typescript, undated

1-3/89: Resnick, Mike and DiChario, Nicholas A.: "Working Stiff" (1995), typescript, undated

1-3/90: Resnick, Mike and DiChario, Nicholas A.: "Working Stiff" (1995), typescript, undated (published as "Coda: Working Stiff")

1-3/91: Richerson, Carrie: "The Harrowing" (1996), typescript, undated

1-3/92: Richerson, Carrie: "The Quick and the Dead" (1997), typescript, undated

1-3/93: Robins, Madeleine E.: "Abelard's Kiss" (1995), typescript, undated

1-3/94: Rogers, Bruce Holland: "Lifeboat on a Burning Sea" (1995), typescript, undated

1-3/95: Rosenblum, Mary: "California Dreamer" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-3/96: Rosenblum, Mary: "Afterimage" (1997), typescript, undated

Rusch, Kristine Kathryn

Manuscripts, Ch - Gou

1-2/1: Chilson, Rob: "Midnight Yearnings" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/2: Chilson, Rob: "This Side of Independence" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/3: Chwedyk, Richard: "Auteur Theory" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/4: Clayton, Jo: "Borrowed Light" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/5: Coates, Deborah: "Tally" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/6: Cohen, Lisa R.: "Rainbone" (1993), typescript, undated

1-2/7: Coney, Michael: "Werewolves in Sheep's Clothing" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/8: Conner, Mike: "East of the Moon" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits (missing page 51), undated

1-2/9: Cool, Tom: "Universal Emulators" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/10: Cornell, Richard: "Magritte's Kick" (1992), typescript, undated

1-2/11: Coulter, Lynn: "Granny Woman" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/12: Coulter, Lynn: "Swamp Water" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/13: Coulter, Lynn: "The Singing Thing" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/14: Counsil, Wendy: "Black Handkerchiefs" (1991), typescript, undated

1-2/15: Counsil, Wendy: "How to Tame the Vampire" (1992), typescript, undated

1-2/16: Couzens, Gary: "Second Contact" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/17: Couzens, Gary: "Half-Life" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/18: Cowdrey, Albert E.: "The Familiar" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/19: Cowdrey, Albert E.: "The Great Ancestor" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/20: Cowdrey, Albert E.: "White Magic" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/21: Cowdrey, Albert E.: "Revenge" (1999), typescript, undated

1-2/22: Crowley, John: "Gone" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/23: de Kruyff, Nicholas: "Burger's Head" (1999), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/24: de Lint, Charles: "Coyote Stories" (1993), typescript, undated

1-2/25: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installments #1 - 3" (1994), typescripts with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/26: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installments #5 - 6" (1994), typescripts, undated

1-2/27: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installments #8 - 17" (1994 - 1995), typescripts with handwritten edits, undated (and 313, May 1995)

1-2/28: de Lint, Charles: "Crow Girls" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/29: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installments #19 - 20" (1995 - 1996), typescripts with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/30: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installment 24" (1996) and #28 (1996), typescripts, undated

1-2/31: de Lint, Charles: "Books to Look For, Installments #31 - 34" (1997), typescripts, undated (#32 - faxed copy)

1-2/32: Dedman, Stephen: "Schrodinger's Catalyst" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/33: Dedman, Stephen: "Tender Young Alice, They Say" (undated), typescript with handwritten edits, undated - not published in F&SF

1-2/34: Dembo, Arinn: "Sisterhood of the Skin" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/35: Denton, Bradley: "We Love Lydia Love" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/36: Dexter, Susan: "Herding Instinct" (1994), typescript, undated (photocopy)

1-2/37: Di Filippo, Paul: "Not the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/38: Di Filippo, Paul: "Pencil Me In" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/39: Di Filippo, Paul: "Your Money (tm)" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/40: Di Filippo, Paul: "Have Gun, Will Edit" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/41: Di Filippo, Paul: "It Was the Blessed of Times, It Was the Cursed of Times" (1996), typescript, undated (2 copies)

