1588-1924; bulk: 1761-1923
Guide to the Collection
Processing funded by the North Shore Unitarian Veatch Foundation of Plandome, New York.
Abstract
This collection consists of papers of Unitarian clergyman, transcendentalist, author, and social reformer James Freeman Clarke, including correspondence, sermons and lectures, journals, personal notebooks, financial papers, etc., as well as papers of his wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke and other members of the Clarke and Huidekoper families.
Biographical Sketch
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), the daughter of Harm Jan Huidekoper (1776-1854) and sister of Frederic (1817-1892) and Elizabeth Huidekoper (1819-1908) of Meadville, Pennsylvania. (Harm Jan and Frederic Huidekoper were co-founders of the Meadville Theological School.) The Clarkes' children were: Herman Huidekoper Clarke (1840-1849); Lilian Freeman Clarke (1842-1921), a social reformer and translator; Eliot Channing Clarke (1845-1921), a civil engineer; and Cora Huidekoper Clarke (1851-1916), a naturalist and author.
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.
Collection Description
The Perry-Clarke collection consists primarily of the papers of Unitarian clergyman, transcendentalist, author, and social reformer James Freeman Clarke. Included are personal and professional letters to Clarke; bills and receipts; notes and drafts of his sermons and lectures; and personal notebooks, writings, journals, and accounts. Among the subjects are Clarke's career as a minister in Louisville, Kentucky, and as editor of the Western Messenger there; his tenure as pastor of the Church of the Disciples in Boston from 1841 until his death in 1888; Unitarian affairs; social reform; and Harvard University.
The collection also contains Clarke family papers, including papers of his parents Samuel and Rebecca (Hull) Clarke; correspondence and financial papers of his wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke and their children, including many letters to Anna from her sister Elizabeth Huidekoper; volumes of Clarke and Huidekoper family members, including diaries of Lilian Freeman Clarke and Sarah Freeman Clarke and volumes related to the Church of the Disciples, the New England Hospital for Women and Children, and the Society for Helping Destitute Mothers and Infants; the 1844 journal and commonplace-book of Margaret Fuller; and a collection of autograph letters by noted literary and historical figures.
All letters and volumes are individually described in the MHS card catalog.
NOTE: This guide includes an index of significant correspondents and select subjects represented in the collection.
Acquisition Information
The Perry-Clarke collection represents a portion of the papers of James Freeman Clarke that were in the hands of his grandson, James Freeman Clarke, when Arthur S. Bolster, Jr. wrote his dissertation (Harvard, 1954) and biography, James Freeman Clarke. The collection was deposited at the Massachusetts Historical Society in November 1968 and given to the MHS in November 1979 by Alice de V. Perry (Mrs. Lewis F. Perry) of Chestnut Hill, Mass. The Margaret Fuller journal and commonplace-book was deposited in 1985 and given to the MHS in March 2013 by Alice de V. Perry.
Other Formats
Digital facsimiles of the Samuel Clarke logbook are available on Life at Sea, a digital publication of Adam Matthew Digital, Inc. This digital resource is available at subscribing libraries; speak to your local librarian to determine if your library has access. The MHS makes this resource available onsite; see a reference librarian for more information.
Detailed Description of the Collection
I. Loose manuscripts, 1761-1923
This series consists of correspondence, financial documents, writings, and other papers of James Freeman Clarke, as well as papers of Clarke family members. Included are undated and dated manuscripts, letters from Elizabeth Huidekoper to Clarke's wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, and many sermons and lectures delivered by Clarke between 1834 and 1888.
NOTE: See the index below for significant correspondents and select subjects represented in this series.
A. Undated manuscripts
ca. 415 itemsArranged alphabetically by author.
Arranged alphabetically by author.
B. Dated manuscripts, 1761-1923
This subseries contains letters, bills, and receipts to James Freeman Clarke and his family. Included in Box 1 are a few papers of his parents, Samuel and Rebecca (Hull) Clarke. Papers dating from after James Freeman Clarke's death consist of letters, bills, receipts, and cancelled checks to his wife and children.
Included are bills, deeds, and correspondence concerning the Clarke family, Samuel Freeman, and the business affairs of Samuel and Rebecca Clarke; letters and bills to James Freeman Clarke related to his early ministerial career; and family and personal correspondence.
Included are letters and bills to James Freeman Clarke, many concerning the publication of the Western Messenger. Much of the personal and financial correspondence dates from Clarke's residence in Louisville, Kentucky. Principal correspondents include Samuel Osgood and Mann Butler.
Included are bills, receipts, and letters to James Freeman Clarke concerning Unitarian affairs in Boston, as well as a large number of personal bills and receipts. Principal correspondents include George W. Bond, Samuel Cabot, Jr., Samuel Osgood, and Jane Ann Pintle.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke concerning Unitarian affairs, politics, and personal matters; mortgage deeds and leases for Brook Farm; and letters describing events in Lawrence, Kansas Territory. Principal correspondents include Ephraim Nute, H. M. Chapin (also for earlier periods), and H. B. Tuttle.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke related to personal matters and Unitarian affairs, as well as material concerning the Civil War, the occupation of the coast of South Carolina, and church-related relief activities. Principal correspondents include Amory Dwight Mayo, Susan E. B. Channing, Edward L. Pierce, and E. W. Hooper (concerning South Carolina).
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke on personal matters and his work with the Harvard University Board of Overseers. Correspondence for 1865-1866 contains many letters from Harvard faculty members related to curriculum reform; some letters are addressed to Dr. James Walker (1794-1874). Principal correspondents also include Charles Brigham and William T. Clarke.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke on Harvard University business and the operations of the American Unitarian Association. Principal correspondents include Dr. James Walker, John Ware, Frederick W. Bird, William B. Weeden, and Thomas Hill. All but Walker and Ware are heavily represented in later correspondence.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke concerning prison reform and other social reform movements, as well as Unitarian affairs. Principal correspondents include John C. Zachos (correspondence from 1860-), M. G. Underwood, Enoch C. Wines, William B. Weeden, and Thomas Hill.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke concerning philanthropic and Unitarian activities. Principal correspondents include Waldo Higginson and Henry B. Rogers (correspondence from 1860-). NOTE: Beginning in 1873, an increasing proportion of the collection consists of personal bills and receipts to the Clarke family.
Included are letters to James Freeman Clarke and members of his family, much of it related to family matters or private business, as well as letters concerning Harvard University examinations for women, Clarke's autograph collection, and amateur astronomy. Principal correspondents include Charles F. Dunbar and A. Thorndike Rice.
Included are letters and bills to James Freeman Clarke and his children. Many of the bills are for taxes and utilities. Principal correspondents include Mary Hewitt (her correspondence extends into the 1880s).
Included are letters and bills to James Freeman Clarke and his family.
Included are bills, receipts, and some letters to James Freeman Clarke related to civil service reform and other subjects. Principal correspondents include John Jay.
Included are bills, receipts, and some letters to James Freeman Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, and some letters to James Freeman Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, and some letters to James Freeman Clarke.
Included are letters and some bills to James Freeman Clarke, 1887-June 1888; bills and receipts to Clarke's estate, 8 June-31 Dec. 1888; and family correspondence.
Included are bills, receipts, canceled checks, and personal business correspondence of Clarke family members, primarily Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke and Eliot Channing Clarke, as well as letters from Houghton Mifflin Company concerning publications by James Freeman Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, canceled checks, and personal business correspondence of Clarke family members; letters to Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, Lilian Freeman Clarke, and Eliot Channing Clarke; and letters from Houghton Mifflin Company concerning the autobiography of James Freeman Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, and canceled checks of Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke; letters to Lilian Freeman Clarke; and personal business correspondence of Eliot Channing Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, and canceled checks of Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke and Eliot Channing Clarke, primarily the latter's.
Included are bills, receipts, and canceled checks of Eliot Channing Clarke and Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, and personal business correspondence of Eliot Channing Clarke, as well as letters to and copies of letters from Lilian Freeman Clarke and Cora Huidekoper Clarke.
Included are bills, receipts, tax forms, and letters to Lilian Freeman Clarke, Cora Huidekoper Clarke, Susan Lowell Clarke, and Eliot Channing Clarke.
