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- William V.S. Tubman Papers, 1904-1992, LCP2005/014 and Endangered Archives Programme EAP 027108
- Indiana University War Service Register, 1920-1946, C502104
- Welles mss. 1930-1950, (Bulk 1936-1947), LMC 2009 80
- The A. Romeo Horton Collection, 1959-2007, LCP2012/03 62
- Indiana University President's Office records, 1937-1962, C21362
- Meier mss. 1927-2010, LMC 2653 56
- Union Board scrapbooks, 1932-201252
- Indiana University President's Office correspondence, 1913-1937, C28651
- Golden Family Collection, 1795-199650
- Liberian Government Archives II, 1911-1968, LCP2006/00347
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- IU Bloomington1,513
- World War II War Service Register,1942-1946, 104
- Subject files, 1937-1962, 62
- Scrapbooks,1932-2012, 52
- Subject files, 1913-1937, 51
- Executive , 1911-196847
- Manuscript Plays, 1837-1935, 42
- The Executive Branch Administrative Files, 41
- Bound Radio Scripts, 1938-1946, 40
- Correspondence39
- Radio, 39
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- Formerly in the collection of Sir Thomas Phillipps (an inscription on the first leaf reads "Phillipps ms. 699"). An inscription ("Fr. President Frost") on recto of the front flyleaf indicates that this volume was once owned by William Goodell Frost, the President of Berea College between 1890-1920. A note on the verso of the flyleaf additionally reads, "14th century manuscript from a monastery near Cologne, Germany. Purchased from Bull and Auvache, London, 1910." It seems likely that William Frost purchased this volume in 1910 and later donated it to Berea before or upon his death in 1938.1
- In the calendar, added obits of John and William Gurney (1479), of their brother Thomas Gurney (1479), and their father Thomas Gurney (1480), also of Dorothy Sankey (1493). Owned in 1570 by Thomas Sankey and circa 1600 by Robert Hewerdyne, of Broughton, Yorkshire. Thomas Pigott then owned the volume shortly thereafter. Bookseller catalogue note pasted to fol. 1v suggests that this volume was "rescued from obscurity" by Sir Robert Cotton, but this attribution has not been confirmed. Acquired by the Library of Congress in March of 1904 from Prof. William Kurrelmeyer, of Baltimore (Acquisition number 110133, Ms. Ac. 544). The College of Wooster obtained this manuscript by exchange in 1932 and accessioned it into their collection on Jan. 9, 1933. Thanks to Cynthia Turner Camp for her observations on the Feast of the Translation of St. Osmund.1
- Produced in Cordoba between 1561 and 1562. Inscription dated to 1789 of Carlos Rusconi Comisano de Gena on fol. 5v. Owned by N. Watts (Surrey, England) in 1985, as evidenced by his correspondence with the Victoria and Albert Museum in regards to this manuscript in December of 1985. Sold by Sotheby's on 8 July 2014, Lot 59.1
- The colophon on fol. 58r associates the volume with the Cistercian monastery of Santa Maria Vallis Serena, diocese of Parma, in Northern Italy, also called St. Martin at Valserena, founded in 1298. The scribe writes that the volume was produced at the request of Sigismund de Fulchinis, the monastery's tenth abbot, who was seated in 1457. The arms of the abbot (azure in a crescent argent a six-pointed star or, beneath a cross of the second) are found on fol. 1r. Sold by C. F. Libbie & Co., Boston, on 17 Nov. 1891 (n. 2021) on behalf of an unnamed Boston collector. This codex was donated to Ohio Wesleyan University by Frank W. Gunsaulus in 1916.1