1-2/42: Di Filippo, Paul: "Manuscript Found in a Pipedream" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/43: Di Filippo, Paul: "Narrative Contents May Have Shifted During Shipment" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/44: Di Filippo, Paul: "Nature, Wineberry in Tooth and Claw, With a Hint of Claret" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/45: DiChario, Nick: "Drainage" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/46: DiChario, Nick: "Sarajevo" (1999), typescript, undated

1-2/47: Donati, Stefano: "The Last of the Glass Menageries" (1998), typescript (4.5k words), undated; typescript (5.5k words), undated

1-2/48: Donnelly, Marcos: "El Hijo de Hernez" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/49: Dozois, Gardner: "A Cat Horror Story" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/50: Duchamp, L. Timmel: "De Secretis Mulierum" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/51: Duchamp, L. Timmel: "De Secretis Mulierum" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/52: Dyer, S.N.: "Sins of the Mothers" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/53: Eakin, William R.: "Monogamy" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/54: Ecklar, Julia: "Promised Lives" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/55: Edghill, India: "We are the Dead" (1999), typescript, 1996

1-2/56: Effinger, George Alec: "Maureen Binrbaum on a Hot Tin Roof" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/57: Elgin, Suzanne Haden: "Only a Housewife" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/58: Ellison, Harlan: "Sensible City" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, 1994

1-2/59: Ellison, Harlan: "Keyboard" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1994

1-2/60: Ellison, Harlan: "Pulling Hard Time" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-2/61: Ellison, Harlan: "Anywhere But Here, With Anyone But You" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-2/62: Ellison, Harlan: "Chatting with Anubis" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-2/63: Ellison, Harlan: "Go Toward the Light" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, 1994

1-2/64: Ellison, Harlan: "Midnight in the Sunken Cathedral" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-2/65: Ellison, Harlan: "From A to Z, in the Sarsaparilla Alphabet" (2001), typescript with handwritten edits, 1991

1-2/66: Eskridge, Kelley: "Strings" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/67: Etchemendy, Nancy: "Saints and Martyrs" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/68: Etchemendy, Nancy: "Double Silver Truth" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits and replacement pages, undated

1-2/69: Farmer, Nancy: "Origami Mountain" (1992), typescript, undated

1-2/70: Finch, Sheila: "A Flight of Words" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/71: Finch, Sheila: "The Roaring Ground" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/72: Finch, Sheila: "Reading the Bones" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/73: Fitch, Marina: "Sarah at the Tide Pool" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/74: Fitch, Marina: "Imprints" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/75: Flynn, Michael: "The Promise of God" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/76: Frazier, Robert: "Night Vision" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/77: Frei, Urs: "The Godsend" (1994), typescript, undated

1-2/78: Freireich, Valerie J.: "Testament" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/79: Friesner, Esther M.: "A Birthday" (1995), typescript, undated

1-2/80: Friesner, Esther M.: "King of the Cyber Trifles" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/81: Friesner, Esther M.: "Miss Thing" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/82: Friesner, Esther M.: "True Believer" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/83: Friesner, Esther M.: "True Believer" (1997), typescript, undated

1-2/84: Friesner, Esther M.: "Chestnut Street" (1998), typescript, undated

1-2/85: Garcia y Robertson, R.: "The Moon Maid" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/86: Gerrold, David: "The Emperor Redux" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, April 1995

1-2/87: Gilchrist, Ellen: "Bleak Winter" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-2/88: Gilman, Carolyn Ives: "Candle in a Bottle" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/89: Godwin, Parke: "Small Change" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits (and photocopy), undated

1-2/90: Goldman, E.M.: "Metastasis" (1993), typescript, undated

1-2/91: Goldstein, Lisa: "The Woman in the Painting" (1993), typescript, undated

1-2/92: Goonan, Kathleen Ann: "The String" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/93: Gorman, Ed: "Yesterday's Dreams" (1996), typescript, undated

1-2/94: Goulart, Ron: "Fear of Sorrows" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-2/95: Goulart, Ron: "Mom's Cooking" (1993), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

Rusch, Kristine Kathryn

Manuscripts, A - Ca

1-1/1: Aandahl, Vance: "Pinched" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/2: Aandahl, Vance: "The First Invention" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/3: Aandahl, Vance: "Water" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/4: Aldiss, Brian: "Common Clay" (1992), typescript, 1991