C. Letters from Elizabeth Huidekoper to Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, 1838-1887
ca. 750 lettersThis subseries contains personal letters from Elizabeth Huidekoper to her sister Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, the wife of James Freeman Clarke.
D. Notes and drafts of sermons, lectures, etc., 1834-1888
ca. 825 sermonsThis subseries contains manuscript notes and drafts of sermons, lectures, addresses, Sunday School lessons, and essays by James Freeman Clarke. Undated material is arranged first, organized alphabetically by title, followed by dated material organized chronologically, then unidentified notes and fragments. Many of the sermons, lectures, etc. include notations of place(s) and date(s) delivered; these notations are included in the list below, as well as information about where the material appears in print. The Saturday Evening Gazette regularly printed Clarke's sermons between 1873 and 1888.
Lists of sermons
Undated sermons and lectures
Arranged alphabetically by title.
1. Sandwich; 2. Canton; 3. Deerfield; 4. East Bridgewater.
Dated sermons and lectures, 1834-1888
Arranged chronologically. Each item is filed at its earliest known date or cross-referenced from that date.
1. Hollis Street Church, 6 July [1834]; 2. Louisville, 31 May 1835; 3. 5 Mar. 1837.
1. Amory Hall, 24 Oct. 1841; 2. Amory Hall, 11 Sep. 1842; 3. New York, Feb. 1843; 4. Waltham, July 1843; 5. Meadville, Oct. 1843; 6. Temple, Apr. 1845; 7. [Freeman] Place, Apr. 1849; 8. Meadville, Sep. 1852.
1. Amory Hall, 5 Dec. 1841; 2. Amory Hall, 3 Dec. 1843.
1. Amory Hall, 19 Dec.; 2. Amory Hall, 31 July 1842; 3. Temple, Aug. 1846.
1. 31 Jan. 1847.
1. Amory Hall, 15 Jan. 1843; 2. Meadville, 3 Sep. 1843; 3. Temple, Mar. 1845; 4. Temple, Aug. 1847; 5. Meadville, 4 Jan. 1852.
"The seed is the word," Mar. 1844
1. Apr. 1846.
1. Temple, July 1844; 2. Temple, Jan. 1846.
"All saints," 3 Nov. 1844
1. [?]; 2. Temple, 5 Jan. 1845.
1. [?]; 2. 16 Feb. 1845.
1. 18 May 1845; 2. Chicago, Aug. 1845; 3. Meadville, 31 Aug. 1845; 4. Temple, Dec. 1846; 5. Boston, Oct. 1869.
1. 25 May 1845; 2. Nov. 1846; 3. Meadville, 1852.
1. Meadville, Sep. 1845; 2. Boston, Philip Place, Sep. 1845; 3. Temple, Nov. 1846; 4. Indiana Place, Sep. 1860.
1. Mar. 1846; 2. Meadville, Aug. 1846; 3. Freeman P.C., June 1849.
"Outward evidence of Christianity," 1846
1. May 1847; 2. Hingham, 1847; 3. Watertown, 1847.
"All saints," 5 Nov. 1848
1. Lectures on positive doctrine, 1846; 2. Jamaica Plain, May 1846; 3. Dr. Gannett's, 17 May 1846; 4. Medford, Stetson, May 1846; 5. Albany, June 1846; 6. Putnam's, Roxbury, July 1846; 7. Meadville, Aug. 1846; 8. Dorchester, Aug. 1846; 9. Chapel in Freeman Place, Apr. 1848.
1. Freeman Place, Boston, 1851.
1. Boston, June 1855.
1. Meadville, July 1853; 2. Brookline, Mass., [1853]; 3. Williams Hall, Mar. 1854; 4. Portland, 1855; 5. Salem, 1855; 6. Beverly, 1855; 7. Indiana Place, Mar. 1856; 8. Indiana Place, 1867.
1. Masonic Temple, Mar. 1844; 2. New Bedford, July 1844; 3. Temple, Nov. 1845; 4. Edmunds, 1845; 5. Meadville, Sep. 1853.
"Think of the true and the good," 1853
1. Boston, 29 Jan. 1854; 2. Meadville, 19 Feb. 1854; 3. Indiana Place, May 1855; 4. Salem, 1855; 5. Indiana Place, 1859.
"Vital Christianity," Oct. 1855
"A little leaven," Oct. 1856
"All things are yours," [1856]
1. Boston, Church of the Disciples; 2. Salem, Jan. 1856; 3. Manchester, N.H., 1856.
1. 1856; 2. 1861.
"Let your speech be with grace, seasoned with salt," Jan. 1859
1. 12 June 1859; 2. 8 June 1862; 3. 15 May 1864; 4. 9 June 1867 (with additions).
2. 25 Dec. 1861.
1. Sep. 1860; 2. Jan. 1865.
"The seed is the word," 21 Oct. 1860
1. Lexington: Staples; 2. Westminster: C. O'Daniel; 3. Roxbury: Putnam.
"Christ and his church," [1860]
"The Holy Ghost and its coming," 1860
1. [?]; 2. Social meeting, 1860.
"So many voices and each its signification," 1860
"Daily bread," Sep. 1861
1. Brooklyn; 2. Boston; 3. Meadville; 4. Williams Hall; 5. Salem: Clapps, 1856.
1. 19 Jan. 1862; 2. Dorchester, Feb. 1862; 3. Indiana Place (with alterations).
"The grace of God which [bringeth] salvation," 2 Feb. 1862
"The son of man is come to seek and save those who are lost," 4 May 1862
"The shadow of the almighty," 26 Oct. 1862
1. Nov. 1862; 2. Aug. 1865; 3. June 1877.
"Man does not live by bread alone," 1862
"Thou fool," 1 May 1863
"Spirits in prison," June 1863
2. June 1872.
2. June 1879.
"Mountains," Mar. 1865
"Things behind," May 1865
"Quench not the spirit," 9 Oct. 1865
Annotation: "Told the Sunday school Nov. 1865 and written out afterward."
"Foolishness of God," 1865
1. Jan. 1866; 2. Divinity School, Jan. 1869.
1. Whitsunday, 20 May 1866; 2. Whitsunday, 5 June 1870.
1. Indiana Place, Sep. 1866; 2. Brookline St., 1 Aug. 1869; 3. June 1874.
2. Oct. 1870; 3. Chicago, 1871; 4. Irvington, July 1871; 5. Bar Harbor, Aug. 1871.
1. Groton, Dec. 1866; 2. Indiana Place, Dec. 1866; 3. Newburyport, May 1877.
1. [?]; 2. Jan. 1867.
"The Doors," Mar. 1867
1. [?]; 2. Social meeting, Apr. 1867.
"Owe no man anything but to love one another," July 1867
2. Barnstable, Oct. 1867.
"The west," Oct. 1867
1. Temple, 3 Nov. 1844; 2. Temple, 7 Nov. 1847; 3. Meadville, Oct. 1852.
"Not to destroy but to fulfill," Nov. 1867
"Thought it not robbery to be equal with God," 15 Dec. 1867
"Palm Sunday," 1867
Printed by vote of the Legislature.
"If any man be in Christ he is a new creature," Feb. 1868
"Palm Sunday," 5 Apr. 1868
"Idle words and industrious words," 3 May 1868
"He who exalteth himself shall be abased," Sep. 1868
2. 1875.
1. 5 Nov. 1848.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. 21 Nov. 1868; 2. Dec. 1875.
1. Boston, 1856?; 2. Boston, 1861; 3. Indiana Place, 1868.
2. [Church of the Disciples], Dec. 1868.
1. Washington, N.H., Aug. 1868.
"Now," 1868
1. Indiana Place, Dec. 1868; 2. Lynn, [Dec. 1868].
"To us there is one God the father," [1868]
1. [?]; 2. Cooper Institute, May 1869; 3. [Dorchester], 1870; 4. Worcester, 1870; 5. Chicago, 1871; 6. Church of the Disciples, 1872; 7. Rufus Ellis, First Church, 1872; 8. Meadville, 1873.
1. 1860?; 2. 1863; 3. 7 Mar. 1869.
