1761-1932
Guide to the Collection
Abstract
This collection consists of additions to the Perry-Clarke collection, including papers of Unitarian clergyman, transcendentalist, author, and social reformer Rev. James Freeman Clarke, members of the Clarke family, and members of the related Huidekoper, Lowell, and Sohier families.
Biographical Sketches
The individuals most heavily represented in this collection are highlighted in bold.
Clarke family
James Freeman Clarke (1810-1888) was a Unitarian clergyman, transcendentalist, author, and social reformer. The son of Samuel (1779-1830) and Rebecca Parker (Hull) Clarke (1790-1865), step-grandson of James Freeman (1759-1835), and grandson of William Hull (1753-1825), Clarke graduated from Harvard College in 1829 and Harvard Divinity School in 1833. From 1833 to 1840, he worked as a minister in Louisville, Kentucky, where he edited the Western Messenger, a transcendental journal that contained the first published writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson.
In 1839, Clarke married Anna Huidekoper (1814-1897), and the couple had four children: Herman Huidekoper Clarke (1840-1849), Lilian Rebecca (later Freeman) Clarke (1842-1921), Eliot Channing Clarke (1845-1921), and Cora Huidekoper Clarke (1851-1916).
In 1841, James Freeman Clarke founded the Church of the Disciples in Boston. Except for a leave of absence between 1850-1854, he was the pastor of that church until his death in 1888. In a radical departure from traditional New England congregational churches, all seats in the church were free, and the laity were full participants in its operation. When Clarke was forced to take sick leave and the church property was sold, the congregation continued to meet until he could return.
Clarke was a non-resident professor at the Harvard Divinity School from 1867 to 1871. He had been a member of the Transcendental Club and was one of the early biographers of his close friend Margaret Fuller (1810-1850). He also owned the Brook Farm property after the collapse of the utopian community there. Clarke was a strong advocate of political and social reform throughout his life. Among the causes he supported were the abolition of slavery, women's suffrage, civil service reform, temperance, and educational reform. He was a member of both the Massachusetts Board of Education and the Board of Overseers of Harvard University. Though a theological conservative, he championed religious liberty. He served as secretary of the American Unitarian Association and was intimately involved in the operations of his own church, as well as local and national Unitarian church government, for 55 years.
Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke (1814-1897) was the daughter of Harm Jan Huidekoper (1776-1854) and Rebecca (Colhoon) Huidekoper (1779-1839) of Meadville, Pennsylvania, and the wife of James Freeman Clarke. She served as treasurer of the Church of the Disciples Branch of the American Unitarian Association Women's Auxiliary Conference and as vice president of the South End Industrial School, a school established in 1883 and incorporated in 1884 that taught "sewing, cooking, carpentry, printing and other industrial pursuits" to needy families.
Lilian Freeman Clarke (1842-1921) ("Lilla"), the daughter of James Freeman Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, was a social reformer and translator. She was born Lilian Rebecca Clarke, but later used Freeman as her middle name. She worked with the U.S. Sanitary Commission in Boston during the Civil War. In 1873, she joined with Elizabeth Willard Greene and Mary R. Parkman, inspired by Dr. Susan Dimock at the New England Hospital for Women and Children, to engage in philanthropic work with new mothers, both married and unmarried. The women provided personal and financial assistance to individual mothers after they left the hospital so that they could keep their children. Clarke described this work in The Story of an Invisible Institution: Forty Years' Work for Mothers and Infants (1913).
Note: Some secondary sources spell Clarke's first name "Lillian," but she and her family consistently spelled it "Lilian," so the latter spelling has been used in this guide.
Eliot Channing Clarke (1845-1921) ("Ellie") was the son of James Freeman Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke. He attended Eliot High School and began his studies at Harvard in 1863. In 1864, on his nineteenth birthday, he enlisted as a private with the 12th Unattached Company, Massachusetts Infantry, and served for three months at Readville and Provincetown, Massachusetts. He returned to Harvard and graduated in 1867, attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and worked as a civil engineer on bridges and tunnels in Hannibal, Missouri; Detroit, Michigan; and Chicago, Illinois. He was also principal assistant engineer on a main drainage system in Boston and wrote a number of articles and reports on engineering.
In 1886, Clarke changed careers and became a manager of mill properties in Lowell, Massachusetts. He also served as treasurer of the Boott Cotton Mills and the Lowell Bleachery. He belonged to a number of scientific, educational, and philanthropic societies. In 1878, he married Alice de Vermandois Sohier (1850-1901), and the couple had five children: Susan Lowell Clarke (1879-1968), James Freeman Clarke (1881-1884), Anna Huidekoper Clarke (1883-1911), Elizabeth Lowell Clarke (1887-1986), and James Freeman Clarke (1889-1966).
Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke (1850-1901) was the daughter of lawyer William Sohier (1822-1894) and Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier (1823-1868), the sister of Elizabeth "Lillie" Putnam Sohier (1847-1926) and William Davies Sohier (1858-1938), and the wife of Eliot Channing Clarke. In the 1890s, she sat on the Board of Managers of the Boston Female Asylum, a charity that operated a home for indigent girls between the ages of 3 and 10 and boarded older girls out to families for housework and child care. Clarke was also a member of the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America, serving as historian of the society in the 1890s and sitting on the Eligibility Committee and the Board of Managers.
Susan Lowell Clarke (1879-1968), the daughter of Eliot Channing Clarke and Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke, attended Miss E. M. Folsom's School in Boston and graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1901. Beginning in 1901, she taught mathematics at St. Agnes School in Albany, New York, before attending graduate school at Simmons College from 1904-1905 and then getting a degree from the University of Oxford in England. She also served on the Board of Managers of the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America and the Executive Committee of the Woman's Education Association.
Anna Huidekoper Clarke (1883-1911), the daughter of Eliot Channing Clarke and Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke, graduated from Miss Haskell's School for Girls in Boston in 1901, with a B.A. from Bryn Mawr College in 1905, and from the Boston School for Social Workers in 1906. She worked with a number of philanthropic organizations, including the Associated Charities of Boston. Clarke was an expert horseback rider and lover of horses. She died of peritonitis on 21 May 1911.
Cora Huidekoper Clarke (1851-1916), the daughter of James Freeman Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, was a botanist and entomologist. At the age of 18, she attended horticultural school in Newton, Massachusetts, followed by the Bussey Institution, a school of agriculture and horticulture in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, where she studied under Francis Parkman. She taught with Anna Eliot Ticknor's Society to Encourage Studies at Home, a correspondence school; founded a science club; led the botany group of the New England Women's Club; belonged to several scientific societies; and published papers in scientific journals. She is known in entomological circles for her work with caddisflies and gall flies, and some species are named in her honor. She was also a skilled photographer.
Sarah Freeman Clarke (1808-1896), the sister of James Freeman Clarke, was an artist, author, teacher, and philanthropist. She was born Sarah Anne Clarke, but later used Freeman as her middle name. As a young woman, she studied under painter Washington Allston, and her friends included Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and the Peabody sisters. Her paintings were exhibited at shows in Boston and at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, and her sketches were used as illustrations for Fuller's book Summer on the Lakes in 1843 (1844). Clarke also participated in Fuller's "Conversations"; taught at Bronson Alcott's Temple School; contributed articles to publications, including The Dial; and traveled extensively. In 1879, she settled in Marietta, Georgia, where she helped found the first town library, contributing more than 2,000 books from her personal collection. She is buried in Marietta.
Huidekoper family
Harm Jan Huidekoper (1776-1854) was a businessman and wealthy landowner in Pennsylvania. Born in the Netherlands, he emigrated to the United States in 1796. In 1799, he began work with the Holland Land Company, an association of landowners, and was later appointed general agent for the company's holdings in Pennsylvania, consisting of almost 500,000 acres. He would eventually become one of the largest landowners in the United States. In 1844, he and his son Frederic founded the Meadville Theological School, a seminary in Meadville, Pennsylvania.
In 1806, Huidekoper married Rebecca Colhoon (1779-1839), and the couple had seven children: Anna Appolina Huidekoper (1807-1808), Frederic Wolthers Huidekoper (1808-1816), Alfred Huidekoper (1810-1892), Edgar Huidekoper (1812-1862), Anna Huidekoper (1814-1897), Frederic Huidekoper (1817-1892), and Elizabeth Gertrude Huidekoper (1819-1908). Their home in Meadville, built by Harm Jan Huidekoper in 1806-1807, was called Pomona Hall.
Frederic Huidekoper (1817-1892), the son of Harm Jan Huidekoper and Rebecca (Colhoon) Huidekoper, entered Harvard College in 1834, but had to withdraw because of poor eyesight. He worked on the family farm and studied independently, developing an interest in theology. He returned to Harvard, graduated from Harvard Divinity School, and was ordained a minister in 1843 in Meadville, Pennsylvania. In 1844, he and his father founded the Meadville Theological School, and Frederic taught at the school for many years. In 1853, he married Harriet Nancy Thorp (1830-1905), and the couple had four children.