1-1/5: Aldridge, Ray: "The Spine Divers" (1995), typescript, undated

1-1/6: Anderson, Kevin J.: "Dogged Persistence" (1992), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/7: Armstrong, Michael: "Mother to Elves" (1994), typescript, undated

1-1/8: Asimov, Janet: "Being Warm-Blooded" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/9: Asimov, Janet: "Crazy for Trees" (1995), typescript, undated

1-1/10: Asimov, Janet: "Language: The Most Powerful Drug" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/11: Asimov, Janet: " Sounding Off" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/12: Asimov, Janet: "Survival Technique" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/13: Asimov, Janet: "A Warm and Dangerous Time" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/14: Asimov, Janet and Isaac: "Essay 400: A Way of Thinking" (1994), typescript, undated

1-1/15: Aurelian, Robin (Nina Kiriki Hoffman): "Jelly Bones" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/16: Aurelian, Robin (Nina Kiriki Hoffman): "The Santa Trap" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/17: Aurelian, Robin (Nina Kiriki Hoffman): "Proxies" (1998), 2 typescripts, undated

1-1/18: Bailey, Dale: "Intervals of Stillness" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/19: Bailey, Dale: "Exodus" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/20: Bailey, Dale: "Quinn's Way" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/21: Bailey, Dale: "Cockroach" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/22: Bailey, Dale: "Night of the Fireflies" (1998), typescript, undated

1-1/23: Bailey, Dale: "The Rain at the End of the World" (1999), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/24: Baker, Eric T.: "Faith and Friendship in the Pre-Atomic Age" (1993), typescript, undated; w/correspondence, 1992 - 1994

1-1/25: Ball, Cathy: "Greenhouse" (1994), typescript, undated (NOT published in F&SF)

1-1/26: Ballingrud, Nathan: "She Found Heaven" (1995), typescript, undated (photocopy)

1-1/27: Beckert, Christine: "Graft" (1998), typescript, undated

1-1/28: Bell, M. Shayne: "With Rain, and a Dog Barking" (1993), typescript, undated

1-1/29: Bell, M. Shayne: "Bright New Skies" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/30: Benford, Gregory: "Antarctica and Mars" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, 1994

1-1/31: Benford, Gregory: "The Fire This Time" (1994), typescript, 1993

1-1/32: Benford, Gregory: "The Big Wham" (1995), typescript, 1994

1-1/33: Benford, Gregory: "The Far Future" (1995), 2 typescripts, 1995

1-1/34: Benford, Gregory: "The Fourth Dimension" (1995), 2 typescripts, 1995

1-1/35: Benford, Gregory: "An Odyssey Galactic" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995; 2 copies of typescript, 1995

1-1/36: Benford, Gregory: "Humanity as Cancer" (1995), typescript, 1994

1-1/37: Benford, Gregory: "Life at Galactic Center" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995; typescript, 1995

1-1/38: Benford, Gregory: "Sex, Gender, and Fantasy" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, 1995

1-1/39: Benford, Gregory: "A Diamond Age" (1996), typescript, 1996

1-1/40: Benford, Gregory: "America as Rome" (1996), typescript, 1996

1-1/41: Benford, Gregory: "Net@Fandom.Com" (1996), 3 copies of typescripts, 1996

1-1/42: Benford, Gregory: "Scientist Heroes" (1996), 2 copies of typescripts, 1996

1-1/43: Benford, Gregory: "Going to Mars" (1997), typescript, 1997

1-1/44: Benford, Gregory: "Life on Mars?" (1997), typescript (faxed copy), October 1996

1-1/45: Bischoff, David: "Fade" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/46: Bischoff, David: "In the Bleak Mid-Solstice" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/47: Bischoff, David: "Joy to the World" (1999), typescript, undated

1-1/48: Bishop, Michael: "Annalise, Annalise" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/49: Bishop, Michael: "Three Dreams in the Wake of a Death" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/50: Bisson, Terry: "Cancion Autentica de Old Earth" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/51: Bisson, Terry: "Partial People" (1993), typescript, undated

