Research


Scope and Content Note

This series consists of correspondence, memoranda, reports, and press releases between the Director of the State Museum, later the Assistant Commissioner for State Museum and State Science Service, and Museum scientists and other staff, administrators and scientists at other institutions, private citizens, and officials in other State agencies. The positions of Director and Assistant Commissioner were occupied by Carl E. Guthe (1944-1953), William N. Fenton (1954-1968) and John G. Broughton (1968-1970).

These files contain correspondence concerning: research projects conducted by the Museum; Museum exhibit planning; acquisition and management of collections; Museum sponsored field work; production of Museum publictions; advice to other institutions; Museum education; research grants received; staff participation in professional conferences and meetings; and inquiries about scientific positions.

11843-82: This accretion contains correspondence, memoranda, reports, and meeting minutes from Assistant Commissioner William N. Fenton (1954-1968) concerning the following subjects: meetings of and reports by the Commissioner's Committee on Museum Resources; promotion of museum legislation by the New York State Association of Museums; and meetings of and reports by the Cultural Center Planning Committee concerning plans for the Cultural Center (later Cultural Education Center) building in Albany's South Mall (later Empire State Plaza) and for State Museum exhibits in the building.

11843-19: This accretion contains inventory cards for and black-and-white photographs of Iroquoian and other North American Indian artifacts in about thirty European museums, with related notes, correspondence, and color slides. Most of the information was compiled by State Museum Director William N. Fenton during trips to Europe in 1962, 1964, and 1967.

Inventoried artifacts date from the seventeenth through early twentieth centuries. Most were produced by Iroquoian, Great Lakes, and Great Plains peoples. Inventory data is typewritten and handwritten on cards, which identify and describe each object. Some of the cards are accompanied by black-and-white photographs of inventoried objects. Other information on artifacts is found in typewritten lists and reports. Museums holding especially relevant collections include the the Bernisches Historisches Museum, Bern; Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen; Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde, Leiden; Horniman Museum, London; Musée de l'Homme, Paris; Museum für Lander- und Völkerkunde, Stuttgart; Skoklosters Slot, near Uppsala, Sweden; and Warwick Castle, England.

Correspondence concerns Fenton's inventory work in European museums; and his participation in the Wenner-Gren Foundation Symposium no. 39, held in Austria in 1967. Correspondents include anthropologists Ted J. Brasser, Claude Lévi-Strauss, and William C. Sturtevant.

Collection includes numerous color slides (35 mm.) of travel destinations, institutions, and museum objects and exhibits. Other slides were taken at conferences of the International Council of Museums, Amsterdam, 1962; and the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Moscow, 1964.