MS. Manuscript Collections
Found in 337 Collections and/or Records:
The Carl Hopkins Elmore Manuscript Collection
This collection includes biographical information, photographs, diary and sermon notebooks, sermons and talks, bulletins and directories, and miscellaneous materials, including Elmore's work "That Difficult Person, Myself." Also included are the papers of his wife Amelia Josephine Burr Elmore.
The Carl Robert Geider Manuscript Collection
This collection consists of notes from courses taken at Princeton Theological Seminary, 1954-57.
The Caspar Wistar Hodge Jr. Manuscript Collection
The Caspar Wistar Hodge Sr. Manuscript Collection
This collection includes sermons, course lectures, correspondence, and miscellaneous materials.
The Chalmers Martin Manuscript Collection
This collection consists of papers written while Martin was a student at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University).
The Charles and Margery Haines Collection
The collection is made up primarily of letters, photographs, and article excerpts focused on the Philadelphia, Chestnut Hill, and Germantown, PA, areas. Some letters cover Princeton, Connecticut, Michigan, California, Washington DC, Australia, South Africa, and China. The correspondence ranges from letters between friends to letters from President Ronald Reagan and Madame Chiang Kai-Shek.
The Charles Augustus Aiken Manuscript Collection
This collection documents Dr. Aiken's life and career from 1852 until his death in 1892. The bulk of the papers consist of lecture notes from his years at Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also contains notes taken during his 1852 trip to Germany, as well as other documents on various topics.
The Charles C. Cook Manuscript Collection
The Charles C. Niebuhr Manuscript Collection
This collection is a scrapbook of various newspaper articles, mostly concerning the Presbyterian Church and Princeton Theological Seminary and dating roughly from April, 1877 to October 1879. Also included is a “Syllabus of the Lectures for 1887 on the ‘L.P. Stone Foundation’ in the Princeton Theological Seminary by Rev. Alfred H. Kellogg, D.D.”