Collections
Papers of Dr. Albert Leffingwell, including diaries, letters, and manuscripts from the 19th and 20th centuries.
Personal, and professional photographs and documents related to Anna Mogilova Reinstein
Materials relating to John and Margaret Bard and Reverend James Starr Clark, which illustrate the beginnings of St. Stephen's College, Trinity Church and School, and Trinity Academy.
Letters, deeds, and other materials related to the Bard family.
Personal, professional and political items related to Boris Isaevich Reinstein
Student essays detailing Brentwood’s History.
Church Records: St. Mary of the Assumption R.C. Church (a k.a. St.
This collection contains the diary and correspondence of Cephas Breed, who graduated from Geneva Medical College in 1850.
Charles Rand Penney was a prominent collector. The Charles Rand Penney Trail unites his collections of Pan-American Exposition souvenirs, Papua New Guinea artifacts, Niagara County historical items, Larkin Company ephemera, and Niagara Falls artwork.
Diary of Christine Ladd-Franklin, Vassar College Class of 1869, and noted mathematician and logician.
This collection consists of letters and a journal written by Charles F. Weller during his time as a soldier in the United States Civil War.
Research by Freeport Village historian Clinton E. Metz
The Anonymous Collection consists of various papers related to voyages made by the Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Company vessels Alice, Edgar, Huntsville, Monmouth, Richmond, and Splendid between 1842-1855, as well as letters and financial documents related to the Abraham Bell & Son shipping fir
Diaries of Helen Alexander, who lived in rural Cayuga County from 1838 to 1923.
The diaries of Jonathan Pearson, a notable Union College graduate who served as a professor, librarian, and treasurer at the college after graduating top of his class in 1835. It includes reflections on his time as both a student and faculty member, along with accounts of his travels.
Daily diaries written by Margaret Jones, a lifelong Edmeston resident. She worked in the rural schools of Edmeston for 51 years, despite having a physical condition that made speech difficult.