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Department of Special Collections


COLLECTION HIGHLIGHTS

The Department of Special Collections collects, maintains, preserves, and makes accessible the UCSB Libraries’ most valuable, rare, and unique materials.  Included are printed materials such as books and serials, as well as manuscripts, and audio-visual materials.  The department's materials are non-circulating, but are available for research in the reading room during posted hours. 

Among Special Collections holdings are approximately 250,000 volumes, 16,000 linear feet of manuscripts, 100,000 photographs, and more than 200,000 early sound recordings.  These items are contained in five major areas: Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Named Collections; the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archive (CEMA), the Performing Arts Collections; the UCSB Oral History Program, and the University Archives.  Some of the most notable materials are described below  - separate detailed guides and lists are available for many.

RARE BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, AND NAMED COLLECTIONS

  • Almanacs and Works about Time.  Primarily early American items such as the Astronomical Diary… (1759+), New England Almanack (1789+), Farmer’s Almanack (1800+), New England Anti-Slavery Almanac (1841), Affleck’s Southern Rural Almanac… (1851), and the California State Almanac and Annual Register (1856).  Also, the Almanach de Gotha, a genealogical, diplomatic, and statistical gazetteer for all countries of the world (1800-1944), and 19th century Mexican almanacs.  An associated manuscript collection, the Donald C. Davidson Collection, focuses on concepts and writings about time.  The Davidson endowment has funded acquisition of many of these works.
  • American Religions.  The American Religions Collection (ARC) contains more than 30,000 books, as well as a large number of serials and approximately 1,000 linear feet of manuscripts mainly relating to 20th century non-traditional religions and splinter groups of larger religious bodies in North America.  The core of the collection, assembled by J. Gordon Melton, includes major sections relating to Astrology, Buddhism, Christian Science, Evangelical Christian, Hindu, Islam, Magick, Mormon, New Age, Spiritualism, Theosophy, and numerous other groups and movements.  ARC also includes the Russell Chandler (Los Angeles Times religion column), Cult Awareness Network, Mark Jurgensmeyer / Radhasoami, Anthony U. Leitner (primarily Buddhism), Lockman Foundation (bible translations), Religious Leaders of America, Worldwide Church of God, and Robert S. Zeiger (Old Catholic) collections.
  • Bernath [Stuart L.] Memorial Collection.  Nearly 2,000 books and 80+ manuscript collections focusing on American diplomatic history and international relations.  Included are papers of James Stuart Beddie (scholar and Foreign Service officer, who worked on the post-WWII German War Documents Project), Stuart L. Bernath (American historian, whose main work was on diplomacy in the Civil War era; his family has established an endowment to support the collection named after him), G. William Gahagan (propaganda used both in the Pacific and Atlantic theaters during WWII), Great War Collection (records of individual units government documents, photographs, scrapbooks, maps, pamphlets, and serials, also several hundred books, cataloged separately), Charles Montgomery Hathaway (American academic and diplomat, with service in the Dominican Republic, England, Ireland, Budapest, Bombay, and Germany, ca. 1912-1939), and the Wilson-McAdoo Collection (Woodrow Wilson and family, much relating to his daughter Eleanor Wilson McAdoo).  Also, a number of latter 19th – early 20th century photograph collections, mainly depicting experiences of Americans abroad – travelers, businessmen, educators, missionaries, military, and government officials. 
  • Bibles.  Early copies, many with extensive illuminations, from the mid-13c, including the 'Santa Barbara Bible' (ca. 1250), Biblia Latina (ca. 1297), Biblia sacra latina (1350); A Noble Fragment, being a Leaf of the Gutenberg Bible, 1450-1455 …; Coverdale Bible, 1535 (first complete bible in English; gift of C. Pardee Erdman); several other 15th-18th century bibles, and the Greek New Testaments Collection (primarily 16th-17th century).  Facsimile editions of early works include The Lorsch Gospels (ca. 810), the Wenzelsbiblel (ca. 1400), and The Beginning of the New Testament Translated by William Tyndale (1525).  Also, modern fine press editions such as the Doves Bible (1903-1905) and the Pennyroyal Caxton Bible, designed and illustrated by Barry Moser (1999).  Other manuscript holdings include the Isaac Foot Collection (with bible leaves, ca. 1530-1611), Medieval Manuscript Fragments (with leaves from bibles, devotional books, scholars’ texts, liturgical musical texts, and texts of religious readings, 9th-15th centuries), Original Leaves from Famous Bibles: Nine Centuries 1121-1935… collected and annotated by Otto F. Ege, and "Biblical Library of Stanley S. Slotkin," with 30 original leaves and accompanying printed text for 16th-18th century bibles and other religious works.  Also, related reference works on early bibles.
  • Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions Collection (CSDI).  Records of the internationally renowned Santa Barbara-based think tank, emphasizing issues such as education, freedom of the press, international relations, public policy, religion, and science and technology in modern society.  Included are materials relating to CSDI leaders such as Robert Hutchins, Harry Ashmore, Elisabeth Mann Borgese, W. H. Ferry, Frank Kelly, Stanley K. Sheinbaum, and Harvey Wheeler.  Also includes papers, talks, correspondence, and other materials relating to hundreds of other well known figures such as Mortimer Adler, Alexander Comfort, William O. Douglas, Mircea Eliade, J. William Fulbright, Hubert H. Humphrey, Clark Kerr, Eugene McCarthy, Gunnar Myrdal, Reinhold Niebuhr, Linus Pauling, James A. Pike, B. F. Skinner, Adlai Stevenson, Arnold Toynbee, UN Secretary-General U Thant, and Earl Warren.
  • Community Development and Conservation Collection (CDCC).  Also known as the Pearl Chase Collection, focusing on Santa Barbara history in the 20th century.  Included are papers relating to several hundred local organizations (especially pertaining to architecture, gardens, housing, land use, and planning), as well events such as Fiesta, Chase family papers, and numerous photographs of local scenes.
  • Darwin / Evolution Collection.  Nearly 3,000 volumes, including first, signed, and limited editions of books by Charles Darwin and others engaged in the debate on evolution and studies in related fields such as anthropology, botany, genetics, geology, heredity, natural history, population, and religion.  Some accompanying manuscript material relating to Bernard Darwin, Charles Darwin, Francis Darwin, Julian Huxley, Thomas Henry Huxley, John Stuart Mill, Richard Owen, Herbert Spencer, and Marie Stopes.
  • Davidson [Eugene] Collection.  Books and papers of an historian and editor of Yale University Press, primarily relating to 20th century  German history, including the Weimar Republic, Third Reich, Holocaust, Nuremberg trials, international war tribunals, and the Cold War period.