"Translation of the Bible into its modern equivalents," June 1869
1. Oct. 1867.
"Possessed with a devil," Dec. 1869
1. Sep. 1869; 2. Apr. 1869; 3. Meadville, 1870; 4. Young Men's Christian Association, Hollis Street, Dec. 1870; 5. Lowell (installation); 6. Providence; 7. Chicago; 8. Bar Harbor, 1871.
Annotation: "For Mr. Stevens."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, [May 1887].
1. 1 May 1870; 2. Meadville, 1870; 3. Bar Harbor, 1870; 4. South Manchester, 1875; 5. Church of the Disciples, July 1875; 6. Hudson, Mass., Sep. 1875 (ordination of [Hilary Bygrave]).
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 26 Oct. 1873; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
1. Dec. 1869; 2. Oct. 1873; 3. Cleveland, 1870; 4. Bar Harbor, 1870.
1. [?]; 2. May 1865; 3. Rewritten June 1871.
Printed in the Christian Register?
2. Rewritten 1874 ("Unitarian Sunday").
1. Oct. 1856; 2. Rewritten Jan. 1865; 3. Revised Jan. 1865; 4. Chelmsford, 1870 (installation); 5. Quincy, 1871.
1. Mar. 1865; 2. Sep. 1871.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "James Freeman Clarke did not preach."
"Religion made for man and not man for religion," Sep. 1872
"The word of wisdom," Oct. 1872
1. 5 Apr. 1868; 2. 6 Apr. 1873.
1. Boston, Oct. 1855; 2. Dorchester, Nov. 1855; 3. Indiana Place, 1857; 4. Reynolds, Jamaica Plain; 5. Osgood's, Dec. 1857; 6. Providence, Mar. 1858; 7. Salem, North Church, 1858; 8. Meadville, 1860; 9. Rewritten Jan. 1867; 10. Dr. Putnam's, [1867]; 11. Exeter, [1867]; 12. Waltham, [1867]; 13. Baltimore, [1867]; 14. Chicago, 20 Oct. 1867; 15. Northfield, Vt.; 16. Rewritten 1873.
1. Jan. 1859; 2. 186-; 3. 1873.
1. 1868; 2. July 1873; 3. New York, 1873; 4. Fitchburg.
1. 4 May 1862; 2. 1867; 3. June 1873.
1. Boston, 4 Oct. 1874; 2. Portland, 7 Oct. 1874; 3. Dr. Putnam's, Roxbury, Aug. 1876.
"Homes in heaven and on earth," Oct. 1874
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. 2 Feb. 1862; 2. Stone Chapel, 1862; 3. Rewritten Dec. 1874.
1. 15 Dec. 1867.
1. Meadville, 1853; 2. Williams Hall, 1854; 3. Dorchester, Mr. Hall's vestry, 1855; 4. Beverly, 1855; 5. Salem, 1855; 6. Indiana Place, Apr. 1856; 7. Rewritten June 1875.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. 26 Oct. 1862; 2. July 1865; 3. South Boston, 1868; 4. Hollis Street, July 1875.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
"The religion of science," 23 Jan. 1876
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "Bible lesson 2nd."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
Printed in the Christian Register.
1. 1860; 2. 1863 (altered); 3. 1876.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. July 1867; 2. Sep. 1870.
"Christmas sermon," [1876]
"Possessed by the devil," 1876
1. 9 Oct. 1865; 2. Hollis St., 1868; 3. Leominster, 1868; 4. Brooklyn, 1868; 5. Haverhill, Oct. 1868; 6. Roxbury (Free Chapel), Nov. 1868; 7. Troy, 1868; 8. Cambridge, 1869; 9. Boston Theater; 10. Chicago, 1871; 11. Bar Harbor, 1871; 12. Dorchester, 1871; 13. Music Hall, 3. Mar. 1872; 14. Philadelphia, June 1872; 15. Warren Ave. Church of Disciples; 16. Jamaica Plain; 17. Lowell; 18. Louisville, Ky., 1873; 19. Meadville, 1873; 20. Boston Theater; 21. Washington, 1876; 22. Keene, N.H.
1. Oct. 1872; 2. June 1873 (ordination of Savary at Canton); 3. Brooklyn, 1876; 4. Louisville, 1876.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
1. Feb. 1868; 2. Providence Theater; 3. Boston Theater; 4. [?] Dec. 1868; 5. Haverhill Public Hall; 6. Hartford Theater.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Go Up Higher, or Religion in Common Life.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. [1868].
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. 1862; 2. Sep. 1877.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Indiana Place, Sep. 1861; 2. Brooklyn, 1861; 3. Cambridge; 4. Stone Chapel, 1862; 5. Rewritten 1869; 6. Milwaukee, 1869; 7. [?] Avenue, 1877.
"Dorothea L. Dix," 1877
1. 21 Oct. 1860; 2. 2 June 1877.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Sunday afternoon Bible class, 17 Mar. 1878; 2. Bible class, Apr. 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Liquification of gases; 2. The telephone; 3. The phonograph.
1. 1867.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 23 Jan. 1876.
1. Church of the Disciples, 23 Jan. 1876; 2. College Hill, 30 May 1878; 3. Philadelphia conference, Oct. 1878.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 7 Mar. 1880.
2. Jamaica Plain, 1878.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; separately printed, Boston, 1886, etc.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. June 1869; 2. Worcester, June 1869; 3. [?]; 4. New York, Dec. 1878.
1. 1 May 1863; 2. 3 Feb. 1867 (altered); 3. June 1871; 4. Nov. 1878.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Nov. 1867; 2. Oct. 1870; 3. Roxbury, 1878.
1. [?]; 2. 1860; 3. Feb. 1864; 4. Sep. 1867; 5. 1878.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Annotation: "Notes to preach from. Magnolia Aug. 28, 1881."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. New York, Church of Nemiah, May 1879; 2. Cambridge, 1879.
1. June 1863; 2. July 1867 (with additions); 3. Saco, July 1867; 4. Boston, June 1879.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 18 Jan. 1880.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. 1865; 2. Rewritten 5 Oct. 1873; 3. Rewritten 5 Oct. 1879.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Hour Which Cometh, and Now Is.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Mar. 1867; 2. June 1873; 3. June 1879.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
2. June 1883; 3. Magnolia, Aug. 1883.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette as "Great gulfs, and bridges over them," 14 Mar. 1880.
1. [?]; 2. Sep. 1862.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
1. 3 May 1868; 2. 29 Aug. 1875; 3. Nahant, 1879; 4. Church of the Disciples, 11 July 1880.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "For Washington, Apr. 1884."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II; separately published.
1. Oct. 1874.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Cincinnati, Lowell, 1876; 2. Providence, 1879; 3. Cornell University, 1880; 4. New York, 1880.
1. Sep. 1872; 2. Dorchester, Sep. 1872; 3. South Manchester, Oct. 1872; 4. Church of the Messiah, N.Y., Feb. 1873; 5. Troy, Mar. 1873; 6. Christian Union, 1876; 7. Lowell, 1880.
With a letter from Mrs. George W. Gay to James Freeman Clarke, Boston, 11 Jan. 1881, attached.
Annotation: "Lecture 4."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "For minister's meeting."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 19 June 1881.
1. Sep. 1868; 2. Aug. 1870.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
2. Washington, D.C., 19 Mar. 1882.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Sunday after Mar. 31; 2. King's Chapel, Sunday after 23 Feb. 1879 (written out into sermon Feb. 1882).
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "Answer to the resolution welcoming the foreign delegates."
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
2. New York, All Souls; 3. Cambridge, Appleton Chapel, 2 Dec. 1883; 4. Washington, 27 Apr. 1884; 5. Atlanta, 1884; 6. Collyers, N.Y., 1884; 7. Philadelphia; 8. Feb. 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1. Church of the Disciples; 2. New York, 21 Jan. 1883.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 29 Nov. 1883.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
2. All Saints Church, N.Y., 22 Feb. 1885.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 21 Feb. 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette, 10 Jan. 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; Every-Day Religion.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
2. Magnolia, 11 July [1886]; 3. Newport, R.I., 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Annotation: "Read, second time at Channing Hall S. School Talks," 16 Dec. 1886.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. I.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. I.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. I.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Part of this sermon preached in 1876.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette; The Disciple's Pulpit, Vol. II.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Printed in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
Unidentified manuscript notes
Included are undated, unidentified manuscript notes and fragments, mostly in the hand of James Freeman Clarke.