Elizabeth Gertrude Huidekoper (1819-1908) ("Lizzie"), the youngest of the seven children of Harm Jan Huidekoper and Rebecca (Colhoon) Huidekoper, was, like most of her family, intimately involved with the Meadville Theological School in Meadville, Pennsylvania, a seminary founded by her father and brother. She served on the board of trustees of the school beginning in 1875, the first woman to do so, and as president of the board from 1891 until her death. She gifted real estate to the school, made significant contributions to the school library, aided many students financially, and was known as "the mother of Meadville."
Constant Freeman (1729-1806)
Captain Constant Freeman was a shipmaster, merchant, and Loyalist. He served as an officer at Castle William (now Fort Independence) in Boston Harbor before the American Revolution. When the war broke out, he was on a trading voyage in Quebec, Canada. Instead of returning to Boston, he sent for his oldest son Constant to join him, and his younger children lived with an aunt in Truro, Massachusetts. Freeman lived and worked as a merchant in Quebec and returned to Boston sometime after 1786. He was master of the Boston almshouse from 1796 to 1806.
Freeman was married three times: in 1754 to Lois Cobb (d. 1775), in 1792 to Susanna (Cazneau) Palfrey, and in 1796 to Susannah Mitchell. His children with his first wife were: Constant Freeman (1757-1824); James Freeman (1759-1835), who was the second husband of James Freeman Clarke's grandmother, Martha (Curtis) Clarke Freeman (1755-1841); Ezekiel Freeman (1762-1825); Lois Freeman (later Davis) (1764-1820); and Nehemiah Freeman (1769-1819).
Lowell family
Anna Cabot Lowell (1768-1810) ("Nancy") was the oldest child of Judge John Lowell (1743-1802) and his first wife Sarah (Higginson) Lowell (1745-1772). She was a prolific letter writer, and her close friends included Ann (Bromfield) Tracy (1777-1856) and Eliza Susan (Morton) Quincy (1773-1850). Her siblings were: John Lowell (1769-1840); Sarah Champney Lowell (1771-1851); Francis Cabot Lowell (1775-1817), who married Hannah Jackson (1776-1815); Susan Cabot Lowell (1776-1816), who married Benjamin Gorham (1775-1855); Rebecca Russell Lowell (1779-1853), who married Samuel Pickering Gardner (1767-1843); Charles Lowell (1782-1861), who married Harriet Brackett Spence (1783-1850); Elizabeth Cutts Lowell (1783-1864), who married Warren Dutton (1774-1857); and Mary Lowell (1786-1789). Anna Cabot Lowell died of tuberculosis in 1810 at the age of 42, and Eliza Quincy's youngest daughter, born two years later, was named after her.
John Lowell (1769-1840), the brother of Anna Cabot Lowell, married Rebecca Amory (1771-1842) in 1793. They had the following children: Rebecca Amory Lowell (1794-1873), John Amory Lowell (1798-1881), Anna Cabot Lowell (1801-1802), Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), and Sarah Champney Higginson Lowell (1810-1816).
Rebecca Amory Lowell (1794-1873) ("Amory"), the daughter of John Lowell and Rebecca (Amory) Lowell, was a teacher and an avid reader. As a child, she attended school in Paris for three years, then completed her education in Boston. From the age of 18, she taught her sister Anna Cabot Lowell and cousin Georgina Margaret Amory (1806-1830) for 12 or 13 years. Later students included several nieces and nephews, as well as others. After the death of her sister-in-law Susan (Cabot) Lowell in 1827, Rebecca and Anna cared for their niece and nephew, Susan Cabot Lowell (later Sohier) (1823-1868) and John Lowell (1824-1897), until their father remarried in 1829. Rebecca Amory Lowell began teaching Sunday School in 1832, first at King's Chapel in Boston, then at the First Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, where she would teach for about 40 years. She participated in and contributed to many philanthropic endeavors.
John Amory Lowell (1798-1881), the son of John Lowell and Rebecca (Amory) Lowell, was a businessman, philanthropist, and first trustee of the Lowell Institute. He married first in 1822 to his cousin Susan Cabot Lowell (1801-1827), with whom he had two children: Susan Cabot Lowell (1823-1868), who married William Sohier (1822-1894), and John Lowell (1824-1897), who married Lucy Buckminster Emerson (1827-1904). After his first wife's death, John Amory Lowell remarried in 1829 to Elizabeth Cabot Putnam (1807-1881). Their children were: Augustus Lowell (1830-1900), who married Katherine Bigelow Lawrence (1832-1895); Elizabeth "Lizzie" Rebecca Lowell (1831-1904), who married Francis Peleg Sprague (1834-1921); Ellen "Ella" Bancroft Lowell (1837-1894), who married Arthur Theodore Lyman (1832-1915); and Sara Putnam Lowell (1843-1899), who married George Baty Blake (1838-1884), a banker.
Sara Putnam (Lowell) Blake (1843-1899) was very active in patriotic and charitable organizations. In 1893, along with her sisters Elizabeth Rebecca (Lowell) Sprague and Ellen Bancroft (Lowell) Lyman, as well as four other women, Blake co-founded the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America, the state chapter of the national organization. She served at various times as the society's president and secretary. She was also a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), Liberty Tree Chapter; the Bostonian Society; and the Widows' Society of Boston. She died of cancer on 30 December 1899, survived by one son, John Amory Lowell Blake (1879-1938), and two stepsons, George Baty Blake (1870-1928) and Francis Stanton Blake (1872-1944).
Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), the daughter of John Lowell and Rebecca (Amory) Lowell, taught Sunday School at the First Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, for about 50 years. She also served as secretary of the Roxbury Branch of the New England Freedmen's Aid Society. Her other charitable activities included work with the New England Branch of the American Freedman's Union Commission, the American Unitarian Association, the Massachusetts Infant Asylum, the Christian Register, and the New England Hospital for Women and Children. Among her causes were the adoption of orphaned children and fundraising for children's welfare, schools, and libraries. From 1870 to her death, she lived at Bromley Vale, the Lowell estate in Roxbury. Beginning in January 1877, Lucy M. Solger (1848-1911) lived with Lowell as a companion.
Georgina Margaret Amory (1806-1830), the daughter of Jonathan Amory (1763-1820) and niece of Rebecca (Amory) Lowell, was born in Paris, France. When her father died in 1820, Georgina went to live as ward to her aunt and uncle, Rebecca (Amory) Lowell and John Lowell (1769-1840). She became close friends with her cousin Anna Cabot Lowell, was taught by another cousin Rebecca Amory Lowell, and aspired to be a writer. In 1825, she married her uncle John's nephew, also named John Lowell (1799-1836). The younger Lowells had two daughters, Georgina Margaret Amory Lowell (1827-1832) and Anna Cabot Lowell (1829-1831). The mother Georgina died on 27 November 1830, followed by both her daughters within the next two years.
Another niece of Rebecca (Amory) Lowell was Georgina's sister Frances Augusta Greene Amory (1800-1819).
Collection Description
This collection consists of papers of Rev. James Freeman Clarke and members of the Clarke family, as well as members of the related Huidekoper, Lowell, and Sohier families. Family correspondence includes many letters from Clarke, primarily to his wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, 1833-1888, about his work as a Unitarian minister at the Church of the Disciples in Boston and at Unitarian churches in Louisville, Kentucky, and Meadville, Pennsylvania; his editorship of the Western Messenger; and his thoughts on abolition, slavery, transcendentalism, Brook Farm, and many other subjects. His letters include original poems and sketches. Also included is correspondence of James and Anna with their children; letters from James's sister Sarah Freeman Clarke about her work as an artist and author, the library she founded in Marietta, Georgia, and other subjects; correspondence with Elizabeth Gertrude Huidekoper, Frederic Huidekoper, Harm Jan Huidekoper, and other members of the Huidekoper family in Meadville; and letters to Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke from aunts and cousins.
Personal papers of James Freeman Clarke include correspondence with William Henry Channing, George Thomas Davis, and others; sermons, lectures, poems, and other writings; scrapbooks; deeds and plans of properties; financial papers; and obituaries. The collection also contains significant personal papers of Sarah Freeman Clarke; Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke; James and Anna's children Lilian Freeman Clarke, Eliot Channing Clarke, and Cora Huidekoper Clarke; their daughter-in-law Alice (Sohier) Clarke; and their grandchildren Susan Lowell Clarke and Anna Huidekoper Clarke. Also represented are Sara Putnam (Lowell) Blake, Constant Freeman, Anna Cabot Lowell (1768-1810), Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), Rebecca Amory Lowell, Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier, and others. Many family members were involved in charitable work and social reform movements; the collection contains a ledger documenting Lilian Freeman Clarke's assistance to new mothers, as well as papers related to Alice (Sohier) Clarke's work with the Boston Female Asylum and Anna Cabot Lowell's work with the Massachusetts Infant Asylum and other charities.