  • Early Works – Ancient / Classical.  Mainly Greek and Latin editions, from the 15th century onwards, by Aristotle (Trattato dei governi …, ca. 1549), Augustine (Tabula Diui Aurelii Augustini in Librum Psalmorum, 1493), Julius Caesar (Commentaries, 1543), Cicero (Epistolaru …, 1536), Ovid (Amatoria, 1536), Demosthenes, Euripides, Homer, Horace, Juvenal, Lucretius, Virgil, and others.  Also, a number of fine press editions of classical writers, and examples of early writing such as Sumerian clay tablets, ca. 2000 BC.

  • Early Works – Medieval to 17th Century.  Holdings include a number of important works such as the ‘Santa Barbara Bible’ (ca. 1250), Biblia Latina (ca. 1297), Biblia sacra latina (1350), medieval illuminated manuscript leaves (ca. 10th – 16th centuries), Gutenberg Bible leaves (ca. 1454-1455), the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493), a 15th century French Book of Hours, several incunabula (e.g. Austinus de Ancona, Summa de postestate ecclesiastica, 1473), Greek New Testaments (ca. 16th – 19th centuries), Holinshed's Chronicles (a source for William Shakespeare’s historical plays - 1587), William Shakespeare’s Merry Wives of Windsor (1602).  Also, early editions of works by authors such as Dante Alighieri, St. Augustine (Tabula Diui Aurelii Augustini in Librum Psalmorum, 1493), Francis Bacon (The Historie of the Raigne of Keng Henry the Seventh, 1622), John Bunyan (A Book for Boys and Girls …, 1686), Desiderius Erasmus, Moliere, and Francois Rabelais (Oeuvres, 1558), as well as limited facsimile editions of milestones in the history of the book, such as the Book of Kells (ca. 800), Domesday Book (1086), and the Ellesmere Chaucer (ca. 1400-1405). 