II. Volumes, 1774-1908
Arranged alphabetically by author.
This series consists of diaries, letterbooks, notebooks, scrapbooks, accounts, and other volumes, primarily of James Freeman Clarke, but also his wife Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke; his children Lilian Freeman Clarke, Eliot Channing Clarke, and Cora Huidekoper Clarke; his daughter-in-law Alice (Sohier) Clarke; his father Samuel Clarke (1779-1830); his sister Sarah Freeman Clarke; Samuel Clarke (d. 1778); and Constant Freeman. The series also contains volumes of the Church of the Disciples (Boston), a diary/commonplace book of Clarke's friend Margaret Fuller, and volumes of Huidekoper family members.
A. Anonymous volumes, 1850s-1881
Arranged chronologically.
B. Church of the Disciples (Boston) volumes, 1885-1892
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries includes two letterbooks containing letters from past and present members of the Church of the Disciples acknowledging invitations to a reception for James Freeman Clarke held on 6 Apr. 1885, as well as four Post Office Mission record books (indexed) with lists of sermons, books sent, letters written and received, applications, etc.
Post Office Mission record books, 1 May 1891-1 May 1892
C. Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke volumes, 1869-1895
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains volumes of Alice de Vermandois (Sohier) Clarke (1850-1901), the wife of Eliot Channing Clarke and daughter-in-law of James Freeman Clarke. Volumes consist primarily of notes on sermons, lectures, religion, mythology, etc.
D. Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke volumes, 1866-1895
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains volumes of Anna (Huidekoper) Clarke, the wife of James Freeman Clarke. Included are two subscription books of the New England Hospital for Women and Children and two Massachusetts National Bank account books.
This volume also includes subscriptions to the Women's Auxiliary, 1885-1889; Home for Aged Colored Women, 12 Dec. 1866-20 Jan. 1891; and S. E. Industrial School, 4 June 1883-30 Mar. 1890.
E. Cora Huidekoper Clarke volumes, [1903]
This subseries contains an autobiographical scrapbook and other papers of Cora Huidekoper Clarke, the daughter of James Freeman Clarke. The scrapbook covers the years 1861-1903 and includes photographs, newspaper clippings, hand-colored botanical drawings, etc.
F. Eliot Channing Clarke volumes, [1855]-1894
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains volumes of Eliot Channing Clarke, the son of James Freeman Clarke. Volumes relate primarily to his engineering work and include sketches, plans, and notes.
G. James Freeman Clarke volumes, 1829-1888
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains volumes of James Freeman Clarke, including journals; poetry, translations, and other writings; notes and commonplace books; account books and other financial volumes; and lists and indexes.
Included are notes on religion in another hand.
Journals, 1832-1834
Disbound.Included are lists of Sunday School scholars, teachers, members of the Unitarian Society, etc.
Included are lists of sermons delivered, Sep. 1836-23 Feb. 1839; letters written/received, 1836-1838; books read/lent; and calls on parishioners.
Included are lists of letters written, Nov. 1839-17 Jan. 1840; letters received, 6 Nov. 1839-18 Jan. 1840; sermons preached, 3 Nov. 1839-12 Jan. 1840; calls made, 9 Dec. 1839-9 Jan. 1840; and miscellaneous events and actions, 9 Nov. 1839-18 Jan. 1840.
Included are pencil sketches, translations of Goethe, newspaper clippings, etc.
Inscription: "S. S. Goodwin, Agt., Louisville." Included is a manuscript genealogy of the Curtis family, descendants of William Curtis, who came from England and settled in Roxbury, Mass. in 1632. James Freeman Clarke was a seventh-generation descendant of Curtis.
Included are Bible notes on the verso.
Included are notes on botanical lectures by Dr. [Asa] Gray.
This volume contains statistical tables related to European history, nations, etc.
Included are newspaper clippings and printed material from 1856.
Included is a list of attendees and notes on Dr. [Asa] Gray's second course of botanical lectures on the verso.
Included are lists of visits, 1846-1847; "books to be read carefully"; sermons preached, 1846-1847; letters written/received, 1846-1847; addresses, 1846; publications, 1846; children in Sunday School, 1847; homeopathic medicine administered; and miscellaneous memoranda.
Included is a visiting list, 1849; letters written/received, 1848; sermons preached, 1848; and miscellaneous loose notes and broadsides.
Included are extracts of letters written by James Freeman Clarke, 30 June 1782-1790; notes for lectures on marriage; addresses of recipients of printed lectures; lecture and sermon plans; investments, 1854; letters written/received, 1854; and expenses and cash accounts, 1853-1854.
Dedication: "Mrs. Hannah Moore from her friend James Freeman Clarke, Nov. 1853."
Included is a diary; a quarterly journal; executive committee memoranda; a list of letters written, etc.
Inscription: "The object of keeping this book is to learn from the New Testament itself what Christianity teaches concerning: 1. God, 2. Christ, 3. Man, 4. Religion, 5. Duty, 6. Salvation, 7. The Church, 8. The Future Life."
Included are Elliot Channing Clarke accounts with James Freeman Clarke, 11 Sep. 1859- (text missing); hospital reports, 1863; subscribers to various funds, Oct. 1870-1872; American Unitarian Association, 1871; and Sunday School, Oct. 1870.
Included is a list of the Church of the Disciples Bible class, 1859-1862.
Included are lists of letters written, 1864; events, 1864; newspaper clippings; loose manuscript receipts; Harvard class of 1829 dinner menus; and a pass from General [Benjamin] Butler, 1864.
Included are addresses and Bible notes on the verso.
Included are lists of lectures, students, remarks, etc.
Massachusetts National Bank account books
Inscription: "This book is meant to contain references to the Books, Periodicals, &c. where subjects of interest are discussed, or important facts can be found." Included is an undated printed list entitled "Titles of Books Written by James Freeman Clarke, with names of Publishers."
Included are chronological tables, letters tipped-in, and printed charts, as well as an outline entitled "A commonplace book of New Testament doctrine" on the verso.
Included are commentaries on the writings of Herbert Spencer, Matthew Arnold, etc.
H. Lilian Freeman Clarke volumes, 1861-1908
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains volumes of Lilian Freeman Clarke, the daughter of James Freeman Clarke. Included is a memoir of her father, two diaries, account books of the Society for Helping Destitute Mothers and Infants, and other volumes.
Accounts of the Society for Helping Destitute Mothers and Infants
I. Samuel Clarke (d. 1778) volumes, [1774]-1778
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains two volumes of Samuel Clarke (d. 1778), including a navigational volume and log of a voyage from Boston to Antigua in 1775.
Digital facsimiles of the Samuel Clarke logbook are available on Life at Sea, a digital publication of Adam Matthew Digital, Inc. This digital resource is available at subscribing libraries; speak to your local librarian to determine if your library has access. The MHS makes this resource available onsite; see a reference librarian for more information.
J. Samuel Clarke (1779-1830) receipt book, 1800-1807
This subseries consists of a receipt book of Samuel Clarke, the father of James Freeman Clarke, kept during the years he worked as an importer of British goods with Joseph Coolidge, 23 Jan. 1800-31 Mar. 1807.
K. Sarah Freeman Clarke diary, 1873-1874
This subseries consists of a travel diary by Sarah Freeman Clarke, born Sarah Anne Clarke, the sister of James Freeman Clarke. The diary is entitled "Notes of a Nile Voyage" and was kept from 22 Dec. 1873 to Feb. 1874.
L. Susan Lowell Clarke notebook, undated
This subseries consists of a school notebook probably kept by Susan Lowell Clarke, the daughter of Eliot Channing Clarke. Included are notes on the history of Normandy and Rome.
M. Constant Freeman ledger, 1791-1795
This subseries consists of a financial ledger kept by Constant Freeman & Sons, Boston distillers, 22 Aug. 1791-28 Feb. 1795. Constant Freeman was the father of James Freeman Clarke's step-grandfather James Freeman.