Other material includes sketchbooks and writings of Lilian Freeman Clarke, Eliot Channing Clarke, and Cora Huidekoper Clarke; many letters to Eliot and his daughter Anna Huidekoper Clarke related to her "coming out" as a debutante, 1904; Eliot's Harvard Class of 1867 scrapbook; volumes and notes listing social calls made by Alice (Sohier) Clarke; papers of the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America, with which Alice and her aunt Sara (Lowell) Blake were heavily involved; the 1905 Bryn Mawr yearbook; correspondence of ship captain Constant Freeman, 1768-1777, and Anna Cabot Lowell (1768-1810), 1799-1810; notebooks and commonplace-books of Sunday School teacher Rebecca Amory Lowell describing lessons and readings; 25 diaries of Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), 1825-1880; and volumes of Susan (Lowell) Sohier, primarily containing notes on sermons, scripture, and religious resolutions.
Arrangement Note
The collection is organized into four series: I. Family correspondence, which contains correspondence between members of the Clarke family and related families; II. James Freeman Clarke papers; III. Personal papers of Clarke family members, which contains papers of Clarke's sister, wife, children, and grandchildren; and IV. Personal papers of related families.
Processing Information
This collection was acquired by the MHS in multiple installments from James Freeman Clarke's great-granddaughter Alice de Vermandois (Ware) Perry between 1984 and 1987, as additions to the Perry-Clarke collection (Ms. N-2155). Because the Perry-Clarke collection was fully processed before the additions could be incorporated, these papers have been processed as a separate collection. There is significant overlap between the two collections.
However, this collection does include the four boxes of correspondence between James Freeman Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, 1832-1888, that were formerly cataloged as the James Freeman Clarke papers (Ms. N-2155.1). All of those letters have been incorporated into Series I (Family correspondence).
Portions of this collection were treated for mold with thymol in the 1980s. These portions are housed in separate boxes (Boxes 42-46 and Box OS 2) from the rest of the collection, but described as part of the appropriate series in the Detailed Description of the Collection below. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Acquisition Information
Gift of Alice de Vermandois (Ware) Perry, 1984-1987. Additions given to the MHS in June 2017 by Alice de Vermandois Perry, Samuel Dexter Perry, and Elizabeth Lowell (Perry) Chick.
Detailed Description of the Collection
I. Family correspondence, 1831-1923
Arranged chronologically.
This series consists of correspondence between family members, primarily members of the Clarke and Huidekoper families, but also the related Sohier and Lowell families. Correspondents include James Freeman Clarke, Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, Sarah Freeman Clarke, Lilian Freeman Clarke, Eliot Channing Clarke, Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke, Cora Huidekoper Clarke, Rebecca Parker (Hull) Clarke, Harm Jan Huidekoper, Frederic Huidekoper, Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), and many others.
Correspondence between James Freeman Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke details his frequent travels and activities as pastor of the Unitarian church in Louisville, Kentucky, 1833-1840; the Church of the Disciples in Boston, 1841-1850, 1854-1888; the Unitarian church in Meadville, Pennsylvania, 1850-1854; and as editor of the Western Messenger, 1836-1839. Letters also discuss his travels in France, Germany, and Switzerland; his association with and opinion of contemporaries such as William Ellery Channing, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, and Abraham Lincoln; and subjects such as Unitarianism, abolitionists, transcendentalism, spiritualism, feminism, and Utopianism at Brook Farm. Included in James's letters are a number of original poems and sketches.
The series also contains correspondence of James and Anna with their children and with extended family, including letters to Edgar Huidekoper, Frances (Shippen) Huidekoper, Elizabeth Gertrude Huidekoper, and other family members in Meadville, Pennsylvania. Apart from James and Anna, the most frequent correspondent is James's sister Sarah Freeman Clarke, who writes about family matters; her work as an artist and author; her travels; contemporaries such as Margaret Fuller, Bronson Alcott, and others; and the library she founded in Marietta, Georgia.
Other subjects discussed in the family correspondence include the unhappy first marriage of James's brother William Hull Clarke, 1839; the death of James and Anna's first son Herman Huidekoper Clarke in 1849 and other family deaths; James's bout with typhoid fever and lung fever, 1850; Eliot Channing Clarke's service during the Civil War at Readville and Provincetown, Massachusetts, May-August 1864; and his work as an engineer in Chicago and other locations. The series contains some typed transcripts of letters from Anna's father Harm Jan Huidekoper, 1845-1846. The original letters from which these transcripts were made are not part of this collection.
Note: For individuals that married into the Clarke family, this series contains correspondence from both before and after their marriage. Undated family correspondence, which includes many letters to Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke from her aunts and cousins, is filed alphabetically at the end of the chronological sequence.
1831-1841
1842-May 1846
June 1846-1850
1851-June 1856
July 1856-1863
1859-1903
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
1864-1871
1872-1880
1881-1893
1894-1923
Oversize family correspondence, 1834-1840
Undated family correspondence
Arranged alphabetically by writer.
Bagley, Margaret Lydia (Hazlett) (1809-1884)
Blake, Sara Putnam (Lowell)
Blake, Sara Putnam (Lowell)
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Cabot, Ella (Lyman) (1866-1934)
Clapp, Susan Prescott (Sohier) (1839-1917)
Clarke, Abraham Fuller (1814-1886)
Clarke, Alice de Vermandois (Sohier)
Clarke, Alice de Vermandois (Sohier)
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Clarke, Anna (Huidekoper)
Clarke, Eliot Channing
Clarke, James Freeman
Clarke, Lilian Freeman
Clarke, Rebecca Parker (Hull)
Clarke, Sarah Freeman
Davis, Helen (1798-1887)
Higginson, Mary Davies (Sohier) (1817-1885)
Huidekoper, Anne Preston (Morris) (1855-1912)
Huidekoper, Emma Gertrude (Evans) (1840-1912)
Huidekoper, Virginia (Christie) (1843-1914)
Kidder, Elizabeth (Huidekoper) (1851-1951)
Lowell, Anna Cabot (1808-1894)
Lowell, Charles Russell (1835-1864)
Lowell, Elizabeth Cabot (Putnam)
Lowell, Francis Cabot (1803-1874)
Lowell, Katherine Bigelow (Lawrence)
Lowell, Lucy Buckminster (Emerson)
Lowell, Olivia Buckminster (1854-1870)
Lowell, Percival (1855-1916)
Lowell, Rebecca Amory
Lyman, Arthur Theodore (1861-1933)
Lyman, Ellen Bancroft (Lowell)
Lyman, Mabel (1872-1950)
Page, Sarah Hull (1824-1892)
Perry, Lydia "Lilla" Jackson (Cabot) (1848-1933)
Putnam, Elizabeth Cabot (1836-1922)
Putnam, Elizabeth Cabot (Jackson) (1808-1875)
Putnam, Georgina Lowell (1835-1914)
Putnam, Mary Traill Spence (Lowell) (1810-1898)
Sohier, Edith Frances Alden (1856-1919)
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Sohier, Mary Davies (1842-1922)
Sohier, Sarah Inches (1852-1871)
Sohier, Susan Cabot (Lowell)
Sohier, William
Sprague, Elizabeth Rebecca (Lowell)
Wells, Gertrude (Huidekoper) (1846-1928)
Woods, Mary
II. James Freeman Clarke papers, 1817-1910
A. Personal correspondence and other papers, 1830-1892
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains James Freeman Clarke's correspondence with individuals outside his family. Included are many letters from Clarke to his Harvard classmate, lawyer and Congressman George Thomas Davis, and Davis's wife Harriet T. (Russell) Davis; letters of sympathy Clarke received after the death of his son Herman in 1849 from Theodore Parker and others; and letters from Harvard president Thomas Hill about the education of Eliot Channing Clarke. Other correspondents include William Henry Channing, Caroline Wells (Healey) Dall, Thomas H. Gill, and Anna Quincy Thaxter Parsons.
The subseries also contains oversize deeds for land Clarke owned in Boston, Newton, and elsewhere, including a lease for Brook Farm in West Roxbury, Massachusetts; extracts of Channing's letters copied by Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke; a small 1840 letterbook with onion-skin copies of James F. Clarke's outgoing correspondence and memoranda; oversize plans, architectural drawings, and blueprints; some letters apparently retained for their autograph value; a few bills, primarily dating from a trip to Europe in 1882; correspondence and receipts related to Clarke's property in Magnolia, Massachusetts, including letters from Thomas Jefferson Coolidge and Lucius M. Sargent; and a typescript list of Clarke's papers at Harvard University. Letters and ephemera related to professional associations with which Clarke was affiliated include printed matter from the 1849 Paris Peace Conference; menus of Harvard Class of 1829 dinners; notices of election and invitations to join organizations; and tally cards, tickets, and other printed matter from the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1876. Much of this material was annotated by Clarke.
This subseries includes five oversize manuscript posters by Franklin Wilder (1813-1892), a patient at the Northampton General Lunatic Asylum, sent to Clarke in 1878. The posters contain drawings of symbols, religious quotations, and lengthy messages about conspiracies and secret societies, such as the Masons.