  • Early Works – 18th Century. First and early editions for authors such as James Boswell (incl. The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson, 1785), Daniel Defoe, Denis Diderot (Encyclopedie, 1755-1780), Benjamin Franklin (Political, Miscellaneous, and Philosophical Pieces, 1779), John Gay (Beggar’s Opera, 1791 ed; also scrapbookof theatrical productions from the time), Oliver Goldsmith (Vicar of Wakefield, 1773 ed), Samuel Johnson (incl. his Dictionary, 1755), Isaac Newton (incl. Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended, 1728), Alexander Pope, Friedrich Schiller, Jonathan Swift (incl. A Tale of a Tub, 1704), Voltaire (incl. Epitres, satires, contes, odes, et pieces fugitives, 1771), John Wesley, and Mary Wollstonecraft (incl. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman …, 1792).  Some manuscript material from the time period, including the Ballitore Collection (mainly papers of the Shackleton and Leadbetter Quaker families of Ballitore, Ireland, incl. Edmund Burke correspondence).
  • Ernst [Morris L.] / Banned Book Collection.  Examples of more than 700 books banned in various countries throughout history, with an accompanying manuscript and reference collection explaining why they were banned.  Includes such well known works as Hans Christian Andersen - Fairy Tales, Samuel L. Clemens - Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Wisdom of Confucius, Daniel Defoe - Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, Charles L. Dodgson - Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Arthur Conan Doyle – Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Nathaniel Hawthorne – Scarlet Letter, Adolf Hitler – Mein Kampf, Victor Hugo – Les Miserables, James Joyce – Ulysses, Sinclair Lewis – Elmer Gantry, Henry Miller – Tropic of Cancer, J. D. Salinger – Catcher in the Rye, and many others.
  • Fine Presses.  Very limited editions, often with handmade papers, unique illustrations, and fine, decorated bindings.  Primarily 19th and 20th century British and U.S. presses. Notable examples include John Dryden (transl.), Fables from Boccaccio and Chaucer (Chiswick Press, 1822); the Doves Bible, (Doves Press, 1903-1905); Ted Hughes, Howls and Whispers, ltd. ed., no. 23 of 110 (Gehenna Press, 1998), Emily Dickinson, Compound Frame: Seven Poems, ltd. ed., no. 56 of 120 (Janus Press, 1998); William Morris, Gothic Architecture… (Kelmscott Press, 1893); Dard Hunter, Primitive Papermaking (Mountain House Press, 1927); Jose Montoya, el sol y los de abajo, ltd. ed., no. 96 of 195 (Ninja Press, 1992); Pennyroyal Caxton Holy Bible, ltd. ed, no. 58 of 400, designed and illustrated by Barry Moser (1999), 33 1/3: Off the Record (Edition Reese, 2000).
  • Foot (Isaac) Collection.  The Foot Library, with more than 50,000 volumes in the family’s country house in Cornwall, was purchased in 1962 by the University of California and distributed among five UC campuses: Berkeley, Davis, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Santa Barbara.  The UCSB portion includes early bibles (from the 13th century), Greek testaments, incunabula, 17th and 18th century monographs, English Civil War tracts, French Revolutionary and Napoleonic history, and items relating to Wesley and Methodism.  Also a small manuscript component, with 16th-17th bible leaves, and correspondence of Joseph Addison, Edmund Burke, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, H. L. Mencken, William Pitt, Alexander Pope, Samuel Wesley, Sarah Wesley, other Wesley family members, and William Wilberforce.

