MC 46 Jacqueline C. Mancall papers, 1974-2003, 6 cubic feet
The Jacqueline C. Mancall papers consist primarily of speeches, publications, conference materials, and grant records projects from the career of a Drexel information science professor. read more >>>
UR 1.12 Assistant to the President patent records, 1966-1982, 2 Cubic feet
This collection consists of administrative files relating to both patents and the Patent Advisory Committee. It also contains a series of files on individual patent applications where ownership was considered by the Patent Advisory Committee. read more >>>
MC 13 Genevieve A. Shryock notebooks, 1910-1911, 6 volumes
The notebooks of library school student Genevieve Shryock contain class notes, class schedules, copies of exams and other examples of her academic work, as well as a few photographs.
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 >>>
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of the Trustees’ Committee on the Library from 1892 to 1917; accession and inventory books listing items received and withdrawn from the collection, 1891-1947; library circulation statistics, 1891-1923, and card catalogs.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.
UR 4.25 Dance Ensemble performance recordings and programs, 2004-2008, 0.33 cubic feet
The Drexel University Dance Ensemble, established in 1978, is a program of the Dance Department in the Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts and Design. Open to all Drexel students on the basis of a competitive audition, the ensemble presents biannual performances featuring choreography by students, faculty, and outside professionals and a variety of dance styles. This collection consists of DVD recordings and printed programs and postcards for the Drexel University Dance Ensemble’s biannual performances. Performances include student and professional dancers, musicians, and choreographers.
UR 4.24 Pennoni Honors College records, 1988-2008, 2.5 cubic feet
This collection consists primarily of photographs, publications and promotional materials, and news articles relating to the Pennoni Honors College. The largest series consists of the dean’s files (1993-2007), including newspapers, newsletters, invitations, and memos. Photos (1996-2004) are organized in one binder and one envelope; arrangement is unclear, possibly chronological. Other series include Honors Program/College committee meetings (1991-2005), Mentor’s Group (1988-1991), and Phi Kappa Phi. Finally, there are computer disks with contents to be determined.
This collection is partially processed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information. Portions of the collection are restricted because they contain confidential student and personnel records. See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.
UR 4.12 War courses for women collection, circa 1918, 1 folder
During World War I, the Drexel Institute undertook a number of efforts to prepare its graduates to serve the nation in wartime, including initiating programs to prepare women for government jobs. A new major in dietetics, begun in 1918, was the first in the nation to be recognized by the Army Medical Corps as preparation for government service. Likewise, the Secretarial School’s course for women was the first to be considered an official preparatory course for employment as a statistical secretary by the Federal Civil Service Commission. This collection consists of promotional brochures advertising wartime courses for women in dietetics and commerce, as well as posters outlining the courses of study, requirements, and curricula.
This collection is partially processed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.
UR 4.4 Social Sciences Department Chairman records, 1964-1975, 2 cubic feet
The Department of Social Sciences became part of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences when the college was established in 1970. Prior to 1970, the department had been a sponsor of the Humanities and Technology Program, an undergraduate honors program with a flexible, interdisciplinary curriculum. Stanley Wasson joined the faculty as an associate professor of history in 1960, became the chair of the department of social sciences in 1968, and served as chairman until 1975. The collection consists of correspondence between the department chairman and faculty; minutes of department meetings; financial records; files on scheduling and testing; and a set of records of the Humanities and Technology Program.
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.
UR 4.6 Department of Performing Arts records, 1940-1990, 1 cubic foot
The performing arts at Drexel date back to 1892, when Drexel offered its auditorium as a rehearsal space for the Philadelphia Chorus. The chorus was dissolved in the next year, and the Drexel Chorus was formed to replace it. In 1897 Drexel formalized its choral music program by establishing a department that would later be called the Department of Evening Classes in Choral Music. The department was abolished in 1909, but students continued to organize their own performing ensembles. In 1942, Wallace D. Heaton, Jr., was appointed music director at Drexel, and over the next thirty-seven years he established the Department of Music and revitalized choral music at Drexel. Clyde Shive joined the faculty as a professor for instrumental music and as the university organist in 1955. A student dance ensemble was established in 1978. The music department became the Department of Performing Arts when the College of Humanities and Social Sciences was founded in 1984. More recently, the department has begun to offer a major in music industry and minors in dance, music, and theater, as well as sponsoring the dance ensemble and a number of vocal and instrumental music groups. This collection consists of concert and recital programs, photographs, promotional materials, newspaper clippings, and correspondence related to concerts, tours, and festivals organized by the Department of Performing Arts and its predecessor, the Department of Music.