Correspondence and bills, 1830-1888, undated
Oversize deeds and receipts, 1831-1884
"Extracts from Letters of Wm H. Channing to James Freeman Clarke," 1839-1884
Letterbook, 1840
Very fragile.Oversize plans and architectural drawings, 1845-1850, undated
"Letters and Notes for Autographs," 1846-1892
Letters and ephemera related to professional associations, 1849-1888
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Certificate declaring Clarke a founder of the Museum of Fine Arts, 1871
Oversize posters by Franklin Wilder, 1878
Papers related to property at Magnolia, Massachusetts, 1878-1884
Bills, trip to Europe, 1882
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Oversize blueprints of stable, 1887
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
List of manuscripts at Harvard University, undated
B. Sermons and other writings, 1817-1887
Arranged chronologically by type.
The bulk of this subseries consists of manuscript sermons, but also included are lectures, notes, and poems. Many of Clarke's sermons were delivered on more than one occasion. A large number of the writings in this subseries are drafts or fragments, and many are undated. The earliest piece is a poem called "On a Bird," written by Clarke when he was seven years old.
Sermons and lectures, 1834-1837
Sermons and lectures, 1838-1877
Sermons and lectures, 1878-1882
Sermons and lectures, undated
Unidentified manuscript(s), undated
Hymns and poems, [1817]-1887, undated
Miscellaneous notes and fragments, undated
C. Scrapbooks, 1833-1899
This subseries consists of 15 scrapbooks related to James Freeman Clarke. Eight scrapbooks contain printed copies of Clarke's sermons, and seven scrapbooks contain miscellaneous material, including clippings of his writings and newspaper articles about him, family members, and topics of interest. One scrapbook (Scrapbook I) relates almost exclusively to slavery and includes handwritten memoranda by Clarke.
Scrapbook I / Slavery commonplace-book, 1849-1855
Included are newspaper clippings and manuscript notes about slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law, statistics, and quotations, as well as miscellaneous memoranda.
Items removed from Scrapbook I
Scrapbook II / "The Apostle Paul," undated
Included are printed Bible extracts and manuscript notes. Mostly blank.
Items removed from Scrapbook II
Scrapbook III / Sermons, 1873-1875
Scrapbook IV / Sermons, 1873-1878
Scrapbook V / Sermons, 1875-1877
Scrapbook VI / Sermons, 1878-1884
Scrapbook VII / Sermons, 1881-1883
Scrapbook VIII / Sermons, 1879-1885
Scrapbook IX / Sermons, 1880-1888
Scrapbook X / Sermons, 1877-1884
Items removed from Scrapbook X
Scrapbook XI / Miscellaneous clippings, 1833-1885
Items removed from Scrapbook XI
Scrapbook XII / Miscellaneous clippings, 1865-1878
Very fragile.Items removed from Scrapbook XII
Scrapbook XIII / Miscellaneous clippings, 1860-1899
Items removed from Scrapbook XIII
Scrapbook XIV / Miscellaneous clippings, 1846-1880
Items removed from Scrapbook XIV
Scrapbook XV / Miscellaneous clippings, 1851-1856
Items removed from Scrapbook XV
D. Other volumes, 1831-1886
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains a sketchbook by Clarke titled "Designs and Sketches together with Copies of engraved figures Drawings &c." The volume includes pencil and ink studies of facial features, heads, figures, architectural features, and landscapes, as well as poetry and extensive annotations about art. The subseries also contains a small paperbound ledger of Western Messenger, Unitarian Church, and church library accounts; passports and passport books; and check registers.
Sketchbook, 1831
Account ledger, 1835-1839
Two oversize passports, 1849, 1852-1853
Passport book, 1849
Passport book, 1852-1853
Check register, 1871-1875
Massachusetts National Bank check registers, 1884-1887
2 volumes.NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
New England Trust Company check registers, 1885-1887
2 volumes.NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
E. Newspaper clippings, 1861-1910, undated
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains newspaper clippings about James Freeman Clarke, including a large number of obituaries from June 1888, as well as copies of some of his sermons and poems published in newspapers.
III. Personal papers of Clarke family members, 1822-1932
Arranged in age order.
This series consists of personal papers of James Freeman Clarke's sister Sarah Freeman Clarke, wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, and most of his children and grandchildren, including Lilian Freeman Clarke, Eliot Channing Clarke, Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke, Cora Huidekoper Clarke, Susan Lowell Clarke, Anna Huidekoper Clarke, and James Freeman Clarke (1889-1966).
Note: Correspondence addressed to two or more individuals is filed with the personal papers of the first addressee. Unidentified Clarke family material has been filed in Series III.J.
A. Sarah Freeman Clarke papers, 1834-1896
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains Sarah Freeman Clarke's correspondence with individuals outside her family, including a few letters to friends Anna Quincy Thaxter Parsons and Ednah Dow (Littlehale) Cheney on women's suffrage in Marietta, Georgia, and other matters. Box 42 contains a letter from Mary Tyler (Peabody) Mann on the death of her husband Horace Mann, as well as letters from Sophia (Peabody) Hawthorne and Fanny Kemble. Some letters in this subseries were written in French or Italian. Also included are three volumes of personal accounts and memoranda kept by Clarke, the first on a trip to Europe, 1876-1878; the second in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, and Marietta, 1890; and the third in Marietta, 1893. The second volume includes notes about paintings exhibited. This subseries also contains a manuscript narrative, apparently an unpublished story by Clarke, titled "Memoirs of a woman who did her own business," as well as a small undated paperbound volume of notes from a female debating society or conversation club.
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1834-1896
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1848-1884
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Accounts and memoranda book, 1876-1878
Accounts and memoranda book, 1890
Accounts and memoranda book, 1893
Items removed from 1893 accounts and memoranda book
"Memoirs of a woman who did her own business," undated
3 signatures.Debating society/conversation club notebook, undated
B. Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke papers, 1831-1897
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists primarily of letters to Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke from individuals outside her family. Correspondents include Martha Eliza (Humphrey) Chappotin; Caroline Wells (Healey) Dall; Jerusha Dewey of Sheffield, Massachusetts; Mrs. E. J. Hale of Petersboro, New Hampshire; Louisa Caroline Jeffery; Sophia Apollonia Mappa; Laurana (Crane) Munroe; Anna Quincy Thaxter Parsons; Elizabeth Palmer Peabody; Susan Bradford Wallace (later Macalester) and Mary Binney Wallace (later Riddle) of Philadelphia; and many others. Much of Clarke's correspondence relates to her charitable work. Also included are some financial papers; returned checks; Clarke's reminiscences of her son Herman, who died in 1849; and printed obituaries of her brother Edgar Huidekoper, 1862.
The subseries also contains three volumes, including a paperbound estate inventory, apparently an inventory of real estate, bonds, stocks, and other property owned by James Freeman Clarke at his death in 1888, as well as debts, copyrights, and income. Most of the volume is in Eliot Channing Clarke's hand, with further annotations by Anna H. Clarke related to dispensations. The front cover reads: "Property of A.H.C." The other two volumes are an account book listing household and family expenses, investment income, wages to household staff, gifts, charitable donations, and other accounts, and a small paper-bound volume showing subscription dues paid for a publication called Little Unity.
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1831-1896
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1858-1895
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Personal correspondence and other papers, undated
Estate inventory, 1888-1890
Returned checks, Massachusetts National Bank, 1889, 1896-1897
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Account ledger, 1894-1897
Items removed from account ledger
Subscription book for Little Unity, undated
C. Lilian Freeman Clarke papers, 1852-1922
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1854-1914
Arranged chronologically.
Included is correspondence to Lilian Freeman Clarke from Edward William Hooper, Fanny Hudson (Chapin) Hooper, Louisa Chapin, and other individuals outside the Clarke family; a long letter by Clarke about Phillips Brooks's sermons and the doctrine of the Trinity; and miscellaneous memoranda and poetry.
Composition books, 1852-1856
Arranged chronologically.
These volumes, written by Clarke when she was young, contain personal anecdotes, stories, descriptions, poems, excerpts, and short essays on various subjects. Some entries are similar to commonplace-book entries, and others are like diary entries, describing events in her life or activities with her family. Included are a few corrections and annotations in another hand, presumably a teacher's.
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
"Compositions, written at Cousin Priscilla Shippen's school [Meadville], when I was ten years old," 1852-1853
Compositions, [Buffalo, New York], 1853-1854
Poetry and excerpts, Jamaica Plain, 1855
"At Miss Peabody's School / No. 4 Winter Place / Boston," 1856
"Flowers from Fairyland," undated
Poetry and excerpts, undated
Items removed from undated poetry and excerpts
Sketchbooks, 1853-1854, undated
Arranged chronologically.
These four sketchbooks contain pencil drawings by Clarke of outdoor scenes, geometric shapes, and other subjects.
NOTE: The material in these boxes has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Sketchbook, 1853
Sketchbook, 1854
Sketchbook, undated
Sketchbook, undated
Items removed from sketchbooks
Other volumes, 1895-1922, undated
Arranged chronologically.
