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Browse All Finding Aids
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- Topic: ("University of Vermont.")
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Barker, B. Benton
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Title: B. Benton Barker Photograph Collection
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Dates: circ- 1920
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Extent: 1.6 Linear feet4 boxes
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Abstract: B. Benton Barker was an early 20th Century photographer in Burlington, Vermont. The collection contains glass negatives and prints of photos taken around Burlington by B. Benton Barker around the turn of the century.
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Neiburg, Gladys
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Title: Gladys Neiburg Papers
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Dates: 1939-1974
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Extent: 4 boxes
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Abstract:
The bulk of the collection documents Neiburg's literary works.
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Hunt, Dorothy B.
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Title: Dorothy B. Hunt Papers
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Dates: 1910-1987
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Abstract:
The Dorothy B. Hunt Collection contains papers from 1910 to 1987. The collection may be of use to those studying Burlington and the arts in
Vermont in the latter half of the twentieth century.
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Crockett, Walter Hill, 1870-1931
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Title: Walter Hill Crockett Papers
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Dates: 1900-1931
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Extent: 3 cartons
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Abstract:
The Walter Hill Crockett Papers consist of three cartons of correspondence, lecture notes and drafts of Crockett's writing from the period 1900-1931.
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Collamer Family
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Title: Collamer Family Papers
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Dates: 1802-1918
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Extent: 3 Cartons, 5 volumes
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Abstract: The Collamer Family Papers consist of three cartons of letters, business papers,
legal notes and dockets, account books, speeches and orations, and other
manuscripts. Although the collection includes material from the early 1800s to the
1910s, the majority of the Papers fall in date between 1840 and 1865.
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Peake family
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Title: Peake Family Papers
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Dates: 1793-1955
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Extent: 7.45 Linear feet5 cartons, 3 boxes
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Abstract: The Peake family arrived in the area that would become Addison County, Vermont, in 1779, when William Peake (1740-1813) moved with his family from Nantucket to the frontier town of Monkton. William's son Seth (1784-1827) settled in nearby Bristol in 1810 as a saddler and storekeeper, beginning more than a centry and a half of Peake residency in that community. The Peake Family Papers consist of approximately six linear feet of correspondence, bound manuscripts, diaries and other miscellaneous papers. The chronological span of the collection is from 1793 to 1955, with the heaviest concentration of material falling between 1840 and 1900.