About Full-Text Documents

Collections of college and personal papers, as well as a select number of individual documents, have been briefly described in entries available for browsing and searching on this site. All collection and document descriptions contain a representative image and a summary of the contents. 

Search Document Descriptions

Browse Document Descriptions

June 26, 1873

This copy of the printed program for the commencement exercises held on June 26, 1873 shows the members of the graduating class and the speeches that they were scheduled to deliver.

Format: Memorabilia and Ephemera

Location: Dickinsoniana Programs

Subject: Dickinson College Events

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: 1873 Commencement Program

June 26, 1873

William C. Wilson prepared this oration, entitled “College Life Its Lights and Shadows," for the commencement ceremonies held June 26, 1873. Authoring an original speech was among the graduation requirements for Dickinson College seniors at that time. Transcript included.

Format: Speeches and Sermons

Location: Orations-1873-W754c

Subject: Dickinson College Student Life, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "College Life Its Lights and Shadows," by William C. Wilson

March 20, 1874

Naturalist Spencer Fullerton Baird (Class of 1843) writes to Dr. Alfred W. Bennett, thanking him for sending a package of notes. Baird acknowledges similar gifts in the introduction of the Annual Report for 1873 and is sending Bennett a copy; he also "hopes that the new Scientific Monthly will be started before a great while" and asks Bennett to be a contributor.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-1986-5

Subject: Literary Pursuits, Science and Technology

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Spencer Baird to Alfred Bennett

June 5, 1874

Professor Charles Himes writes Professor William Fisher a "strictly confidential" letter to discuss several sensitive issues related to Dickinson College. Professor Himes mentions the upcoming Board of Trustee meeting and discusses how they might decide to fill several faculty vacancies. In addition, Himes explains how the financial situation at Dickinson might impact how the Trustees decide to fill the faculty positions. Himes ('55) and Fisher ('70) both teach at Dickinson. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: MC 2000.12, B1, F3

Subject: Dickinson College Academic Affairs, Dickinson College Administration, Education, Personal and Family Life

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Charles Himes to William Fisher

July 27, 1874

Professor Charles Himes writes Professor William Fisher to discuss various affairs at Dickinson College. Professor Himes notes an allegation that Fisher might soon be directly involved in, and warns him to be cautious of these allegations. Himes ends with some brief information about a mutual acquaintance, Professor James McCauley. Himes ('55) and Fisher ('70) both teach at Dickinson. Transcript included. 

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: MC 2000.12, B1, F3

Subject: Dickinson College Academic Affairs, Dickinson College Administration, Education, Personal and Family Life

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Charles Himes to William Fisher

August 17, 1874

Professor Charles Francis Himes writes Professor William Fisher to discuss a controversy related to how the Dickinson College Board of Trustees decided to fill faculty positions. Himes also mentions his recent activities and travels as well as prospects for the upcoming year. Himes ('55) and Fisher ('70) both teach at Dickinson. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: MC 2000.12, B1, F3

Subject: Dickinson College Academic Affairs, Dickinson College Administration, Education, Personal and Family Life

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Charles Himes to William Fisher

1875

The Dickinson College catalog for the 1874-1875 academic year. Through the years, the annual catalog was variously titled "The Bulletin," "Catalogue and Register," "Course Catalog," and similar variants. The catalog typically includes the list of courses offered, requirements for enrollment, requirements for graduation, tuition and other fees, and campus facilities, college policies, and lists of teaching faculty, college trustees, and various administrators.

Format: Books and Pamphlets

Location: Dickinsoniana Periodicals

Subject: Dickinson College Academic Affairs, Dickinson College Administration, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item:

circa 1875

Horatio King responds to a request for his autograph. The note may have been removed from the bottom of a letter. King, father of Horatio Collins King (Class of 1858), served as Postmaster General and was the first to officially deny the right of secession in early 1861 by tying franking privileges to loyalty to the Union. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-1995-1

Subject: Personal and Family Life, Politics and Government

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Horatio King to Unknown Recipient

circa 1875

A copy of the monthly pamphlet "Young and Old," no. 46, edited by Horatio Collins King (Class of 1858).

Format: Newspapers and Magazines

Location: I-PfliegerP-2005-1

Subject: Literary Pursuits

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "Old and Young" No. 46, edited by Horatio Collins King

April 6, 1875

Professor William Henry Allen delivers a speech, "Dickinson College: An Historical Sketch," about the first 90 years of  the College's history to the Philadelphia Conference Historical Society. The Dickinsonian publishes Allen's speech in the April 6, 1875 issue. Transcript included.

Format: Newspapers and Magazines

Location: Dickinsoniana Periodicals

Subject: Dickinson College Academic Affairs, Dickinson College History, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "Dickinson College: An Historical Sketch," by William Allen (Transcript)

June 21, 1875

Clergyman and abolitionist Moncure Daniel Conway (Class of 1849) bids farewell to newspaper editor St. Clair M'Kelway before leaving Belgium. Conway encloses postage for 100 issues of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, M'Kelway's publication, and promises to "read no other paper."

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-AsbellY-2004-2

Subject: Personal and Family Life, Travel and Tourism

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Moncure Conway to St. Clair M’Kelway

June 24, 1875

John Henderson Ahl receives his Bachelor of Arts Diploma from Dickinson College on June 24, 1875.

