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<eadid>5016bran</eadid>
<filedesc>
<titlestmt>
<titleproper>An Inventory of the Branson-Jackson Family Papers, 1794-1962</titleproper>
<author>Finding Aid Prepared by FHL staff</author>
<sponsor>Encoding made possible by a grant by the Gladys Kriebel Delmas Foundation to the Philadelphia Consortium of Special Collections Libraries</sponsor> 
</titlestmt>
<publicationstmt>
<publisher>Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College.</publisher>
<date>1990</date>
</publicationstmt>
</filedesc>
<profiledesc>
<creation>Text converted and initial EAD tagging provided by Apex Data Services, <date>December 2000.</date></creation>
<langusage>ENG</langusage>
</profiledesc>
</eadheader>
<frontmatter>
<titlepage>
<titleproper>Branson-Jackson Family Papers, 1794-1962</titleproper>
<author>FHL staff</author>
<publisher>Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College.</publisher>
<date>1990</date>
</titlepage>
</frontmatter>
<archdesc level="collection">
<did>
<head>Descriptive Summary</head>
<unittitle label="Title">Branson-Jackson Family Papers, <unitdate type="inclusive">1794-1962</unitdate></unittitle>
<unitid label="ID">RG 5/016</unitid>
<origination label="Creator">
<persname>Anna J. (Anna Jackson) Theiss</persname>
</origination>
<physdesc label="Extent">8 boxes; 4 linear ft.</physdesc>
<repository label="Repository">
Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College.
<address>
<addressline>Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 19081-1399 U.S.A.</addressline>
</address>
</repository>
<physloc label="Location">For current information on the location of materials, please consult the Library's online catalog.</physloc>
<abstract label="Abstract">
Anna M. Jackson and her daughter, Anna M. (Jackson Branson) Theiss, were Quaker activists in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Anna M. Jackson was very involved in reform activities in New York City. She served as Chairman of the Women's Prison Reform Committee, and was also involved in the Women's Municipal League and the Political Study Club. Her daughter, Anna Morris Jackson, attended Swarthmore College for two years, and in 1909 earned a B.S. in Education from Columbia University. Anna was involved in Green Street Monthly Meeting, Friends General Conference, and helped to organize the Inter-Racial Committee of Philadelphia. The collection contains correspondence, journals, and memorabilia. It also includes related materials of the Davis, Price, Jackson, and Fox families, as well as some correspondence. There are significant materials relating to prison reform, women's suffrage, peace, and equal rights for African-Americans in New York City in the late 19th century, Quaker activities throughout the period, the Schofield Normal and Industrial School in the late 19th century, and Swarthmore College in the 1890's and the 1930's.
</abstract>
<note>
<p><emph render="bold">Repository:</emph></p>
<p>Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College</p>
<p>500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399</p>
<p>Phone: (610) 328-8496 FAX: (610) 690-5728</p>
</note>
</did>
<bioghist>
<head>BIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL NOTE</head>
<p></p>
<p><emph render="bold">Anna Margaret “Nan” Davis</emph></p>
<p>Anna Margaret “Nan” Davis was the daughter of David H. Davis, a New York textile merchant, and Susan (Price) Davis. Her father's sister, Elizabeth Ann, married the architect, William Eyre, and her mother's father, Ichabod Price, was a prominent New York City hatter. Anna M. Davis was born on May 15, 1848, in Greenwich Village and graduated from New York Friends Seminary in 1864. In 1869, she married William Morris Jackson, who had been a teacher at that school, and they moved to Richmond, Indiana, where Jackson was appointed Principal of Friends Academy. Seven years later they returned to New York City when William Jackson decided to leave teaching as a career and joined his bother, Edwin Atlee Jackson, in partnership in the family business of manufacturing fireplace accessories.</p>
<p>Anna Margaret Jackson was deeply involved in reform activities in New York City. She served as Chairman of the Women's Prison Reform Committee and was involved with the Woman's Municipal League of the City of New York. She was on the Boards of the Colored Orphan Asylum in New York City and of the Schofield Normal and Industrial School from before 1902 until her death in 1920. Both she and her husband served as Delegates to the Parliament of Religions held in Chicago in 1893 and to the World's Peace Conference held in Cleveland. She was a Charter member of the Political Study Club of New York. She became involved in the Young Friends Aid Association after her sister's death, was active in the Friends Temperance Union, and was on the Peace Committee of New York Yearly Meeting. She attended the First Day School General Conference in Yarmouth, Ontario, in 1888, and from that time until her death continued to attend and work toward development and improvement of what became the Friends General Conferences.</p>