  • History of Science.  Printed and manuscript collections such as the American Religions Collection (alternative health and medicine), Darwin/Evolution Collection, Kroc Foundation Collection (medical research), Donald Culross and Louise Redfield Peattie Collection (natural history), Romaine Trade Catalog Collection (scientific instruments), Marie C. Stopes Collection (population and birth control), and Robert B. Sweet Collection (medicine, psychology, and sexuality).  Numerous collections relating to local natural resources, including several on the 1969 Santa Barbara Oil Spill.  Papers of UCSB faculty Lawrence Badash (history of science, scientific instruments), Vernon Cheadle (biology), Preston Cloud (geology, ecosystems, and natural resources), Katherine Esau (biology), Garrett Hardin (biology, population, and ecology), Alan J. Heeger (Nobel Prize winner, Chemistry, 2000), and Walter Kohn (Nobel Prize winner, Chemistry, 1998), and Beatrice Marcy Sweeney (biology).  Oral histories of Cheadle, Esau, Herbert Kroemer (Nobel Prize winner, Physics, 2000), and others.  Also, early and rare books (some with hand colored engravings) on subjects such as anatomy, flora, fauna, genetics, geology, history of photography, medicine, natural history, and zoology. 
  • The Humanistic Psychology Archives (HPA).  Materials generated by the founders, pioneers and major individuals, organizations, centers, and institutions participating in humanistic psychology, including its historical, literary, social and artistic aspects.  HPA, founded in 1986, contains nearly 200 collections, with major holdings relating to the Association for Humanistic Psychology (AHP), George I. Brown, James F. T. Bugental, Esalen Institute, Stanley Keleman, Abraham Maslow, Rollo May, Carl R. Rogers, Virginia Satir, Stewart B. Shapiro, Bob Tannenbaum, John Vasconcellos, and Alan Watts.
  • Isla Vista Collections.  Includes the Isla Vista Archives (from the Isla Vista Recreation and Park Department), audiovisual materials (primarily audio tapes), photographs, government and university studies and reports, literature and poetry, newspapers, papers of individuals, and records of organizations such as the Isla Vista Improvement Association.  Most materials are from latter 1960s and 1970s, and cover a wide range of issues such as the anti-Vietnam War protests, Isla Vista riots, Isla Vista governance, housing, land use, and the environmental movement.  Support for the collections has generously been provided by the Neal J. Linson family.
  • Literature – 19th Century.  First, limited, and early editions, with particular strengths for American and British authors such as Louisa May Alcott, Charlotte and Emily Bronte, Lewis Carroll (incl. 1866 edition and 1969 Salvador Dali edition of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland), Stephen Crane, Richard Henry Dana (whose mid-19th century Two Years before the Mast includes Santa Barbara observations), Charles Dickens (incl. first, early, and fine press editions of works such as David Copperfield, 1850), Frederick Douglass (incl. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave, 1846), Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thomas Hardy, Bret Harte, Henry James, Herman Melville, William Morris, Edgar Allan Poe (incl. early and fine press editions of works such as The Raven), Robert Louis Stevenson, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry D. Thoreau, Mark Twain.  Also, associated manuscript collections such as the Ward-Perkins Collection (incl. correspondence with James Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, George Bancroft, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry and William James, George Santayana, and Theodore Roosevelt).  Also, some individual manuscript items, including correspondence, for authors such as Robert Browning, Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain), Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry D. Thoreau, and H. G. Wells.  
  • Literature – 20th century.  First, signed, and limited editions, with particular strengths for American and British authors, especially those with California associations.  Extensive holdings for Charles Bukowski (John Martin/Black Sparrow Press), Concrete Poetry, T. S. Eliot, William Everson, Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, Robinson Jeffers, D. H. Lawrence, W. Somerset Maugham (Toole-Stott Collection), Henry Miller (Philip Peatman Collection), Christopher Morley (Bob Bason Collection), Ezra Pound.  Holdings include a number of associated manuscript collections relating to Charles Bukowski (Bukowski and John Martin collections), Tom Clark, Robinson Jeffers (Armstrong/Jeffers Collection), Pound (John Richmond Theobald and Elizabeth Schneider collections).  Also several hundred small collections of individual or small groups of manuscripts, with correspondence relating to authors such as Ray Bradbury, William Everson, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, Archibald MacLeish, Thomas Mann, W. Somerset Maugham, Henry Miller, A. Edward Newton (book collector), George Bernard Shaw, Wallace Stegner, H. G. Wells, and Tennessee Williams. 
  • Maps /Atlases. Early 16th - 18th century maps by European cartographers such as Blaeu, Jansson, and Mercator (John and Peggy Maximus Collection).  Also atlases such as Robert Morden, Geography Rectified… (1693).  Other early maps and atlases of North America and California, and 19th century maps depicting the Civil War and U.S. expansion (mainly Wyles Collection).
  • Newspapers.  18th-19th century European and American newspapers (individual issues and short runs), with an emphasis on the Civil War era, as well as early Santa Barbara newspapers, and 1960s-1970s alternative newspapers (mainly U.S.).
  • Pamphlet Collections.  Includes French Revolution Pamphlets (more than 2,000 items, mainly 1780s-1790s) and Radical Pamphlets (primarily U.S., ca. 1960s-1970s) collections.