UR 4.15 Nesbitt College of Design Arts Honors Day programs, 1968-1997, 0.33 cubic feet
Honors Day is an annual event sponsored by several of Drexel’s colleges and schools to recognize students for high academic performance. This collection consists chiefly of programs from Nesbitt College’s Honors Day ceremonies from 1970 to 1997. The programs list academic award recipients, members of honor societies such as Omicron Nu and Phi Kappa Phi, and Dean’s List members. The collection also includes a list of Dean’s List members from the College of Home Economics from 1968.
This collection is partially processed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.
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.
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.
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.
UR 4.2 Evening College records, 1948-1987, 29 cubic feet
The Evening School was one of the original departments established at the Drexel Institute during the first year of classes in 1892. It offered purely technical, non-degree courses of study until 1950, when the Evening College earned accreditation to grant the B.S. degree. The Evening College’s name was changed to University College in 1993, and it was briefly discontinued in 1993, when its programs were transferred to the College of Arts and Sciences. The Evening College was re-established in 1997 as the College of Evening and Professional Studies. The bulk of the collection comprises annual reports submitted to Drexel’s president by the dean of the Evening College, detailing the activities and accomplishments of each academic year from approximately 1950 to 1986. The collection also contains a few other reports on topics such as student employment; a brief series of faculty meeting minutes from the 1930s and 1940s; lists of faculty and personnel directories; subject files; and faculty guides.
This collection is partially processed. A preliminary inventory and partial folder list 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.
UR 4.5 Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics records, 1973-1997, 3 cubic feet
The department of mechanical engineering began granting degrees in 1914. Its first department head, J. Harland Billings, was appointed in 1918. It became the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics in 1975. The collection includes correspondence, faculty meeting minutes, brochures detailing policies and guidelines for students, and a brief set of event files. A large portion of the collection consists of personnel records of department staff.
The collection is unprocessed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information. Portions of the collection containing student and personnel records are closed to researchers. See the university archives’ policy on access to records for further information.
UR 6.13 Civil and Architectural Engineering senior design project reports, 2002, 2 cubic feet
This is a collection of final reports submitted by students in CAE 493, the final course of a three-course senior project sequence in the Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering. The reports simulate engineering design proposals for construction projects, such as the construction of a new dormitory for Drexel, a new passenger rail line between the Philadelphia Airport and the Delaware River waterfront, and the renovation of a bridge on highway I-95.
This collection is unprocessed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist at archives@drexel.edu for more information.
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.
UR 9.1 Middle States Association accreditation records, 1953-1990, 4 cubic feet
The Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools certifies educational institutions to grant degrees and diplomas. The collection consists of preliminary and final reports to the Middle States Association; research materials gathered in the preparation of these reports; and the records of the working groups established during the self-study. The bulk of the records are from the re-accreditation that took place during the 1990s.
This collection is unprocessed. A preliminary inventory is available in the archives; contact the archivist atarchives@drexel.edufor 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 recordsfor further information.
UR 4.3 Dean of the College of Engineering records, 1954-1969, 6 cubic feet
LeRoy A. Brothers was dean of the College of Engineering from 1958 to 1970. Born in Wilmington, North Carolina, he studied civil engineering at North Carolina State College and joined Drexel’s faculty as a professor of civil engineering in 1927. He left Drexel in 1942 to serve in the U. S. Air Force, and in 1944 he became chief of operations analysis for the war in south and east Asia. He left Drexel altogether in 1945, and in 1946 he became Assistant for Operations at the U. S. Air Force headquarters in Washington. After returning to Drexel as dean in 1958, he served briefly as acting dean of faculty in 1961 and 1962. The bulk of the records in the collection are files on academic departments and committees documenting the administration of the College of Engineering and Science from 1961 to 1965. One box of material consists entirely of records of the American Society for Engineering Education’s (ASEA) Engineering College Administrative Council (ECAC) Committee for the Analysis of Engineering Enrollment.
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.