Archival
Collections
Individuals and
Families
Adler, Bertha Marx
Scrapbook, 1888-1889
(AR 373)
Bertha Marx Adler was the daughter
of Birmingham merchant Samuel Marx, one of the founders
of Temple Emanu-El. In 1892 she married Samuel M.
Adler, a Birmingham businessman and investor. This
scrapbook is an atlas that Bertha Marx, then a young
woman, converted to a scrapbook by pasting items over
the pages. The scrapbook primarily contains programs
from Birmingham theater productions, but also contains
a few programs from Birmingham High School and an order
of service from the 1889 dedication of
Temple Emanu-El.
Size: 1 volume
Adler, Jeanne
Scrapbook, 1912
(AR 486)
Jeanne Adler was the daughter of
Samuel and Bertha Marx Adler and resided on Highland
Avenue in Birmingham. This scrapbook, entitled
“The Girl Graduate: Her Own Book,” contains
clippings, photographs, notes from classmates and other
memorabilia relating to Adler’s senior year at
Birmingham High School.
Size: 1 volume
Allen, Beffie, Mary Allen and Ruth
Allen
Papers
(AR 1374)
This small collection contains
letters, photographs and other material of three
sisters who ran the Misses Allen School in Birmingham.
The private school, founded in 1884, stressed a
classical education that included Latin and music and
was later known as the Margaret Allen School.
Size: 1 box
Anselmo Antonio, Carmella
Papers
(AR 737)
Born in Sicily, Carmella Anselmo
Antonio immigrated to Birmingham in 1921 where she
taught in the public schools and taught English
language and citizenship classes to other immigrants.
She worked at the Bechtel-McCone aircraft facility in
Birmingham during World War II. The collection contains
correspondence, photographs, clippings and other
material relating to her life and her students.
Size: 2 boxes
Bass, Helen
Papers, 1937-1942 and 1967-1971
(AR 1535)
This collection contains the
personal papers, primarily correspondence, of the Bass
family of Birmingham. Most of the papers are letters to
and from Mrs. Fred Bass, Sr., her son Fred Bass Jr.,
and her daughter Helen Bass, for whom the collection is
named. The bulk of correspondence dates from the late
1930s and early 1940s the years in which Fred Bass, Jr.
attended the Marion Military Institute. The letters to
and from Fred Bass, Jr. capture the cares and worries
of a boy in the 1930s hoping for a career in the
military. There are a few mentions of the oncoming war
in the correspondence including a few jokes about
Hitler. The collection also contains letters to Helen
from her nephew, Fred. These letters revolve around
Fred being drafted into the army and sent to Vietnam.
While in Vietnam, he served as a detention officer in a
POW camp, and in his letters, he gives descriptions of
his surroundings.
Size: 4 boxes
Bishop, Dorothy
Scrapbooks and Other Material
(AR 1615)
Size: 1 box
Bowron, Lillian Roden
Scrapbook, 1919-1920
(AR 285)
This scrapbook contains newspaper
clippings and other material relating to the woman
suffrage movement in Alabama and the United States,
convict labor in Alabama, the League of Women Voters of
Alabama, and biographical information on the Roden
family.
Size: 1 volume
Brandino, Paul D. and Elizabeth K.
Brandino
Correspondence, 1943-1944 and
undated
(AR 1659)
Paul and Elizabeth Brandino were a
Birmingham, Alabama married couple. Paul served in the
United States Army during World War II, and following
the war Paul worked as secretary-treasurer at Brandino
Sales Company, which dealt in “hardware
specialties.” Elizabeth worked as a clerk for the
same company. This collection contains 43 letters dated
November 9, 1943 to January 15, 1944. All of the
letters are from Elizabeth Brandino to Paul Brandino,
and deal with everyday life in Birmingham during
wartime. Elizabeth discusses household chores, family
life, and occasionally mentions the difficulty of
acquiring rationed goods like gasoline and chocolate.
Some picture of Paul’s experiences, especially
during basic training, can be gleaned from
Elizabeth’s references to his letters to her.
Size: 1 box
Bridges, Eleanor Massey, Georges
Bridges and Family
Papers, 1918-1983
(AR 202)
Eleanor Bridges was born in
Georgia in 1899. She studied at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts and the University of
Pennsylvania. In 1920, she married George (later
Georges) Bridges, who was born in Tennessee in 1899 and
served in World War I. The couple studied at the
Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts, where she concentrated
on painting and he sculpture. During the 1920s the
couple lived and worked France, Spain and Greece before
settling in Birmingham. For twenty years the Bridges
and their daughter, Mary Eleanor (known as London)
divided their time between Birmingham and Mexico. In
Birmingham, both Bridges worked as artists, taught and
were active in civic, cultural and social life. The
collection contains correspondence, photographs,
clippings, lecture notes and other material documenting
the Bridges’ careers and activities.
Size: 29 boxes
Camp, Mae Wilson
Papers, 1935-1936
(AR 591)
The memorabilia, photographs and
scrapbooks in this collection relate to the activities
of the American Legion Auxiliary.
Size: 1 box
Catt, Carrie Chapman
Papers, 1848-1950
(AR 123)
Carrie Chapman Catt was born in
1859 in Wisconsin and graduated from Iowa State
College. A teacher and school superintendent, she
became a colleague of Susan B. Anthony and president of
the National American Woman Suffrage Association. She
died in New York in 1947. This collection includes
correspondence, diaries, speeches, biographical data,
newspaper clippings and other material relating to
Catt’s work on behalf of the women’s
suffrage movement, feminism and the cause of
international peace.
Size: 18 reels microfilm
Chitwood, Lynn
Correspondence, 1942-1943
(AR 391)
This collection contains 68
letters written by Lynn Chitwood, a college student, to
her boyfriend Elbert Hamilton while Hamilton was
undergoing military training. Hamilton served in the
82nd Airborn Division and was killed in July 1944 in
Europe. In her letters, which are often amusing,
Chitwood discusses family and friends, her social life
and the war.
Size: 2 boxes
Clarke, Mary Katherine Burke
Papers, 1841-1871
(AR 215)
This collection contains
correspondence and other material relating to a central
Alabama family, including letters from Mary Katherine
Burke Clarke to her mother in Tuscaloosa, letters of
Richard Henry Clarke, letters of Joseph Maharry and
letters of Georgiane Maharry.
Size: 1 box
Colvin, Lessie Beatrice White
Papers, 1934-1964
(AR 1334)
Lessie Colvin was a 1934 graduate
of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial School and a 1950
graduate of Alabama State College for Negroes. She
taught in the Birmingham city schools. This small
collection includes her diplomas, material relating to
Council and Western and Olin schools and genealogical
material.
Size: 1 box
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