Clarke's account ledger documents her charitable work with women and children, including monthly accounts for medicine and medical care, food, clothing, board, travel, and other items. Included are the names of individuals receiving assistance, as well as Clarke's charitable partners, such as Johanna (Pelger) Denecke, who apparently took in many needy women and children. Other volumes consist of eight penmanship books from her childhood; translations of German poetry, written in her hand and attributed to her and her father; and an inventory of her estate after her death.
Account ledger, 1895-1900
"Appraisal of the Estate of Miss Lilian Freeman Clarke, 5 Brimmer Street, Boston, Massachusetts," 1922
Penmanship books, undated
8 paperbound volumes.NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
"Translations from the German by James Freeman Clarke and Lilian Clarke," undated
D. Eliot Channing Clarke papers, 1852-1921
This subseries contains Eliot Channing Clarke's correspondence with individuals outside his family, bills and receipts, volumes, and other papers. Correspondence consists primarily of a large number of letters from young men accepting or declining invitations to two dinner dances Clarke hosted for his daughter Anna Huidekoper Clarke in February 1904, probably for her "coming out" as a debutante. The subseries also includes many household bills and receipts; an account book of real estate, bonds, stocks, and other property owned by Clarke and his wife; and a scrapbook of printed and other material related to Harvard College (Class of 1867).
Because of its fragile condition, the Harvard scrapbook was disbound by the MHS in 2023. The original order of the contents has been retained, and oversize items, such as Clarke's Eliot High School and Harvard diplomas, have been removed to oversize. The scrapbook includes writings by Clarke; programs, invitations, and ticket stubs; newspaper clippings about the Civil War and about Harvard, particularly the College Regatta and other athletic events; correspondence; and curricula and tests.
The subseries also contains a few undated volumes, including a commonplace-book (mostly blank) and a penmanship book written by Clarke as a child, as well as three sketchbooks with pencil drawings by Clarke of architectural elements, trees, outdoor scenes, and other subjects.
Loose papers, 1852-1917
Arranged chronologically by type.
Personal correspondence, 1852-17 January 1904
Personal correspondence, 18 January 1904-1917
Writings and drawings, 1854-1896
Bills and receipts, 1866-February 1909
Bills and receipts, March 1909-1910
Oversize bills and receipts, 1908-1910
Miscellaneous papers, 1887, 1908
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Volumes, 1861-1921, undated
Arranged chronologically.
Harvard College scrapbook, 1861-1907
Disbound volume.Items removed from scrapbook
Account book, [1881-1919]
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
"Appraisal of the Estate of Mr. Eliot C. Clarke, 15 Brimmer Street, Boston," and obituary, 1921
Commonplace-book, undated
Sketchbooks, undated
3 volumes.NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Penmanship book, undated
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
E. Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke papers, 1863-1910
This subseries contains Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke's correspondence with individuals outside her family, including Agnes G. Balch, Ellen Barnard, Amy Morris Bradley, Edward Everett Hale, Hannah Hathaway Kimball, Helen Frances Kimball, and Helen Paine. Included are calling cards and invitations addressed to the Misses Sohier (Alice and her sister Elizabeth Putnam Sohier) in 1869, as well as letters about the education of Alice's children. The subseries also contains bills and receipts, many of them related to her marriage to Eliot Channing Clarke in 1878; a diary she kept when she was a teenager describing her daily activities, social activities with friends and family, sewing, reading, etc.; five Greek lesson notebooks; three account books of personal and household expenses; and two volumes listing social calls she made and received, with miscellaneous loose scraps of papers and cards listing calls.
Also included are papers related to Clarke's work as historian of the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America and on the Eligibility Committee. These papers consist of letters about the genealogy of prospective members, invitations to events from state chapters, and other correspondence; research notes on qualifying ancestors; printed matter and other papers related to eligibility requirements; and a genealogical index.
The subseries also contains correspondence, memoranda, and other papers documenting Clarke's work with the Boston Female Asylum. Among the girls named in this material are Annabelle Parker, Florence Robbins, Edith Turner, Ida Hooker, and Grace Smith. Some papers describe the girls' family history, health, emotional state, and moral character, as well as physical abuse in homes where they boarded. Included are personal letters from Turner and Smith about their experiences, letters of reference, notes on classes offered by the organization, and a copy of the printed pamphlet An Account of the Boston Female Asylum, 1008 Washington Street (1898).
Loose papers, 1863-1910
Arranged chronologically by type.
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1863-1908
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1896-1901
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Personal correspondence and other papers, undated
Bills and receipts, 1878-1910
Colonial Dames correspondence, 1893-1901
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Colonial Dames research notes, 1897-1898, undated
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Boston Female Asylum papers, 1894-1900
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Volumes, 1869-1901
Arranged chronologically.
Diary, 11 January-10 May 1869
"Questions No I / Alice de V. Sohier," [before 1878]
"Questions No II / Alice de V. Sohier," [before 1878]
"Questions III / Alice de V. Sohier & Miss Paine," [before 1878]
"Questions IV / Alice de V. Sohier & Miss Paine," [before 1878]
"Alice de V. Sohier & Helen Paine / Questions No V," [before 1878]
Account book, 1878-1882
Items removed from 1878-1882 account book
Account book, 1883-1886
Items removed from 1883-1886 account book
Account book, 1886-1889
"List of Calls &c.," 1886-1888
Items removed from "List of Calls"
Lists of social calls, 1887-1894, undated
"Visitors & Visits Made," 1891-1901
Items removed from "Visitors & Visits Made"
Genealogical index, undated
F. Cora Huidekoper Clarke papers, 1906-1907, undated
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists of Cora Huidekoper Clarke's correspondence with individuals outside her family, bills and receipts, and undated school papers. Included are letters from Jane Alexander, Annie Corliss (Taber) Hyde, Anne L. Read, Mary T. Saunders, and Helen M. Tower. School papers consist of a volume of typescript drafts of writings and lectures by Clarke related to gardens, flowers and other plants, literature, and life after graduation, with some handwritten annotations and sketches. This volume was disbound by the MHS in 2023, and the original order of the contents has been retained.
Personal correspondence, 1906-1907
Bills and receipts, 1906-1907
School papers, undated
Disbound volume.G. Susan Lowell Clarke papers, 1892-1924
This subseries contains letters to Susan Lowell Clarke from individuals outside her family; bills, receipts, returned checks, and bank statements; passport papers; papers related to the estates of Rebecca Amory Lowell and John Amory Lowell, of which Clarke was a beneficiary; stories she wrote as a child; and an undated cotillion book listing her partners for various dances, with miscellaneous sketches. Letters from Bryn Mawr friends and others discuss Clarke's activities in Europe in 1909-1910, the end of her engagement to Christian Huidekoper due to his unspecified mental illness, her work with the Woman's Education Association providing scholarships to immigrants for Americanization courses, and other matters. Among the correspondents are Mary R. Black, Gertrude (Smyth) Buell, Ednah Anne (Rich) Morse, and Louise Lyman (Peck) White of Palenville, New York. Bills and receipts include those in Clarke's name, as well as those in her father's name, dated after his death and apparently paid by her. Box 44 contains two letters apparently to Eira Katherine Lloyd (1903-1950), who traveled from Wales to stay with Clarke in 1919.
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1893-1909
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1899-1924
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1910-1923
Financial papers, 1908-1922
Passport papers, 1917
Childhood writings, 1892, undated
Cotillion dance book, undated
H. Anna Huidekoper Clarke papers, 1888-1910
Personal correspondence and other papers, 1888-1910
Arranged chronologically.
The bulk of Anna Huidekoper Clarke's personal correspondence consists of letters written to her from young men accepting or declining invitations to two dinner dances hosted by her father Eliot Channing Clarke in February 1904, probably for her "coming out" as a debutante. Also included are bills and receipts for photographic supplies, clothing, and other items, as well as a few papers related to her education.
Correspondence, 1888-15 January 1904
Correspondence, 16 January 1904-1910
History essay, Bryn Mawr College, 1901
Bills and receipts, 1907-1910
School reports, undated
Diaries and appointment books, 1899-1904
Arranged chronologically.
Included are three diaries kept by Anna Huidekoper Clarke, primarily in Boston; one travel diary; and one appointment book with some diary-like entries. Most entries were written when Clarke was a teenager and describe her social activities with friends and family members; visits with the Sohier family; recreation, including driving and riding horses and attending horse shows; school; church; and other subjects. Included is a long entry, 29 May 1901, about her graduation from Miss Haskell's School for Girls, her feelings about leaving, and her love and admiration for her teachers, Louise Porter Haskell and Mary Elizabeth Haskell. The appointment book contains brief notes of daily activities, including dances, 1903-1904.
The travel diary, apparently written in 1899, describes a sightseeing trip to England and Scotland with her cousins Caroline "Calla" Cutler (Foster) Huidekoper, Rosalind Huidekoper (later Greene), and Prescott Foster Huidekoper, including rides taken by horse and carriage, horseback riding, rowing, hiking, and the steamship voyage home. Included are photographs pasted in, some purchased and some taken by Clarke.