1-1/52: Blumlein, Michael: "Revenge" (1998), typescript, undated

1-1/53: Bourne, Mark: "Mustard Seed" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, April 1994

1-1/54: Bova, Ben: "The Great Moon Hoax, or, A Princess of Mars" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/55: Bova, Ben: "The Cafe Coup" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/56: Bowes, Richard: "At Darlington's" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/57: Bowes, Richard: "Drink and the Devil" (1997), typescript, undated (photocopy)

1-1/58: Bowes, Richard: "Streetcar Dreams" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/59: Bowes, Richard: "Diana in the Spring" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/60: Boyett, Steven R.: "Epiphany Beach" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/61: Boyett, Steven R.: "Current Affairs" (1998), typescript, January 1995?

1-1/62: Bradbury, Ray: "From the Dust Returned" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/63: Bradbury, Ray: "Lost Rites" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/64: Bradbury, Ray: "Another Fine Mess" (1995), typescript, undated

1-1/65: Bradbury, Ray: "Dorian in Excelsis" (1995), typescript, undated

1-1/66: Bradbury, Ray: "The Finnegan" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/67: Bradbury, Ray: "The Offering" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/68: Bradbury, Ray: "That Woman on the Lawn" 91996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/69: Brantingham, Juleen: "Old Freedom" (1994), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/70: Braunbeck, Gary A.: "Small Song" (1997), typescript, undated

1-1/71: Bredenberg, Jeff: "Shootin' Babies" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/72: Brennert, Alan: "The Man Who Loved the Sea" (1995), typescript, undated

1-1/73: Brennert, Alan: "The Refuge" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/74: Brennert, Alan: "The Refuge" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/75: Brennert, Alan: "Echoes" (1997), typescript final draft, undated; and partial typescript, undated

1-1/76: Brin, David: "The Slow Negotiations", partial revised typescript, March 1992 (not published in F&SF)

1-1/77: Brin, David: "NatuLife[tm]" (1993), typescript, May 1993

1-1/78: Brown, Carroll: "The Borderlands" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated; w/cover letter, December 1992

1-1/79: Brown, Carroll: "The King of Seventh Avenue" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/80: Brunner, John: "The Dead Man" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/81: Bryant, Edward: "Flirting With Death" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/82: Budrys, Algis: "Grabow and Collicker and I" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/83: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Asimov Laughs Again/Outnumbering The Dead/Stopping at Slowyear" (1992), typescript, February 1992 (photocopy)

1-1/84: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Gerald's Game/The Time Patrol" (1992), typescript, June 1992

1-1/85: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Last Call/The Net of Dreams/When Dreams Collide" (1992), typescript (faxed copy, April 1992

1-1/86: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Storeys from the Old Hotel/Contemporary Authors/Science-Fantasy Publishers/Courting Disasters" (1992), typescript (photocopy) and typescript (faxed copy), January 1992

1-1/87: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Solo/Time and Again" (1992), typescript (faxed copy), June 1992

1-1/88: Budrys, Algis: "Review of The Stress of Her Regard/Me" (1992), typescript, October 1991

1-1/89: Budrys, Algis: "Review of The Wild Blue and the Gray/Universe 2", typescript, undated

1-1/90: Budrys, Algis: "Review of Why Do Birds" (1993), typescript (faxed copy), June 1992

1-1/91: Budrys, Algis: "Goblins" , typescript with handwritten edits (photocopy), undated - Not published in F&SF

1-1/92: Budrys, Algis: "Portions Deleted", typescript (photocopy), undated - Not published in F&SF

1-1/93: Budrys, Algis: "Through Spates in Time with Gregory Fernshock #1", typescript (photocopy), undated - Not published in F&SF

1-1/94: Budz, Mark: "Toy Soldiers" (1993), typescript, undated

1-1/95: Budz, Mark: "Zinnias and the Moon" (1998), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/96: Bunch, David R.: "A Saint George Pens a Note to His Dragons (Disclosures and Offers)" (1997), typescript, 1995