N. Margaret Fuller journal and commonplace book, 1844 (photocopy)
Also available on microfilm, P-321, 1 reel. Published in the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Vol. 102, 1990, pp. 38-126.
Original located in Special Colls.
This subseries consists of the journal and commonplace book of Margaret Fuller, a friend of James Freeman Clarke, kept while she was living in Cambridge, Mass. and vacationing in Concord, Mass. in 1844. Entries describe the weather; her health and that of her friends and family; trips to Boston to run errands; thoughts about family, friends, and religion; and her relationships with Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne. The volume also contains poetry and other literary and commonplace-type entries. Fuller spent four weeks during the summer in Concord, staying with Hawthorne for ten days. The end of the diary covers her trip to Fishkill Landing, N.Y. and New York City, where she took a job writing for the New York Daily Tribune.
NOTE: This journal is a tracing made by William Hull Clarke in 1876 from Fuller's original journal and includes his annotations and redactions, as well as a note by Fuller's mother Margaret Crane Fuller. The location of the original journal is unknown. For more information, see "Stories Unfolded: William Hull Clarke and His Tracing of Margaret Fuller's 1844 Summer Journal" by Martha L. Berg and Alice De V. Perry (Massachusetts Historical Review, vol. 16, 2014, pp. 122-148).
O. Harvard University examinations for women, 1874-[1878]
Included are requests for pamphlets.
P. Anne Willem Huidekoper letter, 1840 (typescript copy)
This subseries consists of a typescript copy of a long letter from Anne Willem Huidekoper (1796-1841) to his uncle Harm Jan Huidekoper, James Freeman Clarke's father-in-law. The letter, written at Amsterdam on 23 Feb. 1840, discusses Huidekoper family history and life in the Netherlands.
Q. Harm Jan Huidekoper memoir, 1840
This subseries consists of a manuscript memoir by Harm Jan Huidekoper, James Freeman Clarke's father-in-law. The memoir, written at Meadville, Penn. on 28 Feb. 1840, is addressed by Huidekoper to his children and includes a genealogical chart.
R. Sigourney family genealogical material, undated
This subseries consists of genealogical notes on the Sigourney family, a family connected to the Clarkes.
III. Miscellaneous non-manuscript material, 1844-1924
A. Printed material, 1844-1924
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists of newspaper clippings; broadsides, including Women's Education Association broadsides; circular letters; school examinations; printed forms; and other printed items. The subseries also contains a few engravings and photographs; the James Freeman Clarke memorial issue of Our Best Words, 15 July 1888; and calling cards, including those collected by Clarke during an 1882 trip to England.
B. Museum objects
This subseries includes a perpetual calendar, an ink pen, dried flowers, a silk cravat and cap, a wallet, a photograph album, and an envelope of stamps.
IV. Perry-Clarke autograph collection, 1588-1893 (photocopies)
This series consists of a small collection of autograph letters from literary and historical figures, many of them accompanied by engraved portraits and Goodspeed's sales catalog descriptions. The collection was formed after the death of James Freeman Clarke. The autographs are arranged in two subseries: 11 letters related to the Boston Female Asylum (collected in a bound letterbook) and 56 miscellaneous loose autographs.
Originals located in Special Colls.
A. Boston Female Asylum letterbook, 1810-1850
Arranged in the order in which they appear in the letterbook.
Matignon, Francis Anthony
Cheverus, Jean-Louis-Anne-Madeleine Lefebvre de
Freeman, James
Buckminster, J. S. (Joseph Stevens)
Cheverus, Jean-Louis-Anne-Madeleine Lefebvre de
Cappe, Catharine
Everett, Edward
Greenwood, F. W. P. (Francis William Pitt)
Prescott, Catherine Greene Hickling
Everett, Edward
Prescott, William Hickling
B. Miscellaneous autographs, 1588-1893
Arranged alphabetically.
Adolphus Frederick, Prince, Duke of Cambridge
Belcher, Jonathan
Bierstadt, Albert
Bloomer, Amelia Jenks
Blouet, Paul (a.k.a. Max O'Rell)
Burritt, Elihu
Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell)
Canby, Edward Richard Sprigg
Charles XII, King of Sweden
Cherbuliez, Victor
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Cook, Clarence
Craik, Dinah Maria Mulock
Elizabeth, Princess of England, Landgravine of Hesse-Homburg
Frederick Augustus, Prince, Duke of York and Albany
Garden, Benjamin
Garrison, William Lloyd
George III, King of Great Britain
Gladstone, W. E. (William Ewart)
Goodale, Dora Read
Grand, Sarah
See: McFall, Frances Elizabeth (Clarke)
Hall, Charles Francis
Harris, Miriam Coles
Henry III, King of France
Kimball, Harriet McEwen
Kossuth, Lajos
Leech, John
Louis XIII, King of France
Louis XIV, King of France
Louis XV, King of France
Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron
Maintenon, Madame de
Mary, Princess of England, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh
McFall, Frances Elizabeth (Clarke)
Montgomery, James
Morgan, Daniel
Parker, Gilbert
Peck, John J. (John James)
Pepperrell, William
Pinckney, Thomas
Polk, James K. (James Knox)
Quincy, Josiah
Rush, Benjamin
Sewall, David
Sewall, Samuel
Sophia, Princess of England
Southey, Robert
Stanhope, Philip Henry Stanhope, (5th) Earl
Tyler, John
Wilberforce, William
Wilkinson, James
William III, King of England
William IV, King of Great Britain
Wordsworth, William
V. Oversize material
Select Index
Listed below are significant correspondents and select subjects represented in the collection. Undated and dated items are located in Series I.A. (Undated loose manuscripts) or I.B. (Dated loose manuscripts). Other items may be found throughout an entire series (indicated by the series number) or volume (indicated by the volume number). This index does NOT include the autograph collection (Series IV) because those items are listed individually in the series description above.
