Drexel
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Mary S. Irick Drexel scrapbook, 1917-1956

MC 41 Mary S. Irick Drexel scrapbook, 1917-1956, 1 volume

This scrapbook contains news clippings describing Mary S. Irick Drexel’s work as the Chairman of the Bureau of Canteen Service of the Pennsylvania-Delaware Division of the American Red Cross during World War I. read more >>>

Filed under: Manuscript Collections — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 3:24 pm


Pages from the past, 1491-1937

MC 37 Pages from the Past, 1491-1937, 24 items

24 Leaves issued as a set by Foliophiles Inc. [Washington, D.C.?] in 1964.

Finding Aid

Filed under: Manuscript Collections — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 2:26 pm


Men’s Basketball records

UR 7.3, Men’s Basketball records, 1895-2001,  3.33 cubic feet

The collection contains a large series of newspaper clippings related to men’s basketball dating from 1953 to 1988; game and player statistics dating as early as 1895 through 1990; series containing media guides, game programs, calendars, and other printed ephemera; and a small set of slides from circa 1997.  read more >>>

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 4:38 pm


Kathryn Musser Smith collection, 1914-1966

MC 43 Kathryn Musser Smith collection, 1914-1966, .25 linear feet

This collection contains the papers of Kathryn Musser Smith, 1916 graduate of the Drexel Institute.  The collection which ranges from 1914-1966 consists of ephemera generated during Smith’s tenure as a student and includes commencement programs, dance cards, class schedules and correspondence.  read more >>>

Filed under: Manuscript Collections — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 7:57 pm


Howard Pyle collection, 1894-1940

MC 4 Howard Pyle collection, 1894-1940, .25 linear feet

Howard Pyle, noted American illustrator, was an art instructor who headed the Drexel Institute’s School of Illustration from 1894 to 1900.  This collection contains correspondence and pamphlets documenting Howard Pyle’s time as an instructor in the school of illustration at Drexel.  read more >>>

Filed under: Manuscript Collections — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 2:52 pm


Drexel historical films, 1937-1991

UR 10.8 Drexel historical films, 1937-1991, 8 reels and 6 tapes

This collection consists of eight historical films documenting the students, campus, athletics, and activities of the Drexel Institute of Technology.  The films were transferred to four 3/4″ tapes and two VHS tapes.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 9:41 am


Library records, 1929-2002

UR 5.2 Library records, 1929-2002, 32.33 cubic feet

The library and reading room of the Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry opened in 1892 under the direction of librarian Alice B. Kroeger. The first library was housed in the Main Building and was also responsible for running the library school until 1962. A new library, later called the Korman Center, opened in 1959, but planning for another new library began shortly thereafter. The W. W. Hagerty Library opened in 1983. This two largest components of this collection are drafts of the library building program for the construction of Hagerty Library, 1970-1978, and annual reports from the library and its departments, 1964-1997. Other records include subject files compiled chiefly by library director Richard Snyder, staff meeting minutes, some correspondence, and pamphlets pertaining to library events and exhibits.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.  Because the collection may contain confidential information, portions are currently restricted pending review by the archivist. See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 6:04 pm


Early library records, 1891-1947

UR 5.1 Early library records, 1891-1947, 2.66 cubic feet

The library and reading room of the Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry opened in 1892 under the direction of librarian Alice B. Kroeger.  Within its first year of operation, it had built a collection of nearly eight thousand volumes, chiefly through gifts and donations from Anthony J. Drexel and his business partner, George W. Childs.  The Drexel Institute library was also responsible for running the library school, which by 1900 was enrolling twenty students per year.  This collection consists of the minutes of the Trustees’ Committee on the Library from 1892 to 1917; accession and inventory books listing items received and withdrawn from the collection, 1891-1947; library circulation statistics, 1891-1923, and card catalogs.  It also includes a brief series of correspondence by library director Anne Wallace Howland, 1923-1930.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 6:03 pm


Programs and invitations collection, 1892-1965 (bulk 1892-1915)

UR 4.1 Programs and invitations collection, 1892-1965 (bulk 1892-1915), 6.66 cubic feet

The collection consists of bound volumes and loose programs containing announcements, programs, and invitations to Drexel events.  The bulk of the events represented in the collection were sponsored by the Department of Free Public Lectures and Concerts, which served the school founder A.J. Drexel’s desire to “provide a liberal means of culture for the masses.”  Free lectures and concerts at the Drexel Institute began during the school’s first year of operation in 1892.  They were offered during the winter months and open to the general public until the abolishment of the department in 1915.  Other events were held by the Department of Fine and Applied Art, which was established in 1892; reached its zenith under the tenure of Howard Pyle, who headed its School of Illustration from 1894 through 1900; and was discontinued, with the exception of the course in architecture, in 1905.  The collection also contains programs of commencement ceremonies, the first of which was held in 1894; a program from the dedication of the institute in 1892; and invitations to an 1894 memorial service for institute founder Anthony J. Drexel.  Most of the programs date from the first twenty years of the operation of the institute, but the collection also contains a few programs and announcements from as late as the 1960s.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 5:56 pm