<p>The bulk of her correspondence in this collection involves prison reform for women and includes letters from other prominent female reformers as well as prison and municipal officials.</p>
<p><emph render="bold">William M. Jackson</emph></p>
<p>William M. Jackson (1937-1919) was the son of James M. and Mary Ann (King) Jackson of Philadelphia and later of Richland, Pennsylvania. He served on the Board of Managers of Swarthmore College from 1887 until his death in 1906 and on the Board of Schofield Normal and Industrial School from 1887 or 1888 until after 1892. He was also a member of the Board of Trustees of Friends Seminary in New York.</p>
<p><emph render="bold">Anna Morris Jackson Branson Theiss</emph></p>
<p>Anna Morris Jackson, nicknamed “Pansy,” was born in New York City on Dec. 27, 1881, the youngest child of William Morris and Anna Margaret Jackson. Although she was not a birthright Quaker because her mother did not join Friends until 1890, her name was entered into the rolls of New York Monthly Meeting soon after her birth in 1882. She attended Friends Seminary, the Chappaqua Mountain Institute, and then Swarthmore College for two years. At the latter she was a member of Pi Beta Phi, the Joseph Leidy Scientific Society, and the Somerville Literary Society, but left in 1902 after a nervous breakdown. In 1909, she earned a B.S. in Education from Columbia University. After graduation she went on to establish a domestic science Department in the Mt. Vernon, New York, public schools and taught at Butler High School in New Jersey.
</p>
<p>Anna Morris Jackson married Charles Fox Branson, the son of Lindley M. Branson and Anna Miller (Fox) of Cadiz, Ohio, at the Friends Meeting house in New York City on 4mo 30 1910. Their daughter, Anna Florence, was born in Pittsburgh in 1913, and son, Charles F. Jr., in Cleveland in 1916; the latter died within a month of his birth. The Bransons remained in Ohio and Western Pennsylvania until the early 1920's; in 1922, Anna M. Branson was received on certificate from New York Monthly Meeting (she never transferred her membership to Ohio) by Green Street Monthly Meeting in Philadelphia, and her husband was received by Green Street from Short Creek Monthly Meeting in 1924. She attended Summer School at Pendle Hill in 1935. Some time in the 1930's, Charles F. Branson moved to California where he died in 1945. The couple was divorced in 1939, and she remarried Dr. Lewis E. Theiss, head of the Department of Journalism at Bucknell University, on June 9, 1939. She transferred her membership from Green Street to Millville Monthly Meeting in 1944.</p>
<p>Anna Branson Theiss helped to organize the Inter-Racial Committee of Philadelphia and chaired it for three years. This bi-racial group included Leslie Pinckney Hill, Hannah Clothier Hull, and other religious, educational, and civic leaders; its stated purpose was to establish “contacts and [to] educat[e] each race in the viewpoint of the other.” At this time, Anna was Chairman of the Division of Work Among Colored People for Friends General Conference (1922). Her activities within the Society of Friends were extensive. In 1920, she attended the first All Friends Conference in London. She served as Chairman of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Committee on the Interests of the Colored Race (1925-29) and was the first Chairman of the Intervisitation Committee of the Fellowship Council of AFSC (1936-39?), working to accommodate visitors at the Second World Conference at Swarthmore and Haverford Colleges in 1937. She also was Chairman of the Epistle Committee for several years and Assistant Clerk of Ministry and Counsel of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. On a local level, Anna was the Clerk of Ministry and Council for Green Street Monthly Meeting from 1925-28, and also worked as Secretary of the Monthly Meeting until her resignation in 1939. She served on the Executive Board of the Friends Historical Society when Francis Taylor was President and was a Trustee of Schofield Normal and Industrial School for several years.</p>
<p>She remained deeply interested in the spiritual approach to life, and many of her writings reflect this concern. She was a contributor to the Friends Intelligencer and served as one of its editors. In her early married life she lectured on domestic science subjects for the State of Ohio, and after moving to Germantown gave talks to Quaker groups and Women's clubs.</p>
<p>She was President of the Alpha province of Pi Beta Phi, and later served as Vice President of the general fraternity as well as treasurer of its settlement school fund. She was corresponding secretary of the New Century Club of Philadelphia, served on the board of the local YWCA, was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and was one of the founders of the Lewisburg Chapter of the Daughters of American Colonists. She was also active in the affairs of the Lewisburg Civic Club.