  • Photographs.  More than 100,000 photographs, found in numerous collections and covering a wide range of subjects.  Most are black and white prints from the late 19th to latter 20th centuries, but there also are some earlier daguerreotypes, tintypes, ambrotypes, and cyanotypes, as well as later color prints and slides.  Major subject areas include: Africa [Sub-Saharan], California, Civil War [U.S.], East Asia and Pacific Islands, Ethnic Groups in California, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Abraham Lincoln, North Africa and the Middle East, Prominent Individuals, Santa Barbara Area, Southwest Asia, UCSB and Isla Vista, The West [U.S.], World War I, and World War II.
  • Santa Barbara Area Collections.  Emphasis on the local and Central Coast area, including the Robert E. Easton (mainly relating to business dealings in the Santa Maria area, including files for the Sisquoc Investment Company / Sisquoc Ranch Company), Goleta Chamber of Commerce, Kroc Foundation Archive (grant and conference files relating to medical research, 1960s-early 1980s), Jean Storke Menzies (personal/family papers and other materials, mainly 1950s-1980s, for numerous Santa Barbara organizations), William Whitehill Rand (incl. development of oil drilling in the Santa Barbara Channel), Santa Barbara History Files, Santa Barbara Picture Postcards, South Coast Railroad Museum (mainly 20th century North America railroad lines, with timetables, official guides, maps, and other ephemera), Charles A. Storke, Charles A. Storke II, Thomas M. Storke, George P and Mary Tebbetts (papers of a newspaper family, incl. late 19th century SB Daily and Weekly Independent), Walker A. Tompkins (local historian and pulp western writer), and Katharine W. Tremaine (Sunflower Foundation) collections.
  • Santa Barbara Authors.  Signed and first editions of hundreds of past and present authors with local connections, such as Edgar Bowers, T. Coraghessan Boyle, Raymond Carver, Barnaby Conrad, George Dangerfield, Eugene Davidson, Gretel Ehrlich, Clifton Fadiman, J. F. Freedman, John Galsworthy, William Campbell Gault, Father Maynard J. Geiger, Sue Grafton, Pico Iyer, Hugh Kenner, Robert Kirsch, David Lavender, Dennis and Gayle Lynds, Kenneth and Margaret Millar, David Myrick, and Remi Nadeau.  Also, papers relating to Richard Barre (mysteries), Tom Clark, Robert O. Easton (western fiction and 1969 Santa Barbara Oil Spill), J. F. Freedman (mysteries), Steven Gilbar (literary Santa Barbara), Dennis Lynds (detective fiction), Harry McGuire (magazine editor and publisher), Kenneth Pai, Donald Culross and Louise Redfield Peattie, John Ridland (poetry), John Sanford, Walker Tompkins (local history and pulp westerns), Richard Howells Watkins (boys’ books and adventure stories), Peter Whigham, and others.  
  • Santa Barbara Contemporary Issues Collections.  Papers of 20th century local officials, legislators, organizations, and individuals such as Robert O. Easton (oil spill, wilderness), Fred
  • Eissler (airport, flood control, transportation), Robert A. English (war in Vietnam), Get Oil Out (GOO), Don Hamilton (homeless), Gary K. Hart (state legislator – education, energy, families, housing, medical/health, natural resources, public assistance, taxes, and transportation), Lee Moldaver (public transit), Patrick J. Maher (Santa Barbara mayor), Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Oil Spill Information Center, Omer Rains (state legislator – criminal justice, environment, health, political reform), Alice B Rypins (water), Santa Barbara League of Women Voters, Robert C. Sharp (oil), Patricia Shewczyk (water), Robert Sollen (oil), Harriette Von Breton (oil), and Richard Whitehead (land use and planning).
  • Skofield [Hobart O.] Printers Collection.  More than 30,000 volumes, with an emphasis on the book arts, bookplates, California presses (such as Arion, Black Sparrow, Book Club of California, Grabhorn, Flying Fish, Paul Elder, and Yolla Bolly presses), fine printing, history of the book, writing and printing, miniature books, papermaking, Santa Barbara presses (including Capra Press, Mary Heebner’s Simplemente Maria Press and Harry and Sandra Reese’s Turkey Press), small and private presses (such as Doves, Gehenna, Granary, Hogarth, Janus, Kelmscott, Nonesuch, Pennyroyal, Perishable, and Roycroft presses), and typography.  Also, related manuscript collections relating to Hobart O. Skofield, Mudborn Press, John Henry Nash, Ninja Press (Carolee Campbell), Pear Tree Press, Bruce Rogers, Rowny Press, and Rudge Press.
  •  Sweet [Robert B.] Collection.  Large collection, mainly printed works reflecting the donor’s far-ranging interests in areas such as anthropology, the arts, biography, the Civil War, history, humor, literature, medicine, philosophy, psychology, racism, religion, sexuality, sociology, travel, and women.  Mainly 20th century U.S. imprints, but also important earlier 16th-19th century works (especially early medical, religious, and historical texts), and first, signed, and other significant editions of authors such as William Blake, Theodore Dreiser, Robert Frost, Lafcadio Hearn, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Elbert Hubbard, Aldous Huxley, Robinson Jeffers, D. H. Lawrence, Sinclair Lewis, Jack London, Henry Miller, Robert Service, Upton Sinclair, John Steinbeck, Robert Louis Stevenson, Henry David Thoreau, Mark Twain, H. G. Wells, and Walt Whitman. 
  • Trade Catalogs.  The Lawrence B. Trade Catalog Collection contains more than 50,000 items, primarily 19th and early 20th century American trade and advertising literature, with large sections relating to a subjects such as agriculture, architecture, booksellers, building materials, department stores, electrical equipment, hardware, printers’ supplies, scientific and industrial instruments, and seed catalogs.  There are additional related records for Romaine’s bookselling business, Weathercock House.  Smaller numbers of trade catalogs in the Larry Badash, Die Cut Advertising Literature, and James C. Williams collections.  Also, the American Religions Collection includes mid-latter 20th century catalogs of publications and religious goods for and by various religious groups, and the Sound Recording Catalog Collection contains lists and other publications from the early 20th century by numerous recording companies, mainly U.S.
  • Western Americana and Californiana.  Extensive holdings of printed materials, many in the Wyles Collection, but also including the J. J. Mitchell, Ruth Comfort Mitchell (California writer), and Charles Snow (prolific blind California author of westerns) collections.