Nesbitt College of Design Arts records, 1894-1993

UR 4.9 Nesbitt College of Design Arts records, 1894-1993, 7 cubic feet

Includes records of:

  • Nesbitt College of Design, Nutrition, Human Behavior, and Home Economics
  • College of Home Economics
  • School of Home Economics
  • School of Domestic Science and Arts
  • Department of Domestic Science
  • Department of Domestic Arts
  • Department of Domestic Economy

The school that would eventually become Nesbitt College was present at Drexel when it opened in 1892, in the courses of study specifically intended for the education of women, such as cookery, millinery, dressmaking, and normal courses (teacher training) in each of these subjects.  The curriculum expanded over the years to include domestic science, home economics, dietetics, applied arts, textile merchandising, and hotel management.  The school went through many curriculum and name changes before becoming Nesbitt College of Design Arts in 1985.  The collection, which contains records dating as early as 1895, consists of reports, photographs, newspaper clippings, speeches, materials compiled about the history of the college, publications, and notebooks and recipe cards used during the early years of the college.

Finding Aid

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 5:46 pm


Graduate School of Library Science Placement Office alumni cards, 1895-1973

UR 4.8 Graduate School of Library Science Placement Office alumni cards, 1895-1973, 3 cubic feet

Drexel’s Graduate School of Library Science (later the College of Information Science and Technology) was founded as the Library and Reading Room during the Drexel Institute’s first year of operation in 1892.  It was closed by President Hollis Godfrey in 1914 and reopened as the School of Library Science in 1922.  This collection consists of two alphabetical sets of index cards containing information about graduates of the library school from the 1890s to the early 1970s.  Each card contains an alumnus’s address, initial job placement, and subsequent jobs held.  The cards are arranged in two alphabetical sets: one from 1895 to 1914, and the other from 1924 to 1973.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.  Because the collection may contain confidential information, portions are currently restricted pending review by the archivist.  See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 5:39 pm


College of Information Science and Technology records, 1892-2002

UR 4.10 College of Information Science and Technology records, 1892-2002, 16.33 cubic feet

Includes records of:

  • College of Information Studies
  • School of Library and Information Science
  • Graduate School of Library Science
  • School of Library Science
  • Library School
  • Library Department

What is now the College of Information Science and Technology (previously the Library and Reading Room, 1892-1914; School of Library Science, 1922-1954, Graduate School of Library Science, 1954-1978; School of Library and Information Science, 1978-1984; College of Information Studies, 1984-1995) was founded in 1892 when the Drexel Institute opened its doors.  This collection spans the entire history of the college, but the bulk of the material is administrative records (reports, faculty and staff meeting minutes, personnel files, grants, curriculum, etc.) dating mostly from the 1950s through the 1990s.  The collection also includes some student records; materials about specific deans, directors, and alumni; a series relating to the Rush Building; publications; publicity materials; photographs; and programs and memorabilia.  Some of the files contain letters by Guy Garrison, retired dean of the college, who was responsible for transferring the collection to the archives.

Finding Aid

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 5:36 pm


Commencement collection, 1894-2005

UR 6.9 Commencement collection, 1894-2005, 3.33 cubic feet

Drexel celebrated its first school-wide commencement in 1894.  The collection includes programs, invitations, correspondence, speeches, and rosters related to commencement ceremonies at Drexel University and its predescessor institutions.  Records are arranged chronologically by date.

This collection is partially processed.  A preliminary inventory list is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 11:55 pm


Tau Beta Pi Pennsylvania Zeta Chapter records, 1926-1987

UR 8.2 Tau Beta Pi Pennsylvania Zeta Chapter records, 1926-1987, 6 cubic feet

Tau Beta Pi, a national honorary fraternity for engineering students, was founded at Lehigh University in 1885.  Drexel’s chapter, the Pennsylvania Zeta chapter, was established in 1930.  This collection documents the chapter’s activities and members from its founding through 1987.  It includes administrative materials such as the Tau Beta Pi bylaws, the Pennsylvania Zeta chapter charter, and publications and catalogs from the national office.  The bulk of the collection consists of chronological files that document the year-by-year activities of Drexel’s chapter; these files contain correspondence, surveys submitted to the national office, and records of projects sponsored in that year.  In addition, there is a set of index cards listing the names of Tau Beta Pi members, as well as a few un-awarded membership certificates and keys.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 11:17 pm


Trustees’ Committee on Name alumni survey cards, 1934

UR 9.3 Trustees’ Committee on Name alumni survey cards, 1934, 1 cubic foot

When founded in 1891, what is now Drexel University was named the Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry.  In 1933, the administration began to consider a change of name to Drexel Institute of Technology.  A statement from A.J. Drexel Paul, then president of the Board of Trustees, states that “[t]he original name…was felt to be no longer accurate as a description of the fully accredited, professional college which Drexel has become in the last twenty years.  For this reason a strong desire became manifest for the adoption of a name of modern academic significance, which would indicate the present status of the education offered at Drexel.”  A trustees’ ad hoc committee was established to examine a possible name change, and in 1934 this committee conducted a survey of alumni and faculty asking whether they preferred the old name or a change to Drexel Institute of Technology.  According to Paul’s statement, “[t]he vote recorded a majority of more than three to one in favor of such a change on the part of both alumni and faculty.”  The name of the Institute was officially changed to Drexel Institute of Technology on March 30, 1936.  This collection consists of postcards containing the responses received from the alumni and faculty surveyed regarding the name change.  Each card contains an alumnus’s name and address and their preference of name.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 11:15 pm