</p>
<p><emph render="bold">Anna Florence Branson Boardman</emph></p>
<p>Charles F. and Anna Branson's only daughter, Anna Florence, graduated from Friends Central School in 1931 and attended Swarthmore College from 1931-1935. She graduated with an A.B. in June 1935, and married classmate, Myron Lewis Boardman in 1936 at Green Street Monthly Meeting in Germantown. They had two children, Thomas and Jean. Myron worked for Prentice-Hall as an Editor. Anna Florence and her husband spent the last years of their lives working for the Institute for Christian Living in Pawling, New York, and were members of Housatonic (Connecticut) Meeting.</p>
</bioghist>
<scopecontent>
<head>SCOPE AND CONTENT OF THE RECORDS</head>
<p>This collection consists primarily of the correspondence, journals, and memorabilia of Anna Margaret (Davis) Jackson (1848-1920) and her daughter, Anna Morris (Jackson) Branson Theiss (1881-1960), Quaker activists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It also includes related materials of the Davis, Price, Jackson, and Fox families as well as some correspondence of William M. Jackson and memorabilia of Anna Florence (Branson) Boardman, and Myron Lewis Boardman. There are significant materials relating to prison reform, women's suffrage, peace, and equal rights for black Americans in New York City in the late 19th century, Quaker activities throughout the period, the Schofield Normal and Industrial School in the late 19th century, and Swarthmore College in the 1890's and 1930's. Correspondents include Mrs. Sarah J. Bird, Samuel J. Barrows, Kate Bond, Joel Bean, Elizabeth Powell Bond, William W. Birdsall, Cornelia Bowen, George Gordon Bennett, Harriet Stanton Blaton, Antoinette Blackwell, Ellen Collins, Susan J. Cunningham, Isaac Clothier, Anna J. Cooper, Grace H. Dodge, W.E.B. DuBois, Phebe A. Hanaford, Cornelia Hancock, Josephine Shaw Lowell, Jacob A. Riis, Belle deRivera, Theodore Roosevelt (as New York Police Commissioner and President), Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Margaret Schofield, Fanny G. Villard, Stephen Samuel Wise, Booker T. Washington, Rosalie Loew Whitney, and Alice L. Woodbridge.</p>
</scopecontent>
<arrangement>
<head>Arrangement</head>
<p>The collection is divided into four series:</p>
<list type="ordered">
<item>Genealogical and biographical materials</item>
<item>Anna Margaret (Davis) Jackson</item>
<item>Anna Morris (Jackson) Branson Theiss</item>
<item>Anna Florence (Branson) Boardman</item>
</list>
</arrangement>
<descgrp>
<head>ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION</head>
<acqinfo>
<head>Accession information</head>
<p>Donor: Jean Boardman</p>
<p>Date: 1990</p>
</acqinfo>
<acqinfo>
<head>Provenance</head>
<p>This collection was given to Friends Historical Library by Jean Boardman, the granddaughter of Anna Morris (Jackson) Branson Theiss.</p>
</acqinfo>
<accessrestrict>
<head>Access</head>
<p>Collection is open for research.</p>
</accessrestrict>
<userestrict>
<head>Use Restrictions</head>
<p>Copyright has not been assigned to Friends Historical Library All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in to the Director. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Friends Historical Library as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by reader.</p>
</userestrict>
<prefercite>
<head>Preferred Citation</head>
<p>[Indicate the cited item or series here], Branson-Jackson Family Papers, RG5/016, Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College</p>
</prefercite>
<processinfo>
<head>Processing information</head>
<p>There was little indication of the original order of the documents as received, except for the alphabetical arrangement of the non-familial correspondence (received), now in Series 2, and for a group of chronologically arranged scrapbooks which were assembled and annotated by Anna Theiss for Anne Boardman, starting in 1945. Some of these scrapbooks were bound, and others consisted of loose pages which were scattered throughout the collection. All of the scrapbooks have been dissembled and their contents re-sorted chronologically by decade in Series 3. Correspondence indicates that Anna Theiss sold some of her mother's letters to autograph dealers in the 1947.</p>
<p>Fumigated, catalogued, re-foldered, and placed in RG5 by FHL staff.</p>
</processinfo>
<separatedmaterial>