  • World War I.  Books and manuscripts (records of individual units government documents, photographs, scrapbooks, maps, pamphlets, and serials) in the Great War Collection.  Also manuscript collections such as the Louis deKeyser Belden] Papers (correspondence, documents, photographs, and ephemera of a surgeon and Captain in the Medical Corps), Thomas Driscoll Collection (contains correspondence, documents - including intelligence reports, maps, pamphlets, photographs, and posters of a Lt. Colonel and Division Intelligence Officer in the U.S. Army's 91st Division), Charles Montgomery Hathaway Collection (American academic and diplomat, with service in the Dominican Republic, England, Ireland, Budapest, Bombay, and Germany, ca. 1912-1939).   
  • World War II.  James Stuart Beddie Collection (scholar and Foreign Service officer, who worked on the post-WWII German War Documents Project).  G. William Gahagan (propaganda used both in the Pacific and Atlantic theaters during WWII).  Eugene Davidson Collection (historical works on 20th century Germany, Adolf Hitler, Nuremberg Trials, and Cold War).  Bruce C. Hopper (academic, military historian, and O.S.S. observer in Sweden during WWII). 
  • Wyles [William] Collection.  The first UCSB ‘special collection,’ and still one of the largest, with more than 35,000 volumes on Abraham Lincoln, slavery, abolition, the Civil War, American expansion, travel in America, and the American West.  Also, more than 100 separate manuscript collections and 800 small collections, with correspondence, diaries, and photos of individuals and families, many with Civil War connections, and records of Civil War military units.  Includes Civil War Diaries, Civil War Muster Rolls, Confederate Collection (correspondence, documents, autographs, photographs, engravings, currency, stamps, song sheets), Daughters of Union Veterans, 1st South Carolina/33rd U. S. Colored Troops (records, ca. 1861-1865), Gold Rush Sermons (from the Sonora California area, 1852-1863), Campbell Grant (patriotic Civil War covers), Mortimer Leggett (correspondence and documents of a Civil War general), Farnham Lyon (correspondence from Libbie Custer), Jay Monaghan (correspondence and files relating to research and writings of a Lincoln, Civil War, and western history scholar, and longtime consultant to the Wyles Collection), Isaac Shepard (ranking Civil War officer for Colored Troops), and Slave Documents (bills of sale, manumission papers, and other, ca. 1711-1878) collections.  Also some individual manuscript items relating to U.S. presidents, generals, and other important figures such as Jefferson Davis, Ulysses S. Grant, Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee, Abraham Lincoln, and William Tecumseh Sherman.

