Collections
Lectures from the 1930s, primarily by Charles F. Binns, about ceramics.
Early 20th century posters created by the American Humane Association to promote the “Be Kind to Animals” campaign.
Photograph of a school class taken in Bethpage, NY.
Photographs of schools and classrooms around Broome County.
Digitized copies of Chatham High School Commencement programs.
This collection contains documents written by students of the College of Saint Rose.
A collection of photographs represent graduating classes of Albany College of Pharmacy from the late nineteenth to the early-twentieth centuries.
This collection contains photographs sharing the history of Russell Sage College.
This collection contains images illustrating the rich history of Crandall Public Library (founded in 1892).
The collection documents General Electric's Americanization program, which existed from 1919 to 1931.
The Jessie Bonnie Monroe Fashion Illustration Collection includes sketches and newspaper clippings of fashion in the early twentieth century.
Materials, not including yearbooks, from Oneonta High School.
A collection of documents, photographs, books and pamphlets highlighting the development of public education in the Town of Bethlehem and the history of the Bethlehem Central School District.
Documents the history of Siena College in Loudonville, New York.
This collection contains a student notebook from Stephen Bastable, who graduated from the Syracuse University College of Medicine in 1941 and was an orthopedic surgeon.
This collection contains photographs and documents relating to noted Buffalo citizen Thomas B. Lockwood and the University at Buffalo Library dedicated to him.
Documents and images of the Town of Olive’s fifteen one-room school houses that were in use from 1817 until the early 1950’s.
Photographs, mementos, yearbooks and scrapbook pages from the VBH School of Nursing.
This collection includes drawings, photographs, and posters created for the WPA Federal Arts Project in the Rochester, New York region during the late 1930s.