<p>The following materials were removed from the collection and filed in Oversize:</p>
<list type="simple">
<item>
Chart of Fox family.
</item>
<item>
Price Family silhouettes, diploma (1864), marriage certificates (1827, 1844).
</item>
<item>
Branson-Fox family (reunion), FGC (1925).
</item>
<item>
Diplomas (1931 (2), 1935 (2), certificates (1952).
</item>
</list>
</separatedmaterial>
</descgrp>
<controlaccess>
<head>SELECTED SEARCH TERMS
Materials catalogued separately</head>
<p>This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Friends Historical Library (TRIPOD). Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings:</p>

<subject encodinganalog="650">
Woman's Municipal League (New York, N. Y.)
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Schofield Normal and Industrial School (Aiken, S. C.)
</subject>
<corpname encodinganalog="710">
Swarthmore College
</corpname>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Prison reformers
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Social reformers
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Charities -- New York (N. Y.)
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Women and Peace
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Quakers -- New York (N. Y.)
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Quaker women
</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="650">
Women, Quaker
</subject>
<famname encodinganalog="600">
Branson family
</famname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Riis, Jacob A. (Jacob August), 1849-1914
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Jackson, William M. (William Morris), 1837-1919
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Jackson, Anna M. (Anna Margaret), 1848-1920
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Theiss, Anna J. (Anna Jackson), 1881-1960
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Boardman, Anna Florence, 1913-1978
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Hancock, Cornelia, 1840-1927
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Dodge, Grace H. (Grace Hoadley), 1856-1914
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Collins, Ellen, 1828-1927
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Bean, Joel, 1825-1914
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Barrows, Samuel J. (Samuel June), 1845-1909
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Hanaford, Phebe A. (Phebe Ann), 1829-1921
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Blatch, Harriot Stanton, 1856-1940
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa Brown, 1825-1921
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Cooper, Anna J. (Anna Julia), 1858-1964
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Wise, Stephen Samuel, 1874-1949
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Villard, Fanny Garrison, 1844-1928
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="700">
de Rivera, Belle, 1848-1943
</persname>
</controlaccess>
<dsc type="in-depth">
<head>DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE RECORDS</head>
<note>
<p>Note to Researchers: To request materials, please note both the location and box numbers shown below:</p>
</note>	
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>Ser. 1. Genealogical and Biographical Materials, 1903-1910, n.d.</unittitle>
</did>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Genealogical Notes <unitdate>1903-1910 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">1</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Contains material on the Cooper, Miller, Day, Branson, Balderston, and Fox families. See also: Oversize. Chart of Fox family.</p></scopecontent>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>Ser. 2. Anna Margaret (Davis) Jackson, 1848-1920</unittitle>
</did>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Correspondence, 1839-1919</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Anna M. Jackson correspondence, 1978-1919</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Sent, General <unitdate>1878</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">1</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Received, General <unitdate>1891-1919</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">1</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Alphabetically arranged. 