Adams, Charles Francis: 15 Oct. 1878; 15 Mar. 1883 |
Adams, Henry: 21 July 1874; 16 Oct. 1874; 20 Nov. 1874 |
Agassiz, Elizabeth C. (1822-1907): 4 undated letters |
Alcott, Amos Bronson: 14 Feb. 1863 |
Allen, Charles Adams: 6 undated letters |
American Unitarian Association: letters from Charles Briggs to James Freeman Clarke, 1835-1839; Vol. 84 |
Andrew, John A.: [1864]; 4 Jan. 1865; signatures throughout collection |
Anthony, Susan B.: 7 Nov. 1859; 14 Feb. 1860; 15 Feb. 1860; 12 Nov. 1866; 24 July 1881 |
Armstrong, Samuel Chapman (1839-1893): 2 undated letters |
Astronomy: correspondence, 1875-1888 |
Autographs: Vol. 103; Series IV |
Bird, Frederick W.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1867-1869 |
Bond, George W.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1846-1870 |
Botta, Vincenzo (1818-1894): 1 undated letter |
Bowen, Francis: 8 Dec. 1865 |
Brigham, Charles: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1864-1866 |
Briggs, Charles: letters to James Freeman Clarke (concerning American Unitarian Association), 1835-1839 |
Brook Farm: manuscript map, [186-]; see also Clarke, James Freeman |
Brooks, Phillips: 12 Mar. 1877; 28 Nov. 1877 |
Brown, John: letter from David N. Utter to James Freeman Clarke, 7 Jan. 1885 |
Butler, Mann: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1837-1854 |
Cabot, Samuel, Jr.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1846-1853 |
Channing, Susan E. B.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1863 |
Channing, Walter (1786-1876): 8 July 1842 |
Channing, William F. (1820-1901): 6 Mar. 1848 (concerning ether controversy); 7 May 1861; 24 May 1861 |
Chapin, H. M.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1846-1859 |
Cheney, Edna D. L. (1824-1904): 1 undated letter |
Child, Francis J. (1825-1896): 2 undated letters |
Church of the Disciples, Boston: Series II.B.; Series II.G. |
Clarke, Alice de Vermandois Sohier (1850-1901): Series II.C. |
Clarke, Anna Huidekoper: correspondence throughout collection (principal correspondent, 1889-1895); Series I.C.; Series II.D. |
Clarke, Cora Huidekoper: correspondence, 1897-1910; Series II.E. |
Clarke, Eliot Channing: correspondence, 1889-1910 (many bills, receipts, etc., 1895-1909); Series II.F. |
Clarke, James Freeman: 15 undated cut-slip autographs; 4 undated letters, including manuscript poem and drafts of letters; May 1848 (notes on water cure at Brattleboro, Vermont); 8 Sep. 1850; 27 Dec. 1851; 20 Mar. 1852; 4 Dec. 1852; 27 Aug. 1857; 13 Apr. 1859; 21 Dec. 1859; 28 Mar. 1861 (proposals concerning Brook Farm); 7 Feb. 1873; 12 Apr. 1874; 19 Apr. 1874; 5 May 1874; 8 May 1874; 9 May 1874; 2 Jan. 1884; Series I.D.; Series II.G. |
Clarke, Lilian Freeman: correspondence, 1890-1910; Series II.H. |
Clarke, Samuel (d. 1778): Series II.I. |
Clarke, Samuel (1779-1830): miscellaneous documents, 1779-1831; Vol. 115 |
Clarke, Sarah Freeman: Vol. 116 |
Clarke, Susan Lowell: correspondence, 1910-1923; Vol. 117 |
Clarke, William T.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1864-1866 |
Cooke, George W. (1848-1928): 2 undated letters |
Dall, Caroline H. (1822-1912): 2 undated letters; 20 Dec. 1866; 15 Jan. 1867; 8 Nov. 1884; 30 Sep. 1889 |
Dall, Charles H. A.: 22 Sep. 1859 |
Dana, Richard Henry, Jr. (1815-1882): 9 Feb. 1870; 5 Dec. 1872 |
Diaz, Abby Morton (1821-1904): 4 undated letters |
Dix, Dorothea L.: 19 Dec. 1881; 27 Apr. 1882 |
Dunbar, Charles F.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1876-1877 |
Eliot, Charles W.: 2 Jan. 1867; 9 Nov. 1869; 24 Jan. 1870; 13 Feb. 1873; 24 Sep. 1879; 23 June 1881; 14 Mar. 1882; 14 Oct. 1882; 24 May 1886; 9 Jan. 1887; 24 Jan. 1887; 16 Jan. 1888; 18 Jan. 1888 |
Emerson, Ralph Waldo: Series II.G. |
Ether controversy: see Channing, William F. (1820-1901) |
Everett, Charles Carroll (1829-1900): 2 undated letters; letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1865 |
Follen, Charles: 26 Mar. 1860; 21 Mar. 1861 |
Francis, Convers: 1 May 1858; 29 June 1858; 17 Aug. 1858; 7 July 1860; 26 Feb. 1861 |
Freeman, Constant: Vol. 118 |
Fuller, Margaret (1810-1850): Series II.G.; Vol. 119 |
Fuller, Margaret (mother of Margaret Fuller, the author): 26 May 1854 |
Hale, Edward E.: 7 Nov. 1888; 8 July 1902 |
Harvard University, Board of Overseers: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1864-1872 |
Harvard University, Divinity School: Vol. 44; see also Stearns, Oliver (1807-1885) |
Harvard University, Examinations for Women: correspondence, 1876-1877; Vol. 120 |
Hawthorne, Rose: see Lathrop, Mother Mary Alphonsa (1851-1926) |
Hawthorne, Sophia: 1 undated letter; see also Hawthorne family |
Hawthorne, Una: [May 1864] (2 letters, one with attached note from Elizabeth Palmer Peabody) |
Hawthorne family: 6 June 1864; 1 Oct. 1866; 16 June 1867; 30 June 1867; 7 Aug. 1868 |
Hemenway, Mary (1820-1894): 1 undated letter |
Higginson, Waldo: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1873-1875 |
Hill, Thomas: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1867-1888 |
Home for Aged Colored Women: Vol. 21 |
Hooper, E. W.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1863 (concerning activities in South Carolina during the Civil War) |
Hopkins, Mark (1802-1887): 21 Nov. 1864 |
Houghton Mifflin Company: correspondence (concerning the writings of James Freeman Clarke), 1889-1891 |
Howe, Julia Ward: 1 undated letter |
Howe, Samuel Gridley: 17 Nov. 1858 |
Howells, William D.: 15 July 1874 |
Howitt, Mary: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1878-1888 |
Huidekoper, Anne Willem: Vol. 121 |
Huidekoper, Elizabeth: Series I.C. |
Huidekoper, Harm Jan: Vol. 122 |
Jackson, Charles T.: 3 May 1848 |
James, William: 30 Sep. 1887 |
Jay, John (1817-1894): letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1882-1883 |
Lathrop, Mother Mary Alphonsa (1851-1926): 2 undated letters; see also Hawthorne family |
Lawrence, Kansas: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1856; 1859-1860 |
Lowell, James Russell: 26 Dec. 1865 |
Lyman, Theodore, Jr.: 18 Apr. 1880 |
Mayo, Amory Dwight: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1863 |
Mitchell, Maria (1818-1889): 1 undated letter |
New England Hospital for Women and Children: Series II.D. |
Norton, Charles Eliot: 16 Oct. 1862; 6 Nov. 1862; 22 Feb. 1867; 12 Dec. 1873; 27 May 1874; 3 July 1877; 13 July 1877; 2 Dec. 1878; 15 Oct. 1879 |
Nute, Ephraim: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1854-1859 |
Osgood, Samuel: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1837-1860 |
Ossoli, Sarah Margaret Fuller (1810-1850): see Fuller, Margaret |
Palfrey, John G.: 3 undated letters; 14 Jan. 1834; 18 Mar. 1835; 1 Apr. 1837; 3 July 1837; 11 May 1838; 20 Feb. 1847; 25 Aug. 1858; 11 Sep. 1858; 10 Nov. 1868; 23 Nov. 1874 |
Parkman, Francis: 1 undated letter |
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer: undated note attached to undated letter from Una Hawthorne to James Freeman Clarke; Apr. 1841; Mar. 1842; Oct. 1842 (receipts from West Street Bookstore) |
Peabody, Ephraim: [Feb. 1835] |
Photographs: Series II; Series III; see also MHS Photo Archives and Photo. 1.381L |
Pierce, Edward L.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1863 |
Pintle, Jane Ann: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1846-1870 |
Prison reform: correspondence of James Freeman Clarke, 1870-1872 |
Quincy, Josiah (1802-1882): 22 Nov. 1878; 5 Dec. 1878 |
Quincy, Josiah (1859-1919): 10 Nov. 1882; 14 Jan. 1884 |
Redpath, James (1833-1891): 22 Aug. 1887 |
Rice, A. Thorndike: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1876-1877 |
Richards, Laura Howe (1850-1943): 1 undated poem |
Ripley, George: 1 undated letter; 16 Jan. 1837; 15 Dec. 1841; 5 Aug. 1842 (from Brook Farm); 22 Sep. 1842; 27 Apr. 1859; 24 Aug. 1864; 17 July 1878 |
Robbins, Chandler: 8 Oct. 1833 |
Rogers, Henry B.: letters, 1860-1880 |
Schleiermacher, Friedrich F. D. (1768-1834): Vol. 59 |
Sea Islands, South Carolina: correspondence (concerning aid to freedmen), Mar.-Apr. 1862 |
Sewall, Samuel E.: 4 undated letters; 18 Sep. 1882 |
Sigourney family: Vol. 123 |
Society for Helping Destitute Mothers and Infants: Series II.H. |
Sohier, Alice de Vermandois (1850-1901): see Clarke, Alice de Vermandois Sohier (1850-1901) |
Stearns, Oliver (1807-1885): 20 Jan. 1864 (20 pp., concerning reform of Harvard Divinity School); 30 Jan. 1865 |
Tuttle, H. B.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1854-1859 |
Underwood, M. G.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1870-1872 |
Utter, David N.: 7 Jan. 1885 (concerning John Brown in Kansas) |
Walker, James (1794-1874): letters to Dr. James Walker, 1864-1869 |
Ware, John F. W. (1818-1881): 6 undated letters; letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1867-1869 |
Weeden, William B. (1834-1912): 2 undated letters; letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1867-1888 |
Wells, Kate Gannett (1838-1911): 3 undated letters |
Western Messenger: bills, receipts, letters, 1837-1845; Vol. 62 |
White, Andrew D. (1832-1918): 22 Nov. 1882; 29 Nov. 1882 |
Wines, Enoch C.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1870-1875 |
Winsor, Justin: 28 Oct. 1874; 9 Dec. 1874; 12 Apr. 1877; 28 Apr. 1877; 8 July 1879; 27 Aug. 1881; 21 Jan. 1887 |
Winthrop, Robert C.: 14 Jan. 1880; 9 Feb. 1882; 12 June 1884 |
Zachos, John C.: letters to James Freeman Clarke, 1860-1872 |
Preferred Citation
Perry-Clarke collection, 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
Photographs
Photographs from this collection have been removed to the MHS Photo Archives. A daguerreotype of an unidentified man has been removed and cataloged separately (Photo. 1.381L).