Travel diary, 9 August-9 September [1899]
Items removed from 1899 travel diary
Diary, 1 January-31 August 1900
Diary, 28 July 1900-30 May 1901
Items removed from 1900-1901 diary
Diary, 26 January-19 July 1901
Appointment book, 1903-1904
Items removed from appointment book
Other volumes, 1894-1910
Arranged chronologically.
Included are two account books, mostly blank, containing sporadic personal accounts, expenses incurred by Clarke during her 1899 trip to England and Scotland, and expenses for classes at Bryn Mawr College. Also included is a printed birthday book in which Clarke's friends and family members wrote their birthdays; a register of Clarke's correspondence; her notebook from a "Comparative Religion" course at Bryn Mawr College; the Bryn Mawr yearbook for 1905, the year she graduated; and other volumes. The yearbook contains attached photographs of Clarke and her classmates, faculty, the campus, athletics, and events, including plays performed by students in blackface.
Birthday book, 1894-1910
Register of correspondence, 1899-1910
Personal accounts, [1899]
Personal accounts, 1903
"Comparative Religion" notebook, 1904-1905
Items removed from notebook
Bryn Mawr College yearbook, 1905
Items removed from yearbook
Origami notebook, undated
Address book, undated
I. James Freeman Clarke (1889-1966) papers, 1906-1921
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists primarily of a disbound album of postcards from James Freeman Clarke, the grandson of Rev. James Freeman Clarke, sent to family members during a trip to Italy, Switzerland, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and England. Subjects include the voyage, sights seen, and letters received. Also included are a few postcards from others. Because of its fragile condition, the volume was disbound by the MHS in 2023, but the original order of the postcards has been retained. This subseries also contains a folder of bills and receipts, mostly related to the upkeep and storage of Clarke's car, as well as one chapter of a typescript history of the Dugout Club, written by an unknown author. The Dugout Club was a social club for World War I veterans, and Clarke was a member.
Postcard album, 1906
Disbound volume.Bills and receipts, 1908-1921
"Thumb-Nail Sketch of the Dugout Club," undated
J. Unidentified and miscellaneous family papers, 1822-1932, undated
Arranged chronologically.
The Perry-Clarke additions, when donated to the MHS, included a number of boxes of unsorted Clarke family material. Papers with identifiable authors and/or recipients have been moved to the appropriate series or subseries. This subseries contains papers with unidentifiable or miscellaneous authors and/or recipients, including correspondence, deeds, writings, genealogical material, manuscript fragments, and a large number of calling cards. Included are items that may have been collected or retained for their autograph value, such as autographs of Barbara Isabella Buchanan, Caroline Wells (Healey) Dall, Eleuterio Felice Foresti, Joguth Chunder Gangooly, William Channing Gannett, Francis Jackson Garrison, Harriet Hosmer, Mary Howitt, Mary Tyler (Peabody) Mann, James Martineau, John Hamilton Thom, Adeline Dutton (Train) Whitney, and Roger Wolcott (1847-1900), as well as an album of onionskin copies of autographs of Lajos Kossuth, primarily dating from his tour of Great Britain and the United States in the 1850s.
Correspondence, 1822-1916
Correspondence, 1883-1932
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Oversize deeds and financial papers, 1828-1881
Oversize autograph album, Lajos Kossuth, 1850-1854
Disbound volume.Financial papers, 1869-1912
Stimpson family stories, 1892, undated
Letters from Lois F. Endicott to "Miss Clarke," 1913
Poems and drawings, undated
Writings on James Freeman Clarke, undated
Oversize family tree, undated
Genealogy and family history, undated
Notes and fragments, undated
Envelopes and seals, undated
Calling cards, undated
IV. Personal papers of related families, 1761-1922
Arranged in age order.
This series consists primarily of personal papers of Lowell and Sohier family members, who were related to the Clarke family through Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke. Included are papers of Anna Cabot Lowell (1768-1810), Rebecca Amory Lowell, Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), Mary Davies (Sohier) Higginson, Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier, and Sara Putnam (Lowell) Blake. The series also contains papers of Clarke ancestors Obadiah Curtis, Capt. Constant Freeman, and William Hull; a small subseries of Harm Jan Huidekoper correspondence; and papers of members of the related Amory and Putnam families.
A. Obadiah Curtis deeds, 1761-1807
Obadiah Curtis (1724-1811) was a Boston wheelwright and storekeeper and the great-grandfather of James Freeman Clarke.
This subseries consists of six deeds for property purchased and sold by Obadiah Curtis, including land in Newton, Massachusetts, and a house and land on Marlborough Street in Boston.
B. Constant Freeman letterbook, 1768-1777
This letterbook contains copies of the outgoing correspondence of Capt. Constant Freeman, 7 March 1768-12 November 1777. Included are letters written while he was in Bristol, England; Kingston, Jamaica; Charleston, South Carolina; Quebec, Canada; Boston, Massachusetts; Haiti; and other places, primarily related to shipping concerns, such as cargo (including molasses and rum), bills, and markets. The volume also contains a few letters to his children, written in 1775 when Freeman was in Quebec, about the death of his wife Lois (Cobb) Freeman and the outbreak of the American Revolution, as well as portage bills for ships of which Freeman was master. These bills list the names of individual sailors, including a Black man named Cato, and the wages each was paid.
C. William Hull papers, 1795-1837
This subseries consists exclusively of papers of James Freeman Clarke's grandfather William Hull related to the Connecticut Land Company and Hull's ownership of property in the Connecticut Western Reserve in Ohio. Included is correspondence with Pierpont Edwards, William Ewing, Elihu Chauncey Goodrich, Elizur Goodrich, William Judd, John Livingston, Isaac Mills, Oliver Phelps, Ephraim Root, and others, as well as agreements, promissory notes, memoranda, and other papers.
1795-1837
Oversize papers, 1796-1799
D. Anna Cabot Lowell (1768-1810) scrapbook, 1789-1855; bulk: 1799-1810
The scrapbook consists almost exclusively of letters from Anna Cabot Lowell to friends and family, primarily Ann Bromfield (later Tracy), but also friends Susan (Palfrey) Lee, Penelope (Russell) Sedgwick, Sarah (Russell) Sullivan, and Mary (Amory) Bethune; brother and sister-in-law, John and Rebecca (Amory) Lowell; sisters Sarah Champney Lowell, Susan Cabot (Lowell) Gorham, and Elizabeth Cutts (Lowell) Dutton; brother-in-law Warren Dutton; and stepmother Rebecca (Russell) Lowell. Letters relate primarily to personal, family, social, and religious matters, although letters to her brother John, written while he was abroad, include discussions of local news and national politics, such as the 1804 duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr. Many letters discuss Anna C. Lowell's health and her admiration for Scottish author Anne MacVicar Grant. The scrapbook also contains letters written during Lowell's trip to England, Wales, the Netherlands, and France in 1805, including passages about the Napoleonic Wars. This scrapbook was compiled by her niece and namesake, Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894), in 1881 and disbound by the MHS in 2013. The order of the pages was retained. Some letters have sections cut out.
E. Harm Jan Huidekoper personal correspondence, 1829-1839
This subseries consists of two letters from Harm Jan Huidekoper to William Ellery Channing related to Unitarian publications and one letter to Huidekoper from Sophia Apollonia Mappa on the upcoming marriage of Anna Huidekoper and James Freeman Clarke, as well as other matters.
F. Rebecca Amory Lowell papers, 1804-1871
Rebecca Amory Lowell's papers consist primarily of volumes arranged into three groups: Sunday School notebooks; commonplace-books containing memoranda from her reading; and miscellaneous volumes, including two travel diaries, an account book, and lists of books read. There is some overlap between the first two groups; Sunday School notebooks contain specific lessons, but some commonplace-books also indicate they were intended for use in classes. Several volumes include the names of students and lists of books lent. Titles in quotation marks are taken directly from volumes. The subseries also contains miscellaneous personal papers.
Sunday School notebooks, 1839-1863
Arranged chronologically.
"Book 6th / Roxbury Class April 28th 1839"
"Roxbury Sunday school [May] 1841 2d class 2d year"
"Questions on the Old Testament begun June 1841"
"4th book of the Class 1843 - 44 - 45"
"2d book of the Class of 1845 / Class of 1845 continued in 1846 Begun April 5th"
"Class of 1847-8 3d book / June 4th 1848 / April 8 1849"
"Class begun Decr 17 1848"
"Sunday school Book 5th / 1849 October Roxbury"
"Sunday School book begun April 1850 - Book 6th - (Class of 1847)"
"Book 7th / Sunday School Book / Scholars September 1850"
"Book 8th / Sunday school book - 1851 - begun June 1st"
"3d Question book of the Class begun with in 1852 / October 1853"
"4th Question Book of the Class of 1852 / September 1854"
"Class of April - 1855 (begun in 1852[)] - 5th Question Book"
"7th Question Book for the Class taken in 1852 / October 11th 1856"
"8th Question book for the Class of 1852 / April 1857"
"9th Question book for the Class taken in 1852 - begun November 1857"
"10th Question Book for the Class taken in 1852 - Begun March 14 1858"
"11th Question Book for the Bible Class taken in 1852 / October 1st 1858"
"13th Question book for the Class of 1852 / June 12 1859"
"14th Manual for the Class of 1852 / [December 1859]"
"15th Manual of the Class of 1852 - 1860 March"
"1st Manual for the Class taken April 1st 1860"
"Record book for the Class of 1860 connected with Manual 1st begun April 1st"
"5th Manual of Class taken in April 1860 / Begun June 29th 1862"
"6th Manual of Class of April 1860 / begun May 1863"
"Book 7th of George Putnam's class," undated
Commonplace-books, 1847-1864
Arranged chronologically.