Primarily correspondence regarding reform activities in New York City. Includes letters from John Ashworth, Mrs. Sarah J. Bird, Samuel J. Barrows, Kate Bond, Joel Bean, Elizabeth Powell Bond, William W. Birdsall, Cornelia Bowen, George Gorden Bennett, Antoinette Blackwell, Harriet Stanton Blaton, Aaron Chadwick, Ellen Collins, Susan J. Cunningham, Isaac Clothier, Carrie Chapman Catt, Anna J. Cooper, Belle de Rivera, W.E.B. DuBois, Grace H. Dodge, David Ferris, Charles P. Fagnani, William Foulke, Clark B. Firestone, Helen Hoy Greeley, Elizabeth B. Grannis, Phebe Hanaford, Cornelia Hancock, S.B. Hambleton, Thomas A. Jenkins, Robert M. Janney, Josephine Shaw Lowell, Maud Nathan, Mary W. Plummer, Jacob A. Riis, Theodore Roosevelt, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Martha Schofield, Anna Garlin Spencer, Fanny G. Willard, Armayis P. Vartooguian, Stephen Samuel Wise, Booker T. Washington, Rosalie Loew Whitney, Alice L. Woodbridge, and police and New York government officials. Also includes some correspondence between third parties which AMJ had in her possession.
</p>
</scopecontent>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Libbie Lefetra, sent <unitdate>1865</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>William Morris Jackson correspondence, 1867-1918</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Sent, 1869-1915:</unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1869 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Anna M. Jackson (daughter)<unitdate>1900-1915</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Sarah F. Green (sister)<unitdate>1867-1882</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To James M. &amp; Mary Ann Jackson (parents)<unitdate>1865-1877</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Florence L. Jackson (daughter) <unitdate>1867 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Anna M Jackson (wife)<unitdate>1869-96 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To family members <unitdate>1900</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Written while on Caribbean cruise with Florence.</p></scopecontent>
</c05>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Received, 1867-1918:</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1867-1919</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>From Arthur Reeves (Jerusalem) <unitdate>1872</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>From William &amp; Lida Hutchinson <unitdate>1918 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>William Walter Jackson, received <unitdate>1900-1914</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>William &amp; Elizabeth Ann Eyre, sent <unitdate>1864-72</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>A.R. Eyre, sent <unitdate>1876-93</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>David H. Davis, 1843-1866</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Sent, 1843-1864</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Susan M. Davis (wife) <unitdate>1843-59</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Anna M. Jackson (daughter) <unitdate>1854-64</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1859</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Received, 1847-1866</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>From Johanna H. Davis <unitdate>1847-49</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1850-66</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Susan M. Davis, 1839-1976</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Sent, 1864-1876</unittitle>
</did>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To Susan Price (mother) <unitdate>1869 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>To David H. Davis (husband) <unitdate>1866</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
<c05>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1864-76</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c05>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Received <unitdate>1839-70</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Ichabod Price, sent to Susan M. Davis (daughter) <unitdate>1858</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Mary E. Davis, received &amp; sent <unitdate>1866-78</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Mary Ann Jackson, received and sent</unittitle>
<unitdate>1877, 1887, n.d.</unitdate>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Unidentified <unitdate>1889</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Journals and Other Writings, 1841-1920, n.d.</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Anna M. Jackson, 1894-1920</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Minutes, Prison Reform Committee, New York Monthly Meeting <unitdate>1894-1900</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>2 vols.</physdesc>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Probably personal record of AMJ. Includes miscellaneous reports, 1894-99 and AMJ notes on correspondence, 1900-03.</p></scopecontent>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Daily Calendars <unitdate>1918-1920</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>3 vols.</physdesc>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“The Race Problem in the United States,” Friends Conference, Toronto <unitdate>1904</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">2</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Wm. M. Jackson, 1894-1919, n.d.</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Daily Calendars <unitdate>1917-19</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>3 vols.</physdesc>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Autobiographical notes <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>"Whittier's Religious Character" <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
<physdesc>ms</physdesc>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“The Light Universal,” Young-Friends Review <unitdate>3mo 1 1894 </unitdate>
</unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>"Should Quakerism Be taught in Our First Day Schools?” <unitdate>n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>offprint</physdesc>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>"Duties of the Society of Friends” <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>offprint</physdesc>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>"The Present activity of the Religious World in the Direction of Liberal Thought and the Relation of the Society of Friends thereto” <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
<physdesc>ms</physdesc>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“The Higher Criticism and the Relation of its Results to Quakerism” <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>typescript and mss.</physdesc>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>
"The Relation of Spiritual Culture and Devotion to Moral Progress,” <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>typescript</physdesc>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>"Character Building”<unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
<physdesc>typescript</physdesc>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Susan M. Davis, Poetry &amp; essays <unitdate>1841-44</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>mss.</physdesc>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes original work and copies.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Unidentified</unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Poetry <unitdate>1858-66 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Biblical research <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Business and Property, 1794-1879</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Jackson Family, 1823-1871</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Agreement between Peter Jackson and James M. Jackson to carry on a grate and fender business in Philadelphia</unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Receipt for Farm Work <unitdate>1871</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Davis Family, 1865-1879</unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Receipts for Anna M. Davis schooling <unitdate>1857</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Receipts for Mary E. Davis <unitdate>1865-1879</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Income for David H. Davis<unitdate>1865, 1866</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Receipt, S. Price <unitdate>1870</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Green Family, 1794-1849</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Business correspondence, bills, and authorization as Postmaster <unitdate>1823-49</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container></did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>William Green, Administration of Joseph Minchinger's Estate <unitdate>1794-1839</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Memorabilia, 1809-1915</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Wm. M. and Anna M. Jackson, 1847-1912, n.d.</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>General Memorabilia <unitdate>1847-1912 &amp; n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Includes clippings, school catalogues, brochures and handouts, etc</p></scopecontent>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Embroidery, Anna M. Davis <unitdate>1857, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Price Family, 19th c.</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook of mounted clippings of poetry and prose<unitdate>19th c.</unitdate> </unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Includes documents relating to the military service of Ichabod Price 1809-1915</p></scopecontent>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Unidentified memorabilia<unitdate>1847-1865, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook</unittitle>
<container type="box">3</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>See also: Oversize. Price Family silhouettes, diploma (1864), marriage certificates (1827, 1844).</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>Ser. 3. Anna Morris (Jackson) Branson Theiss (1881-1960); 1844-1960</unittitle>
</did>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Correspondence, Anna Morris Theiss, 1887-1958</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Sent, 1909-1944</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>To Family <unitdate>1925-44</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>To Charles Branson <unitdate>1909</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Received, 1887-1958</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>From Lewis Theiss <unitdate>1944 &amp; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>From Martha Schofield <unitdate>1887</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>General <unitdate>1909-1958</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Journals and Other Writings, 1912-1950, n.d.</unittitle>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>See also series 5.</p></scopecontent>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Anna J. Branson Theiss</unittitle>
</did>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Appointment Diary <unitdate>1912</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Lectures and Speeches <unitdate>1912-43, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Includes notes and announcements</p></scopecontent>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Published articles <unitdate>1922-26, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“Domestic Science"<unitdate>ca. 1912</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“Henry Adams"<unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>“Have You a Friend Going Abroad"<unitdate>ca. 1933</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>[I am Glad...] <unitdate>1916</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>[Anything Worth Anything...] <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Miscellaneous Notes, mostly on religious topics <unitdate>n.d. </unitdate><unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc>6 notebooks</physdesc>