Printed Material
1. Allen, R. L. Optician and Manufacturer of Astronomical Telescopes... (broadside)
2. Allen, R. L. Prices of Ordinary Styles and Sizes... (broadside)
3. American Ancestry. Form for insertion of lineage in American Ancestry.
4. American Unitarian Association. The Proposed New Unitarian Building. Boston, Sep. 1883. (sheet)
5. American Unitarian Association Ladies' Commission on Sunday School Books. Annual list of books for Sunday School libraries. Boston, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901.
6. American Unitarian Association Ladies' Commission on Sunday School Books. Books approved by the Ladies' Commission, reading for Sunday School and other libraries, since 6 Dec. 1897. (broadside)
7. American Unitarian Association Ladies' Commission on Sunday School Books. By-laws, revised 1893. (broadsheet)
8. American Unitarian Association Ladies' Commission on Sunday School Books. Catalogue of Books for Sunday-School Libraries; 1866-1885, Boston, 1886; 1885-1889, Boston, 1889; 1890-1894, Boston, 1894.
9. American Unitarian Association Ladies' Commission on Sunday School Books. Reader's Report on a Rejected Book. (broadside)
10. Boston. Assessing Dept. "This statement is not open to public inspection. This schedule must be presented to the Assessors at their office, City Hall..." (sheet)
11. Boston. Church of the Disciples. Order of Services at the Dedication of the House of Worship... (sheet)
12. Boston. Church of the Disciples. Semi-Centennial Celebration. 1841, 1891. (broadside)
13. Boston. Church of the Disciples. Sunday School Picnic... (broadside)
14. Boston. Church of the Disciples. Ticket to the Course. Admit the Bearer to Four Shakespeare Readings in the Hall Below the Church of the Disciples... (broadside)
15. Boston. Dept. of Parks. Schedule of assessments made by the Board of Park Commissioners upon the estates benefited by the locating and laying out of a public park... 30 Apr. 1885.
16. Boston. Old South Church. Old South Fair. Fair for the preservation of the Old South Church, in account with Chas. G. Wood, Treasurer... Boston, 1 May 1878.
17. Boston. Old South Church. Old South Fair. Table receipts. 1 May 1878. (broadside)
18. Boston Society for the Care of Girls. Boston Female Asylum. An account of the... Boston, 1889.
19. Boston Society for the Care of Girls. Boston Female Asylum. Exercises at the dedication of the house in Lexington... (broadside)
20. Boston Society for the Care of Girls. Boston Female Asylum. Received payment. (broadside)
21. Boston Society of Natural History. Candidates for office, 1905-1906. (broadside)
22. Boston Society of Natural History. Officers for 1894-1895. (broadside)
23. Boston, Mass. South End Industrial School. The management of this School desire to have the pupils... (broadside)
24. Boston. Stock Exchange. Official Report. First Board. 20 July 1883.
25. Boston. Stock Exchange. Prices and Sales. Second Board. 20 July 1883.
26. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Certificates of Qualification. Directions to candidates. Boston, Apr. 1876. (broadside)
27. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination of Candidates for First-Grade Certificates of Qualification. Boston, 25 July 1876. (sheet)
28. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Third-Grade Certificates of Qualification. Boston, 25 July 1876. (sheet)
29. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for First-Grade and Third-Grade Certificates. Order and time of examination... Boston, 4-6 Sep. 1876. (broadside)
30. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for First-Grade and Third-Grade Certificates. Boston, Sep. 1876; Principles of education and methods of teaching as applicable to high schools (req.); Principles of education, school organization and modern theories and methods of teaching, with Illustrations of the best methods of teaching (elec.). (sheet)
31. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for First-Grade and Third-Grade Certificates, 1876; Botany, Zoology, Geology (elec.) (sheet); Botany, Zoology, Geology (req.) (sheet); Chemistry, Mineralogy and Geology (elec.) (sheet); English language (elec.) (sheet); English language (req.) (sheet); Essay (req.) (broadside); Greek, Latin, French (req.) (first grade sheet); Geography (req.) (broadside); Human Anatomy and Physiology with School Hygiene (req.) (broadside); Ancient History (req.) (first grade sheet); Ancient History (elec.) (sheet); Medieval and Modern History (req.) (third grade sheet); Latin (elec.) (first grade sheet); Latin (req.) (third grade sheet); Mathematics (elec.) (sheet); Geometry (req.) (broadside); Plane Trigonometry (req.) (first grade broadside); Arithmetic and Algebra (req.) (sheet); Physics and Astronomy (elec.) (sheet); Physics and Chemistry (elec.) (sheet); Physics and Chemistry and Astronomy (req.) (sheet); Psychology (req.). (broadside)
32. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination of Candidates for the Second-Grade Certificate of Qualification. Boston, 11 Apr. 1876. (broadside)
33. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Certificates of Qualification. Directions to candidates. Boston, Apr. 1876. (broadside)
34. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Second-Grade Certificates. Boston, Apr. 1876; English language (sheet); Latin (broadside); Greek, French and German (sheet); Arithmetic (broadside); Algebra (broadside); Plain and Solid Geometry (broadside); General History (sheet); Geography (broadside); Physiology (broadside); Botany, Zoology (sheet); Physics, Chemistry and Astronomy (broadside); Vocal Music (broadside); Psychology (broadside); History and principles of education and methods of teaching the studies of grammar schools. (broadside)
35. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Fourth-Grade Certificates of Qualification. Boston, 11 Apr. 1876. (broadside)
36. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination of Qualification. Directions to candidates. Boston, Apr. 1876. (broadside)
37. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination of Candidates for Fifth-Grade Certificates of Qualification. Boston, 11 Apr. 1876.
38. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination for Fourth-Grade and Fifth-Grade Certificates; English language (sheet); Arithmetic, Fourth-Grade (broadside); Arithmetic, Fifth-Grade (broadside); Algebra (broadside); Plane and Solid Geometry (broadside); General History (sheet); Geography (broadside); Physiology and School Hygiene (broadside); Botany and Zoology and Geology, Fourth-Grade (sheet); Natural History, Fifth-Grade (broadside); Physics and Aeronomy (broadside); Music (broadside); Principles of education, and methods of teaching, as applicable to grammar schools, Fourth-Grade (broadside); Principles of education, and methods of teaching, Fifth-Grade. (broadside)
39. Boston. Superintendent of Public Schools. Examination of Candidates for Fifth-Grade Certificates of Qualification. Boston, 15 Feb. 1877.
40. Boston. Water Board. Davis, Wm. F., Water Registrar. Office of the Water Registrar, City Hall. Extract from the ordinance regulating the payment of fractional supplies of water. (broadside)
41. Boylston Insurance Co. of Boston. Statement..., 1 Jan. 1887. (broadside)
42. Brown, Alice. Buckets in the Sea. Boston (Mass. Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary).
43. Cambridge University. Girton College. The favor of your attention is asked to some considerations... Sep. 1874. (sheet)
44. Cambridge University. Girton College. Jan. 1875.
45. Clarke, James Freeman, D.D. Address delivered at the 17th Annual Exhibition of the Norfolk Agricultural Society, at Dedham...29 Sep. 1865. Boston, 1866.