Drexel Women’s Club records, 1927-1980

UR 8.1 Drexel Women’s Club records, 1927-1980, 5 cubic feet

The Drexel Women’s Club was founded in 1927 by the wife of Drexel’s president, Kenneth G. Matheson.  Membership was opened to female faculty and staff as well as the wives of faculty and administrators.  To fulfill its stated purpose of “promot[ing] good fellowship and to further the interests of the Institute in every way possible,” the Women’s Club began to offer student loans, scholarships, and awards.  In 1942, the club began to publish the Drexel News Letter, a publication sent to Drexel men serving in the armed forces during World War II, with news about happenings at Drexel and from its readers.  The Women’s Club has also sponsored card parties, plays, teas, and other benefit events such as fundraisers for its scholarship and loan funds.  Records in the collection include the club’s constitution, financial records, minutes, membership rosters, annual reports, subject files on events sponsored by the Women’s Club, newsletters, and a history of the club written in 1947.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory list is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Sieczkiewicz @ 11:11 pm


College of Engineering records, 1937-1979

UR 4.7 College of Engineering records, 1937-1979, 6.33 cubic feet

Three of the Drexel Institute’s original eleven departments taught programs that would eventually become part of Drexel’s early School of Engineering: the scientific department, the technical department, and the mechanic arts program.  In 1914, President Hollis Godfrey consolidated these departments into the School of Engineering, which was the first school at Drexel permitted to grant a four-year degree (in 1915), first to implement a cooperative education program (in 1919), and, later, first to extend the cooperative course from four years to five (in 1925).  In 1945, it became the College of Engineering.  The college offered its first graduate degrees in 1953.  It was briefly consolidated with the College of Science from 1964 to 1968, when it again became the College of Engineering.  The collection consists largely of annual reports submitted by the dean of the college to the president of Drexel, as well as manuscripts of annual reports.  It also includes the outgoing correspondence of college administrators and faculty members from 1967 to 1973, faculty and department head meeting minutes from 1937 to 1968, records on individual departments within the college, and other reports.

This collection is unprocessed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.  Because the collection may contain confidential information, portions are currently restricted pending review by the archivist.  See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 4:46 pm


College of Business and Administration records, 1934, 1966-1989

UR 4.11 College of Business and Administration records, 1934, 1966-1989, 1 cubic foot

The College of Business and Administration was established as the Business Department when the Drexel Insitute of Art, Science, and Industry.  The school was renamed the School of Business Administration in 1922 (later the College of Business Administration in 1945) and began granting bachelor’s degrees in 1923.  The MBA program was established in 1949.  The college was first accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) in 1966 (for its undergraduate program) and in 1976 (for its MBA).  A PhD program was launched in 1980. The bulk of this collection consists of the 1966 application for AACSB accreditation and reports prepared for reaccreditation in 1986.  It also includes an earlier AACSB application, annual reports from the dean to Drexel’s president from 1978 to 1981; a strategic plan from the 1980s; a report on the founding of the PhD program; and MBA and PhD curricular materials.

This collection is partially processed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.  Because the collection may contain confidential information, portions are currently restricted pending review by the archivist.  See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 4:41 pm


Financial records, 1892-2001

UR 3.4 Financial records, 1892-2001, 5 cubic feet

This collection consists of financial records, including ledgers, account books and account balance worksheets, year-to-year spending comparisons, and annual financial reports, found among the collection in the Drexel University Archives.  It includes ledgers dating from the founding of the Institute in 1892 through 1916.  The provenance of the collection is unknown, and information about the creation of these documents and their transfer to the archives is unavailable.

This collection is partially processed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 2:24 pm


Investment Committee records, 1924-1996

UR 2.2 Investment Committee records, 1924-1996, 1.42 cubic feet

Includes records of:

  • Finance Committee
  • Endowment Fund Trustees

The Drexel Institute’s first finance committee was established in 1891 as a standing committee of the Board of Managers, which merged with the Board of Trustees in 1894.  It appears to have been dissolved or become less active in the early 1920s.  In 1924, when the Institute initiated its first endowment campaign, a group called the “endowment fund trustees” was established to oversee the money raised during the campaign.  The endowment fund trustees stopped meeting in 1943, and a new finance committee took over its oversight of the endowment interest and principal.  The finance committee was renamed the investment committee in 1987.  This collection consists chiefly of the minutes of these committees from 1924 to 1995. A small series of administrative files is also included.

This collection is partially processed.  A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.  Because the collection may contain confidential information, portions are currently restricted pending review by the archivist.  See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.

Filed under: University Records — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Rebecca Goldman @ 1:37 pm


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