<container type="box">4</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Note Cards <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c04>
<c04>
<did>
<unittitle>Poetry <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c04>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Lewis E. Theiss. Ms. speeches and articles<unitdate>1950, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Business and Property, 1844-1959</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Fox Family <unitdate>1838-75. </unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
<scopecontent><p>Miscellaneous property agreements and papers concerning Josiah and Charles J. Fox of Harrison County, Ohio</p></scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Estates of Emma Green, Ella L. Burdge, and Lucretia Dunn <unitdate>1913-1956</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Philadelphia Properties <unitdate>1930-36</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>30 Beekman Street, NYC (Jackson Estate) <unitdate>1921-31</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Cadiz Mining Company/Ohio-Pennsylvania Properties <unitdate>1844-1930</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Miscellaneous Financial Papers <unitdate>1914-1959</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbooks, 1902-1959</unittitle>
<container type="box">5</container>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1902-1909</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">6</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes Phi Beta Phi, Somerville Day and other Swarthmore College memorabilia, Columbia University, Friends Summer
School (at SC), correspondence concerning teaching at Mt. Vernon, as well as dance cards, playbills, receipts, and photographs. Note: typewritten instructions for speakers (suffrage).</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1910-1919</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">6</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes playbills, Phi Beta Phi, Somerville, lectures on Domestic Science for Farmers Institutes and other groups in Ohio, a small account book, and other ephemera.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1920-1929</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">6</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes memorabilia and correspondence of the Fellowship Council, Committee on the Interests of the Colored Race (1925), Ministry &amp; Council, New Century Club, Friends Sesqui-Centennial Commission, Inter-Racial Committee of the City of Philadelphia as well as original mss poetry, clippings of published articles, and photographs.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1930-1939</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes material on Green Street Monthly Meeting, many lectures, peace rallies, Friends World Conference, European trip, Fellowship Council, notice of divorce, and re-marriage.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1940-1949</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes information on Bucknell NAACP, Fellowship Council, lectures, and Lewisburg clubs</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Scrapbook<unitdate>1950-1959</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>Includes clippings on other memorabilia of Lewisburg clubs.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Other Memorabilia, 1898-1960, n.d.</unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>“My Wedding Presents"<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
<physdesc>notebook</physdesc>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Notes on European Trip  <unitdate>1931</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">7</container>
<physdesc>notebook</physdesc>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Swarthmore College <unitdate>1898-57</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>New Century Club <unitdate>1910-29</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Quaker Activities <unitdate>1938-49, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Genealogical Memorabilia <unitdate>1898</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Miscellaneous Memorabilia <unitdate>1910-60, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Photographs <unitdate>1895-1936, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>See also: Oversize. Branson-Fox family (reunion), FGC (1925).</p>
</scopecontent>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle>Ser. 4. Anna Florence (Branson) Boardman (1913-1978); 1924-1962</unittitle>
</did>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Correspondence, 1926-47</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Received by Myron Boardman <unitdate>1935-47</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Received by Anna F. Boardman <unitdate>1926-35, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Memorabilia, 1924-62</unittitle>
</did>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Friends Central School <unitdate>1928-35</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Swarthmore College <unitdate>1931-38. </unitdate>Includes correspondence, bills, student papers, and ephemera</unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Anna F. Boardman <unitdate>1931-38, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Myron L. Boardman <unitdate>1931-35</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Miscellaneous <unitdate>1924-1962</unitdate></unittitle>
<container type="box">8</container>
</did>
<scopecontent>
<p>See also: Oversize. Diplomas (1931 (2), 1935 (2), certificates (1952).</p>
</scopecontent>
</c03>
</c02>
</c01>
</dsc>
</archdesc>
</ead>