46. Clarke, James Freeman. Address of James Freeman Clarke, at Tremont Temple, 1 Oct. 1884.
47. Clarke, James Freeman. How to Study the Stars. New York, 1873.
48. Clarke, James Freeman, D.D. James Freeman, D.D., 1782-1835. Boston, 14 Sep. 1850.
49. Clarke, James Freeman, D.D. Memorial and Biographical Sketches; Common Sense in Religion; Ten Great Religions. (sheet)
50. Clarke, James Freeman. Peter at Antioch; or the Vatican vs. Bismarck and Gladstone. A sermon to the Church of the Disciples, Boston, 20 Dec. 1874. Boston, 1875.
51. Clarke, James Freeman. Selections from sermons preached to the Church of the Disciples. (broadside)
52. Collyer, Richard. Letter from Richard Collyer to the editors of the Christian Register. (sheet)
53. Columbus, Ohio. Douglass House, Long Street between Third and High, Columbus, Ohio... (broadside)
54. Cunard Steamship Co., limited. Cunard Line. European Agencies...American Agencies... Jan. 1881. (broadsheet)
55. Cunard Steamship Co., limited. Cunard Line. 1882 proposed sailing between Liverpool, Boston, and New York. (sheet)
56. Curtis, George Ticknor. Observations on the Rev. Dr. Gannet's sermon entitled "Relation of the North to Slavery." Boston, 1854. Republished from the editorial columns of the Boston Courier of 28 June, 30 June, and 6 July 1854.
57. Dixwell, George Basil. Review of Progress and Poverty. Cambridge, 1882.
58. Facts. Advertise and Subscribe! People will read Facts... (broadside)
59. Flonzaley Quartet. Mr. Luce announces for Next Season Three Subscription Concerts... (sheet)
60. Foote, Henry Wilder. King's Chapel and the Evacuation of Boston. Boston, 1876.
61. Frothingham, Octavius Brooks. Colonization. Anti-Slavery Tracts. No. 3.
62. Harvard University Examinations. Examinations for Women. Application for Examination. (sheet)
63. Harvard University Examinations. English Literature. (sheet)
64. Harvard University Examinations. Examinations for Women in 1874. Cambridge, 1873.
65. Harvard University Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1874; Botany, Plane Geometry, Virgil, English, English Literature, German, History of Continental Europe, Latin Grammar and Composition, Latin Grammar and Composition, French Translation Course I, French Translation Course II, French Grammar and History Courses I and II, Greek Grammar, Greek Goodwin's Reader, Physical Geography, History, Elementary Physics, Arithmetic, Algebra.
66. Harvard University Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1875; Algebra, Arithmetic, English Literature, French Translation Course I, French Translation Course II, French Grammar and History Courses I and II, German, German, History, Latin, Physical Geography, Physics, Plane Geometry.
67. Harvard University Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1876; Algebra, Arithmetic, Botany, German, German, English Literature, History, Latin, Physical Geography, Physics, Plane Geometry.
68. Harvard University Examinations. Papers used at the Examinations for Women in 1874, 1875, 1876. Cambridge, 1876.
69. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1877. Fourth annual examination, 30 May 1877... Algebra, Arithmetic, Botany, English Composition, English Literature, French Translation Course I, French Translation Course II, French Grammar and History Courses I and II, German Grammar and Composition, German Translation, History, Latin, Latin Translation, Physical Geography, Elementary Physics, Plane Geometry.
70. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1878. Cambridge, Mass., 1877.
71. Harvard University. Examinations. Papers used at the Examinations for Women held at Cambridge, New York, Philadelphia and Cincinnati, 29 May to 6 June 1878. Cambridge, Mass., 1878.
72. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1879. Cambridge, Mass., 1878.
73. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women. Cincinnati Local Committee. Feb. 1877.
74. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1877. New York Local Committee.
75. Harvard University. Examinations. Papers used at the Admission Examinations held at Cambridge, Exeter, New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Chicago and San Francisco, 30 June, 1 & 2 July 1881. Cambridge, Mass., 1881.
76. Harvard University. Examinations. Examinations for Women, 1881; English History, Physical Geography, Latin I and Latin II.
77. Harvardiana. September, Vol. IV-No. I. Cambridge, 1873.
78. Huidekoper, Henry Shippen. Personal notes and reminiscences of Lincoln. Philadelphia, 1896.
79. Keith, B. F. Palace Theatre, Cleveland. B. F. Keith's Theatre Program. Week of 16 Apr. 1923.
80. Librairie Guyon. Edition Imprimerie (bookmark). (broadsheet)
81. The London Association of Schoolmistresses. Apr. 1874.
82. Lowell, John. Thoughts upon the conduct of our administration, in relation both to Great Britain and France... Boston, 1808.
83. Lowell, John. The Impartial Inquirer; being a candid examination of the conduct of the President of the United States... by a citizen of Massachusetts. 1811.
84. Lowell, Percival. Oliver Wendell Holmes. 1895.
85. Mademoiselle de la Motte's Music School. Established in Boston, 1854... (broadside)
86. Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston. Collections, 5th series, Vol. II. Belknap Papers, Part II.
87. Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Boston, Feb. 1883. (broadside)
88. Men and Women of Ohio! Please read and circulate the following opinions in regard to Woman Suffrage... (sheet)
89. National Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Massachusetts. 1923-1924, Officers and Board of Managers. (sheet)
90. [New Orleans World's Industrial and Cotton Exposition, 1884-85]. To the General Committee of Manufacturers, Merchants and Business Men of Boston... Boston, 17 Oct. 1881. (broadside)
91. Newport, R.I. Channing Year. 1780-1880. Special course of sermons. (broadside)
92. Niedermann, Max. Historische Lautlehre des Lateinischen. Heidelberg, 1911.
93. Our Best Words. Shelbyville, Illinois, 13 Dec. 1884. Dear friends in the spirit of "Christmas Present," I want to call your attention to the question: Shall our Best Words continue for 1885... (broadside)
94. Our Best Words. Shelbyville, Illinois. For 1885. A monthly paper for church, sunday-school and home... (broadside)
95. Porter, Maria. These two men walked together in the house of God as friends. A facsimile of a few words spoken by Phillips Brooks at the time of the death of James Freeman Clarke together with portraits. Boston, 1893.
96. Realty Company. To the Stockholders. The annual meeting... Boston, 15 Sep. 1891. (broadside)
97. Roxbury, Mass. First Church. First Religious Society in Roxbury. Act of incorporation... Boston Highlands, 1880.
98. Ryle, John Charles, Bishop of Liverpool. Christ is willing. No. 11. American Tract Society, Boston. (broadside)
99. Services in memory of Rev. William E. Channing, D.D. at the Arlington-Street Church, Boston, 6 Oct. 1867.
100. Sir! Three or four years previous to January 27th 1847, resided in Marshall a colored family... Marshall, Calhoun County, Michigan, 1 Jan. 1849. (sheet)
101. Statements of Societies, References, Employers, Agent, Visitor and others. Confidential. (form)
102. Thoughts selected from the writings of Rev. William E. Channing, D.D. Boston, 1846.
103. Treat, John H. and E. P. Treat. The Treats in the United States are lineal descendants of Richard and Matthias... Frankfort, Maine, 1 Oct. 1884. (sheet)
104. Unitarian Club, Boston. Meadville Theological School at the Boston Unitarian Club. At the meeting of the Unitarian Club of Boston, on Wednesday evening..., 12 Nov. 1890. (sheet)
105. Unitarian Sunday School Society. Mass Meeting of Sunday-School Children. 30 May 1867. (broadside)
106. United States Nautical Almanac Office. Total Eclipse of the Sun, 7 Aug. 1869. Washington, 1869.
107. Watkins Glen. Head of Seneca Lake, New York. (sheet)
108. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Fiftieth Annual Report for the Year Ending 18 Jan. 1922.
109. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Harvard Examinations for Women, 1875. (sheet)
110. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Harvard Examinations for Women, 1876. (sheet)
111. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Harvard Examinations for Women, 1877. (sheet)
112. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Harvard Examinations for Women, 1878. (sheet)
113. Woman's Education Association, Boston. Harvard Examinations for Women, 1879. (sheet)
114. Woman's Education Association. Harvard University Summer Instruction in Chemistry, Botany and Geology, for 1875, intended for teachers and other adults. (broadsheet)
115. Yr Ymofynydd. Mehefin, 1876.