"Book 1st / Common-Place book of Miscellaneous thoughts, suggestions, references & quotations, chiefly intended as aids in Teaching / Begun July 1847"
"Common-Place book Number 2 / Notes & extracts chiefly for the use of my scholars / Begun at Nahant August 18th 1850"
"Common Place Book No. 3 / Extracts & Notes for the use of my scholars / Begun at Nahant September 13th 1852"
Items removed from 1852 commonplace-book
"Common Place Book No. 4 / April 1856 / Miscellaneous Extracts illustrative of History, Literature, Philosophy, Morals & Religion"
Items removed from 1856 commonplace-book
"Common Place Book No. 5 / Extracts illustrative of Theology, History, Literature, Philosophy, Religion & Morals / begun February 2d 1858"
Items removed from 1858 commonplace-book
"Common Place Book No. 6 / Extracts to be used chiefly for classes of young persons on Literary & Theological subjects / Begun June 1862" to 1864
Items removed from 1862-1864 commonplace-book
Other volumes, 1804-1863
Arranged chronologically.
Included are two short travel diaries, the first apparently kept by Lowell as a child on rides to Rhode Island and the White Mountains. The second diary was written on a ride in 1815 from Roxbury to Newburyport, Massachusetts, and a trip to Niagara Falls and up the St. Lawrence River to Quebec in 1825. Also included is a volume listing books read by Lowell and to others, books studied by her sister Anna Cabot Lowell and cousin Georgina Margaret Amory when they were her students, and subjects of compositions by Anna and Georgina, as well as extracts in French and English and other memoranda. The two teaching notebooks dated 1844 were kept for private lessons Lowell conducted at home. Her students included Susan Cabot Lowell, Sarah W. Taber, Harriet Taber, and "Miss Lord," probably Sarah A. Lord. A few volumes are books of questions for students on various subjects. The account book lists personal expenses, including charitable contributions and books purchased.
Travel diary, [1804?]
Travel diary, 7-9 September 1815, 1825
Lists of books read, sermons, etc., 1819-1830
"Questions for John on Goldsmith's Greece / Begun June 2d. 1834"
"Hints for Sunday School Teaching April 1844 - Book 1st"
"Book 2d - Aide for Sunday School Teaching," [1844]
Books lent to various individuals, 1845-1849
"Texts of Sermons heard from September 17th 1854" to 1857
"For Carrie / Questions to be answered in writing / [February 1857]"
Account book, 1857-1863
"Cullings from Cecilia Selwyn's Sunday-school lessons / Sunday 28th Sept. 1862" to 1863
"Questions for Mary Ann Forea," undated
"Questions on Mrs. Makefield's botany / Miss Lowell," undated
"Questions on Paley's Moral Philosophy continued" undated
Miscellaneous personal papers, 1839-1871
Arranged chronologically.
Included are many quotations on slips of paper, excerpts, and notes, mostly undated, probably copied by Lowell for use in lessons; a draft of a long letter from Lowell to Mr. [George] Putnam on the formation of Bible classes; newspaper clippings apparently collected by her; and bills and receipts, primarily for books.
Quotations, notes, and fragments, 1839-1868
Quotations, notes, and fragments, undated
Printed material, 1861-1862, undated
Bills and receipts, 1862-1868
Certificate declaring R. A. Lowell and Anna C. Lowell founders of the Museum of Fine Arts, 1871
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
G. Frances Augusta Greene Amory commonplace-books, 1816
This subseries consists of two commonplace-books of poetry by various poets, copied by Frances Augusta Greene Amory.
"Elegant Extracts of Poetry," 1816
"Elegant Extracts of Poetry," [1816]
Items removed from commonplace-books
H. Georgina Margaret (Amory) Lowell papers, 1822-1830
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists of two volumes kept by Georgina Margaret (Amory) Lowell: a commonplace-book of poetry titled "Extracts by Georgina Margaret Amory / July 1822 Roxbury Broomley Vale" and apparently given to her cousin Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894) in October 1824; and a diary, kept at Boston, describing the growth, health, and development of Lowell's two young children, Georgina and Anna.
Commonplace-book, 1822-1824
Items removed from commonplace-book
Diary, 29 July 1827-30 September 1830
I. Anna Cabot Lowell (1808-1894) papers, 1825-1893
Diaries, 1825-1880
Arranged chronologically.
Most of Anna Cabot Lowell's diaries (21 vols.) were kept in a series of softbound notebooks, 1876-1880. Entries describe Lowell's life at Bromley Vale, the family home in Roxbury, Massachusetts; household and family matters; social and charitable activities, including meetings of the directors of the Massachusetts Infant Asylum and visits to the institution; teaching Sunday School and attending services at First Church in Roxbury; reading and writing; grief for deceased family members, especially her sister Rebecca Amory Lowell; health concerns and her feelings about aging; the engagement and marriage of Alice de Vermandois Sohier and Eliot Channing Clarke; the death of Rev. George Putnam; and many other subjects. Other individuals mentioned include Rev. John Graham Brooks; Lowell's live-in companion Lucy Marie Solger; Solger's brother Parry Kennard Solger; Lowell's sister-in-law Elizabeth Cabot (Putnam) Lowell; members of the Lowell, Putnam, and Sohier families; and many others.
The subseries also contains a diary kept by Lowell as a young woman in 1835 with several long, detailed entries, written in July, describing unwanted attentions and sexual harassment by Rev. William Gray Swett, as well as her refusal of his marriage proposal. This diary frequently mentions George Putnam and his wife Elizabeth Anne (Ware) Putnam, as well as Lowell's cousin Cornelia Amory (later Goddard Loring). Another volume contains select diary entries from 1868, copied by Lowell from her own diaries. The entries relate to Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier, and the volume may have been given to Sohier's children after her death.
Also included are two travel diaries, the first written during a trip to Canada with family members in 1825. The family traveled to New York City, up the Hudson River via steamship and on land, through the Finger Lakes region of New York to Niagara Falls, across Lake Ontario and up the St. Lawrence River to Montreal. The diary ends before their arrival at Quebec. Entries primarily describe scenes of natural beauty, cities and towns, and the people Lowell encountered. The second travel diary contains a few pages of very brief notes on Lowell's activities during a trip to Europe, 1874-1875, but the bulk of the volume lists letters written and received on the trip.
"Remarks made on a Tour from Boston to Quebec by the way of The Falls of Niagara and Montreal - in July 1825"
Diary, 3 June-12 November 1835
Items removed from 1835 diary
Copies of select diary entries, 1868
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Pocket travel diary, 14 November 1874-19 January 1875
Diary, 6 December 1876-4 February 1877
Diary, 5 February-2 April 1877
Diary, 3 April-31 May 1877
Diary, 2 August-10 October 1877
Diary, 11 October-18 December 1877
Diary, 19 December 1877-11 February 1878
Diary, 12 February-11 April 1878
Items removed from February-April 1878 diary
Diary, 12 April-6 June 1878
Diary, 7 June-15 August 1878
Diary, 16 August-19 October 1878
Diary, 20 October-24 December 1878
Diary, 25 December 1878-15 March 1879
Diary, 16 March-22 May 1879
Items removed from March-May 1879 diary
Diary, 22 May-17 July 1879
Items removed from May-July 1879 diary
Diary, 18 July-11 October 1879
Diary, 12 October-25 December 1879
Items removed from October-December 1879 diary
Diary, 26 December 1879-7 March 1880
Items removed from December 1879-March 1880 diary
Diary, 8 March-14 May 1880
Diary, 15 May-1 August 1880
Diary, 2 August-11 October 1880
Diary, 12 October-25 December 1880
Other volumes, 1847-1893
Arranged chronologically.
Included is a scrapbook apparently compiled by Lowell containing newspaper clippings, other printed material, and manuscript material related to members of the Lowell family, Lowell genealogy, Elizabeth C. Putnam, Lajos Kossuth, William D. Sohier, Rev. George Putnam, and others, as well as material documenting Lowell's charitable work with Associated Charities, the Massachusetts Infant Asylum, and other organizations. The volume contains many obituaries and a small amount of correspondence, including a few letters of Laura Lucretia Case and Charles P. Ware, 1891. This material was housed in a portfolio scrapbook that was disbound by the MHS in 2023. The original order of the contents has been retained.