1-1/97: Cadigan, Pat: "True Faces" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/98: Cady, Jack: "Kilroy Was Here" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/99: Card, Orson Scott: "Books to Look For: March 1992" (1992), typescript, October 1991

1-1/100: Card, Orson Scott: "Books to Look For: April 1992" (1992), typescript, November 1991 (faxed copy)

1-1/101: Card, Orson Scott: "Books to Look For: June 1992" (1992), typescript, December 1991 (faxed copy)

1-1/102: Card, Orson Scott: "Books to Look For: September 1992" (1992), typescript, April 1992 (includes faxed copy)

1-1/103: Card, Orson Scott: "Books to Look For: October-November 1992" (1992), typescript, May 1992 (includes faxed copy)

1-1/104: Card, Orson Scott: Reviews, various (1993), December 1992 (faxed copy)

1-1/105: Card, Orson Scott: "Reviews of Path of the Hero/The Guns of the South/Blackburn" (1993), typescript, March 1993 (faxed copy)

1-1/106: Card, Orson Scott: "Reviews of Jumper/Ruler of the Sky (1993), typescript, May 1993 (2 copies)

1-1/107: Card, Orson Scott: Reviews, various (1993), typescript, September 1992 (faxed copy)

1-1/108: Carr, Michael: "A Dog's Night" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/109: Carroll, Jonathan: "Uh-Oh City" (1992), typescript, undated

1-1/110: Casil, Amy Sterling: "Jonny Punkinhead" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/111: Cassutt, Michael: "Jinx", typescript, 1994 (Not published in F&SF)

1-1/112: Cassutt, Michael: "The Longer Voyage" (1996), typescript, undated

1-1/113: Castro, Adam-Troy: "Neither Rain nor Sleet" (1996), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/114: Castro, Adam-Troy: "The Funeral March of the Marionettes" (1997), typescript with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/115: Caves, Sally: "Ketamine" (1995), typescript with handwritten edits, August 1992

Kristine Kathryn Rusch The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction Collection

  • US TxAM-C C000516
  • Collection

This collection consists of manuscripts of short fiction, book reviews, and nonfiction pieces submitted to The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction during the editorship of Kristine Kathryn Rusch from 1991-1997. (Several stories in the collection would be actually published in F&SF by Rusch's successor Gordon Van Gelder, who edited the magazine between 1997-2015.) With a few exceptions, all of the manuscripts were eventually published in the magazine.

Many of the manuscripts in the collection contain handwritten edits, most of which are grammatical or structural and made by copyeditors. A minority of edits, some of them more substantive textual alterations, appear to have been made by the authors themselves.

Rusch, Kristine Kathryn

Henri Dron's United States of Earth Imaginary Utopia

  • US TxAM-C C000503
  • Collection
  • 1876 - 1903

This collection contains the maps of The United States of Earth dated 1876-1903, by Henri Dron, who was a geographer that envisioned a utopia of the world united into several states.

Dron's utopia consists of six maps of each continental confederation with annotations of his utopia visions. The goal of unity is depicted in three maps of Europe with connective highways along the Danube river and with Dron's Universal Renovating Academy. The world map shows all twelve states under the United States of Earth to end international strife.

The collection also includes three newsletters, the Ideograph, where Dron shared his utopia ideas by giving examples of his maps and explaining them in detail. Lastly, there are two documents where Dron is attempting to recruit and register subscribers to his newsletters and ideals. Dron's archive displays map development and how it ties to political ideologies at the turn of the century.

Dron, Henri

Fan Mail Correspondence

1-2/1: January 2015 - March 2015

1-2/2: April 2015 - May 2015

1-2/3: June 2015 - September 2015

1-2/4: October 2015 - 2015

1-2/5: 2016

1-2/6: January 2017 - August 2017

1-2/7: September 2017 - 2017

1-2/8: January 2018 - June 2018

1-2/9: July 2018 - 2018

1-2/10: January 2019 - March 2019

1-2/11: April 2019 - June 2019

1-2/12: July 2019 - September 2019

1-2/13: October 2019 - 2019

1-2/14: January 2019 (oversized)

1-2/15: 2020, undated

Results 246 to 280 of 17687