CALIFORNIA ETHNIC
AND MULTICULTURAL ARCHIVE.

Primary sources documentingthe experience of African Americans, Asian Americans, Chicano/Latino, and Native Americans in California, including personal and organizational collections relating to social and cultural history, literature, and the visual and performing arts. 

  • African Americans.  Includes collections relating to William Downey (newspaper columnist and novelist), Charles C. Irby (cultural anthropologist and ethnic studies pioneer), Anita J. Mackey (civic leader), Horace J. McMillan (physician and civil rights advocate), Lowell Steward (former Tuskegee Airman), and Samuel Williams (attorney, former Deputy Attorney General, State of California).
  • Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders.  Includes collections relating to the Asian American Theatre Company (with production and script files), Robert Billigmeier (WWII Japanese evacuation and relocation study; Tule Lake Relocation Center), Iris Chang (Chinese American author), Frank Chin (Chinese American playwright), Michio Ito (Japanese American dancer and choreographer), Kearney Street Workshop, Genny Lim (Chinese American playwright, poet, performance artist), Ester Soriano-Hewitt (Filipina American civil rights activist), and Nellie Wong.
  • Chicanos/Latinos.  Includes collections relating to Oscar Zeta Acosta (activist, attorney, and novelist), Alurista (poet and artist), Aztlan, Francisco Camplís  (artist, filmmaker, photographer, and filmmaker), Ana Castillo (poet and novelist), Bert Corona (labor leader), Richard Duardo (graphic artist), Galería de la Raza (Chicano/Latino cultural arts), Galería Las Américas (Chicano/Latino Los Angeles art gallery), Adelina Garcia (romantic bolero singer), Lalo Guerrero, Yolanda Lopez (artist), Jose Montoya (artist, writer, and activist), Ralph Maradiaga (Chicano artist and administrator), National Hispanic Women's Network, Sheila Ortiz-Taylor (novelist), Ernesto Palomino (artist and community activist), REFORMA, Patricia Rodríguez (artist and muralist) Royal Chicano Air Force, Self-Help Graphics (Chicano/Latino cultural arts), Gil Sanchez (architect), El Teatro Campesino (Chicano theater), Rini Templeton (political activist and artist), Mario Torero (Latino artist) Salvador Roberto Torres, and Luis Valdez (playwright and filmmaker).
  • Native Americans.  Related materials, primarily in Wyles and CDCC collections.  Includes printed and manuscript sources on art, Chumash, history, literature, missions, public policy, and organizations such as the American Association on Indian Affairs Files, American Indian Historical Society, American Indian League, California Indian Rights Association, Inc., California League for American Indians, Candelaria American Indian Council, Indian Defense Association of Santa Barbara, and the Inter-Tribal Council of California Inc. 

PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTIONS

  • Historical Sound Recordings.  Primarily older formats and rare recordings, such as cylinders and 78 rpm sound recordings (more than 200,000 items), with an emphasis on classical and ethnic music; including Carlisle Adams (approx. 5,000 vocal 78rpm and LP classical recordings), Arabic Wax Cylinders, Archives of Recorded Vocal Music (over 30,000 vocal recordings from the first half of the 20th century, including the Anthony Boucher Collection), Robert Florey, Harry and Grace James (approx. 15,000 78rpm recordings), Kingsbaker/Moeller/Bang, Johnny Lucas (jazz 78s of the Dixieland trumpeter, including unreleased acetate recordings), William Moran (Victor Project), Martial Singher (French baritone who was on the faculty of the Music Academy of the West), Barbara and Bart Singletary, Leopold Stokowski Test Pressings, and Verne Todd collections.
  • Music.  Papers of composers, performers, and musicologists such as Hall Clovis (singer; including manuscripts of commissioned works by Milhaud, Castelnuovo-Tedesco and others), Mildred Couper (composer), Emma Lou Diemer (composer and UCSB faculty member), Maurice Faulkner (UCSB professor of trumpet), Peter Fricker (British born composer and UCSB faculty member), Bernice Geiringer (pianist and philanthropist, second wife of musicologist Karl Geiringer), Leon A. Goldshlak (Gilbert and Sullivan collection), Bernard Herrmann (film composer noted for his scores to Hitchcock and Orson Welles films), Lotte Lehmann (Austrian born soprano noted for her interpretations of German Lieder and her roles in Strauss' operas; spent her later years in Santa Barbara), Kurt Sober (German-American conductor, pianist, accompanist and voice coach), Sound Recordings Catalogs (extensive collection of manufacturers' catalogs, primarily from the 78 rpm era), and Anton Van der Voort (Santa Barbara composer and educator).
  • Film and Television.  Includes the Film Press Kit Collection, Cal Naylor Production Files, Screen Guild Players Recordings, and Robert Sinclair Collection.
  • Theatre and Dance.  Includes Dame Judith Anderson, Betsy Brown Puppetry, Rita Fikkert, Douglas Harmer, Lobero Theatre, Robert Potter collections.
  • Related Areas.  Includes materials such as the Toole-Stott Circus Collection (books and manuscripts).

UCSB ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM. 

Primarily interviews conducted by Special Collections staff, along with supporting documentation.  Also some oral histories done by others and donated to Special Collections.  Many of the oral histories augment materials in other areas of Special Collections.

  • Architecture/Urban Planning.  Interviews with Joseph T. Bill, John C. Harkness, H. Ralph Taylor, Congressman James H. Scheuer, Yukio Kawaratani, Ray Hebert, Jack Bevash, James Langenheim, Niels Stoermer, Cesar Pelli, Edward Logue, Edward L. Barnes, Harry Cobb, Bruce Allen, and Edward Helfeld.