Other volumes kept by Lowell consist of three commonplace-books of poetry and prose extracts, primarily religious in nature and including passages in French, as well as one memoranda book. The second commonplace-book was given by Lowell to her niece Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier in February 1856. The memoranda book contains a few pages of notes from charitable visits to an unspecified "Home," 1860-1862, and to the Massachusetts Infant Asylum, with details of children and mothers in need of assistance. The other side of the memoranda book lists gifts Lowell gave and received between 1868 and 1873.
Scrapbook, 1847-1893
Disbound volume."Extract Book," 1847-1849
"Thoughts of Consolation & Strength," 1856
Memoranda book, 1860-1873
Commonplace-book, 1861-1868
J. Mary Davies (Sohier) Higginson recipe book, 1849-1884
Mary Davies (Sohier) Higginson (1817-1885) was the paternal aunt of Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke. She was married to Waldo Higginson (1814-1894).
This volume contains recipes for foods, medicines, and cleaning products, as well as first aid instructions, mostly undated. Higginson collected many of the recipes from other people and clipped some from newspapers.
K. Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier and William Sohier papers, 1838-1878
Arranged chronologically.
The bulk of this subseries consists of papers of Susan Cabot (Lowell) Sohier, primarily volumes containing notes on sermons and scripture, as well as her religious resolutions. Additional volumes include a mostly blank album containing one poem and reproductions of engravings; two personal account books, one of which lists clothes, household furnishings, and other items purchased for her wedding in 1846; a small homemade "magazine" of stories, apparently written by Sohier as a child; and a small volume of instructions to household staff for daily cleaning, child care, etc.
The subseries also contains a volume titled "Preferences," in which various individuals recorded their answers to questions about likes and dislikes, such as favorite author, animal, food, etc. The questions are written at the end of the volume. The names of Susan Sohier and Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke are listed on the first page, but answers were written in different hands. Included are answers of Lowell and Sohier family members, as well as Edward Everett Hale, Henry Wilder Foote, Robert Collyer, and others.
Loose papers include receipts of Susan and William Sohier related to the marriage of their daughter Alice to Eliot Channing Clarke. Among the items purchased were clothes, furniture, dishes, and wedding cards.
Album, 1838
Loose notes on sermons and scripture, 1839-1862, undated
Religious resolutions, 1843-1852
Items removed from 1843-1852 religious resolutions
Account book, 1845-1846
Items removed from 1845-1846 account book
Religious resolutions, 1846-1856
Notes on sermons, 1849-1862
Items removed from 1849-1862 notes on sermons
Notes on scripture, 1849
Notes on sermons, 1852-1854
Items removed from 1852-1854 notes on sermons
Notes on sermons, 1858
Notes on scripture, 1861-1866
Account book, 1861-1867
Items removed from 1861-1867 account book
"Preferences" book, 1862-1873
Susan and William Sohier bills and receipts, 1872-1878
"Lilliputian Magazine, edited by Ebenezar Hermit of Bachelor Row," undated
Instructions to household staff, undated
L. Georgina Lowell Putnam sketchbook, 1855
Georgina Lowell Putnam (1835-1914) was the daughter of Mary Traill Spence (Lowell) Putnam (1810-1898), John Amory Lowell's first cousin.
This sketchbook contains only one ink sketch, signed with the initials B.F.A., accompanying part of a poem. The rest of the volume is blank.
M. William Phineas Upham property inventory, 1887-1901
Historian William Phineas Upham (1836-1905) was distantly related to the Lowells through his great-grandmother Mary May (Jackson) Wendell (1739-1804), whose niece was Hannah (Jackson) Lowell (1776-1815). It is unclear how the volume became part of the Perry-Clarke additions.
This volume, titled "Statement of Property owned by William P. Upham," lists real estate, including extracts of deeds; stocks; and bonds.
N. Sara Putnam (Lowell) Blake papers, 1893-1899
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists exclusively of papers related to Sara Putnam (Lowell) Blake's work as president and secretary of the Massachusetts Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Included is correspondence about membership eligibility, efforts to preserve the Fairbanks House in Dedham, Massachusetts, and other matters; many handwritten, typewritten, and printed annual circular letters from state chapters; and undated member admission forms. These forms were sent by other state chapters, on behalf of prospective members who traced their ancestry back to Massachusetts, and include each individual's "right of descent" from a qualified ancestor. They were signed by Blake and other officers of the Massachusetts chapter.
NOTE: The material in these boxes has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
Correspondence, 1893-1899
Annual circular letters, 1893-1897
Annual circular letters, 1898-1899
Member admission forms, undated
Genealogical chart and crests of the Gookin, Wendell, Quincy, Sheafe, Cushing, and Sumner families, undated
NOTE: The material in this box has been treated with thymol. Researchers must use gloves when handling thymol-treated materials.
O. Olive Augusta (Richards) Perry genealogy notebook, 1861-1922
Olive Augusta (Richards) Perry (1843-1932) was the grandmother of Lewis Frederick Perry (1910-1973), who married Alice de Vermandois Ware (1909-1999) in 1941. Alice was the granddaughter of Eliot Channing Clarke and great-granddaughter of James Freeman Clarke.
This volume contains genealogical material on the antecedents of the Perry family, including the Colburn and Richards families.
P. Elizabeth Putnam Sohier correspondence, 1871-1872, undated
This subseries consists mostly of letters to Elizabeth Putnam Sohier either accepting or declining invitations to join her dancing school. Many of the letters are undated, but were probably written in 1872. Also included is an 1871 letter from Edward Everett Hale to Elizabeth and her sister Alice about gifts exchanged.
Preferred Citation
Perry-Clarke additions, Massachusetts Historical Society.
Access Terms
This collection is indexed under the following headings in ABIGAIL, the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should search the catalog using these headings.
Persons:
Organizations:
Subjects:
Materials Removed from the Collection
The following items have been removed from the Perry-Clarke additions and added to the MHS collection:
Graphics
One box of miscellaneous graphic materials, including greeting cards, paper dolls, engravings, pressed seaweed place cards, a portfolio cover belonging to James Freeman Clarke, and an autographed engraving of Abraham Lincoln. Also one extra-large engraving of Meadville, Pennsylvania, by Philadelphia Publishing House, 1882 (removed 9 September 1996).
Photographs
One narrow box added to the existing Perry-Clarke uncataloged photographs (Photo. Coll. U-131).
Printed materials
Address to the People of New England, by the Boston Free Trade
Club, 1876.
Auguste, J. Opening: Maison De Modes...
267 Washington St.
Beverly Yacht Club. Special Regatta, Beverly,
Saturday, September 6, 1873.
Boston Miniature Almanac for
1857. Boston: S. K. Whipple, 1856.
Clarke, James F. Hymns
and Poems. Boston: George E. Ellis, 1908.
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Oversize
broadside proclaiming national day of humiliation and prayer, 28 July 1864 (removed 9 September
1996).
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Oversize broadside proclaiming national day of
fasting, humiliation, and prayer, 1 March 1865 (removed 9 September 1996).
Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Oversize broadside proclaiming national day of public thanksgiving and praise, 8
November 1865 (removed 9 September 1996).
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Oversize broadside
proclaiming national day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer, 24 February 1886 (removed 9
September 1996).
Doten, Lizzie. A Review of a Lecture by Rev. Jas.
Freeman Clarke on the Religious Philosophy of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Boston: William
White, 1865.
Easter Services by the Sunday School of the First
Religious Society of Roxbury, March 28th, 1869.
Educational Commission. The Clothing Committee...ask your attention in behalf of the negroes who have
been or may be emancipated by the operation of the war.
Elements of Religion and Morality in the Form of a Catechism. Boston: S. G. Simpkins,
1848.
Exercises at the Centennial Anniversary of the Birth of
Alexander von Humboldt Under the Direction of the Boston Society of Natural History.
Boston: Kingman, 1869.
Farnese Relief Fund: Miss Edith Deacon
Appeals for Funds, ca. 1918.
Hymn and Responses for
the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the birthday of James Freeman Clarke, 4 April
1880.
Knobel, E. The Day Butterflies and Dusk Flyers of New
England. Boston: Bradlee Whidden, 1895.
Lessons on the Old
Testament, Arranged for the Use of the Sunday-School and Bible-Class in King's
Chapel.
Martineau, H. The Children Who Lived by the
Jordan. Boston: American Unitarian Association, undated.
Order of Services at the Children's Christmas Festival, King's Chapel, Sunday, December 27,
1868.
Program for a concert in honor of Ole Bull, 8 December 1876.
Putnam,
Rev. Sermon on the Death of Dr. Kane. Boston: For the Traveller, 1857.
Redfield, James W. Outlines of a New System of Physiognomy. Boston: Redfield, 1848.
A Sale in Aid of Denison House, undated.
Shirley, James. The Wedding: As It Was Lately Acted by her Maiesties Seruants, at the Phenix
in Drury-Lane. London: John Grove, 1633.
South End Errand and Commission Office,
circular, undated.
Stowell, Hugh. Hints on Self Examination.
Boston: Mass. Sabbath School Society, 1847.
Winkley, S. H. A
Question-book on the Life of Jesus. Boston: Sunday School Society, 1878.
Woman's
Education Association (Boston) Annual Report, 1917, 1920,
1922.