Format: Certificates and Diplomas

Location: Diploma Collection

Subject: Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Bachelor of Arts Diploma - John Ahl

July 20, 1875

Abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher writes to Horatio Collins King about King's apparent change of mind on becoming a publisher for Christian Union. Beecher accepts King's decision regretfully after admonishing that "backward" steps can be taken if they lead to "better promise in the future." Envelope included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-HartC-1981-1

Subject: Literary Pursuits, Religion and Spirituality

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Henry Beecher to Horatio Collins King

October 12, 1875

Harriet Beecher Stowe writes Horatio C. King to discuss musical compositions and to suggest changes to the Christian Union. "I want the C Union to put the public in early possession of the signal hymns of the [revival?] times," as Stowe explains. King is the editor of the Christian Union. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-2011-2

Subject: Religion and Spirituality, Visual and Performing Arts

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Harriet Beecher Stowe to Horatio Collins King

February 2, 1876

S. Homer Dosh writes to his mother, Mrs. J. H. C. Dosh, about life in Carlisle as a student at Dickinson College. He comments on the Presbyterian church, saying that the ministers are boring and that there "is not fire enough in the meetings." In addition, Dosh expresses an interest in possibly continuing his studies at John Hopkins University after graduating from Dickinson. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-BaconJ-1961-1

Subject: Carlisle and Cumberland County, Dickinson College Student Life, Education, Personal and Family Life, Religion and Spirituality

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from S. Homer Dosh to Mrs. J. H. C. Dosh

March 29, 1876

Naturalist Spencer Fullerton Baird (Class of 1843) writes to James T. Ames about his hopes of having "a good long talk." Baird tried calling at Ames's hotel, but he was not there. Baird gives Ames his hours at the Smithsonian and invites him to visit there or at his home.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-1983-11

Subject: Personal and Family Life

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Spencer Baird to James Ames

April 10, 1876

Dickinson College President James McCauley writes Daniel Gilman, President of Johns Hopkins University, in order to recommend S. Homer Dosh, a senior at Dickinson. Dosh is an excellent student and is a "young man of excellent character – is a professing Christian, and has, during his stay with us, been correct in all his ways," as McCauley explains. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-BaconJ-2001-1

Subject: Dickinson College Student Life, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from James McCauley to Daniel Gilman

[1876?]

S. Homer Dosh writes his thesis, titled "Some Experiments in Taking Transparencies," about developing photographs while a student at Dickinson College. While using a piece of ground glass behind the negative film is the most satisfactory method, Dosh admits that the method is "inconvenient, and very often cannot be recorted to at all." Dosh includes several photographs as examples in his thesis.

Format: Essays and Dissertations, Photographs

Location: I-BaconJ-2001-2

Subject: Dickinson College Student Life, Education, Science and Technology

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "Some Experiments in Taking Transparencies," by S. Homer Dosh

May 29, 1876

Professor Joshua Lippincott writes Daniel Gilman, President of Johns Hopkins University, in order to recommend S. Homer Dosh, a senior at Dickinson, for a program at that institution. "[Dosh] has proved himself both industrious and successful" at Dickinson, as Lippincott explains. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-BaconJ-2001-1

Subject: Dickinson College Student Life, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Joshua Lippincott to Daniel Gilman

May 30, 1876

Professor Charles F. Himes writes Daniel Gilman, President of Johns Hopkins University, in order to recommend S. Homer Dosh, a senior at Dickinson, for a program at that institution. Himes discusses Dosh's thesis, "Some Experiments in Taking Transparencies," and assures Gilman that the thesis is Dosh's own work. Dosh's work ethic will "make him a credit to his Alma Mater, as well as the institution that receives him," as Himes notes. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-BaconJ-2001-1

Subject: Dickinson College Student Life, Education

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Charles Himes to Daniel Gilman

June 20, 1876

Amy A. Carothers writes to Doctor Cornelius Rea Agnew, thanking Agnew for his donation of five dollars to Carothers' class of Indians.  Carothers also notes that Howling Wolf is under Agnew's treatment for an eye condition. Transcript included.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: CIS-MC-001, B1, F1

Subject: Education, Native Americans

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Amy A. Carothers to Cornelius R. Agnew

June 29, 1876

John Webster Henderson prepared this oration, entitled “The Elevation of the Masses ," for the commencement ceremonies held June 29, 1876. Authoring an original speech was among the graduation requirements for Dickinson College seniors at that time. Transcript included.

Format: Speeches and Sermons

Location: OrationsX-1876-H496e

Subject: Education, Social Reform and Advocacy

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "The Elevation of the Masses," by John W. Henderson

June 29, 1876

F. Harry Hoffer prepared this oration, entitled “The Statesman and the Politician," for the commencement ceremonies held June 29, 1876. Authoring an original speech was among the graduation requirements for Dickinson College seniors at that time. Transcript included.

Format: Speeches and Sermons

Location: OrationsX-1876-H698s

Subject: Politics and Government

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: "The Statesman and the Politician," by F. Harry Hoffer

October 28, 1876

Naturalist and Smithsonian administrator Spencer Fullerton Baird writes to his colleague Charles Bell. Baird thanks Bell for his "assistance in securing for us the magnificent collection of mining materials in the Canadian exhibit" of the 1876 Centennial International Exhibition in Philadelphia. Baird also mentions that he has written to an unspecified Major Sibley to ask about the collection of silver ores.

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-1987-3

Subject: Education, Science and Technology

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Spencer Baird to Charles Bell

October 30, 1876

Naturalist and Smithsonian administrator Spencer Fullerton Baird writes to his colleague Charles Bell at the Canadian Geological Survey, following up on his previous letter. He writes to urge Bell "to press the matter to a decision on the subject of transfers to the Smithsonian as soon as possible."

Format: Letters/Correspondence

Location: I-Friends-1987-3

Subject: Education, Science and Technology

Time Period: 1860-1879

View Item: Letter from Spencer Baird to Charles Bell