  • Arts and Entertainment.  Includes interviews with Paul Radin (film producer) and Howard Walls (early 20th century Hollywood).  

  • Cultural Diversity.  Includes the Japanese American /Nisei Oral History Project, Helen and Hiroshi Takeda, Anita Mackey, and Mississippi/Headstart Project.
  • Humanistic Psychology.  Includes interviews with leading practitioners such as James F. T. Bugental, Stanley Keleman, Carl Rogers, Virginia Satir, Robert Tannenbaum, and the Avanta network.
  • Santa Barbara Area History.  Interviews relating to Harold S. Chase (Hope Ranch; brother of Pearl Chase), Joel Conway (photography and film industry), Direct Relief International, Frances Gledhill (community and political issues), Loyd Amos and Berta Lee Winniford Kelley (early 20th century Santa Barbara), Jeanette Lyons (early 20th century Santa Ynez Valley), Old Town Goleta Oral History Project, UCSB Public History projects (State Street, water, fires, Santa Barbara wine history).  
  • UCSB.  Interviews relating to faculty and administrators such as Ellen Bowers (Dean of Women), Vernon Cheadle (UCSB Chancellor and botanist), Donald Davidson (University Librarian), Katherine Esau (botanist), Lieslotte Fajardo (library), Thomas Fleming (Black Studies), Friends of the UCSB Libraries (events and programs), Mario Garcia (History/Chicano Studies), Theodore Harder (early Goleta campus years), Garrett Hardin (biology, population, and ecology), Hugh Kenner (English), Herbert Kroemer (Nobel Prize winner, Physics, 2000), Katherine McNabb (library -Riviera and early Goleta campus years), Lawrence Willson (English)

  • World War II.  Experiences of Donald C. Davidson, Robert O. Easton (who also published his correspondence with his wife, Jane Easton, in Love and War) Douwe Stuurman, Bob Tannenbaum, and George Wittenstein (White Rose German resistance movement). 

  • Writers, Printers, and Publishers.  Harry Ashmore (newspaperman, Pulitzer Prize winner, CSDI), Robert O. Easton (western and California fiction), Anton K. Money (1920s Yukon mining frontier), Hobart Skofield (Printers Collection, printing industry, and Rudge Press), Noel Young (Capra Press).

  • Oral histories supporting UCSB printed or manuscript collections.  Includes interviews relating to Mercedes Eichholz (re William O. Douglas), Frank Kelly (CSDI; Truman speech writer), Frances Holden/Lotte Lehmann (opera soprano), Jay Monaghan (Lincoln and Wyles Collection), Harvey Wheeler (CSDI).

UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES.

Official university records of permanent value and other materials documenting the development of the institution, including papers of faculty and administrators.

  • Early Records of Predecessor Institutions. Materials relating to the pre-Goleta campus years of UCSB, including Anna Black Manual Training School, Santa Barbara State College, and Santa Barbara College of the University of California.

  • Faculty, Administrators, and Staff Papers.  Includes papers of Herbert P. Broida (physics), George I. Brown (confluent education), Vernon Cheadle (UCSB Chancellor), Preston Cloud (geology, ecosystems, and natural resources), Donald C. Davidson (University Librarian), Katherine Esau (biology), Richard Exner (German literature), Robert Freeman (musicology), Garrett Hardin (biology, population, and ecology), Alan J. Heeger (Nobel Prize winner, Chemistry, 2000),Wilbur R. Jacobs (frontier and western history), Robert Kelley (history, public policy), Walter Kohn (Nobel Prize winner, Chemistry, 1998), Kenneth Pai (Chinese literature), Philip W. Powell (15th and 16th century Spanish and Mexican history), and Lawrence Willson (English, Thoreau scholar).

  • Official Records of the University.  Records of permanent historical value from administrative offices, departments, centers, and programs across the campus.  Includes Academic Senate Minutes, Bio Files (mainly information for earlier faculty and administrators), Subject Files (programs and events).

  • Theses and Dissertations.  Original copies accepted by the University in fulfillment of advanced degree requirements.

  • University Publications.  Holdings include titles such as 93106, Campus Directory, Coastlines, Daily Nexus (and predecessor student newspapers such as El Gaucho), Faculty Notes, General Catalog, In Memorium, La Cumbre (yearbook), Schedule of Classes, Soundings, Spectrum, UCSB Alumni Directory, UCSB Financial Report.

 


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