Research


Scope and Content Note

B0561-78: This series contains incoming correspondence and drafts or copies of outgoing correspondence, and occasional clippings, financial statements, and transcripts of selected letters prepared by James Hall's biographer. The majority of this correspondence is between James Hall and other geologists and paleontologists. The series contains materials spanning Hall's entire career including his years as a student and later faculty member at the Rensselaer School (later Rensselaer Institute), member of the New York State Geological and Natural History Survey (1836-1842), State Geologist of Iowa (1855-1858), State Geologist of Wisconsin (1857-1860), New York State Geologist (1837-1898), State Paleontologist (1843-1898), and the State Museum Director (1866-1894). Included is correspondence between Hall and some of the most prominent scientists of the period, such as Louis Agassiz, Albert S. Bickmore, James D. Dana, Joseph Henry, Alpheus Hyatt, Lewis Henry Morgan, John Wesley Powell, and Benjamin Silliman, Jr. Occasional letters are written in French. Beginning about 1885, an increasingly greater proportion of the correspondence was directed to and answered by other State Museum officials, particularly John C. Smock, Frederick J. H. Merrill, and John M. Clarke.

Some of the specific subjects of the correspondence are: acquisition and disposition of Hall's personal and the State Museum's fossil collections; identification of fossils received by the Museum; exchange or loan of fossils, including type specimens, for scientific study; field work by Museum staff and other scientists (e.g. stratigraphic mapping and specimen collecting); preparation, illustration, and publication of the Paleontology of New York; preparation of the Geologic Map of New York (1894); appropriation and allocation of funds for the continuation of Hall's work; New York State's exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition (1893); and preparation of State Museum exhibits.

B0561-78A: This accretion consists of correspondence and memoranda sent and received by the State Museum Director. Until 1894 and from 1904 to 1925 the Director also held the positions of State Geologist and State Paleontologist; from 1898 to 1904 the Director held the position of State Geologist. Also included in the series is correspondence of the Assistant Director of the Museum, 1885-1894, and a small quantity of James Hall's correspondence, 1858-1869. The position of Director was occupied by James Hall (1870-1894), Frederick J. H. Merrill (1894-1904), John M. Clarke (1904-1925), Jacob Van Deloo (Acting Director 1926), Charles C. Adams (1926-1943), and Robert D. Glasgow (Acting Director, 1943-1944).

The correspondence in the series is between the Director or Assistant Director and scientists within and without New York State, particularly geologists; private collectors; museum suppliers; other museums and institutions of science or higher learning; members of the Board of Regents; private citizens; and Museum staff. In addition to documenting the administration of the State Museum, the correspondence from the years 1858-1894 and 1898-1925 contain information on the Director's activities in his capacities as State Geologist and State Paleontologist.

Subjects of this correspondence include, but are not limited to: acquisition and management of Museum collections; preparation of the Museum Bulletin and geologic maps; distribution of Museum publications; preparation of exhibits for national and international expositions (e.g.: World Columbian Exposition of 1893, Pan American Exposition of 1901, and Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904); field investigations, especially geological and archaeological, sponsored by the Museum; questions from private citizens regarding geologic formations or specimens answered by the Director in his capacity as State Geologist (see above); discussion of interpretations of geologic evidence; Legislation affecting the Museum; compilation of inventories of museums in the United States; production of road metal (crushed stone) in New York; opening of the Museum in the Education Building; proposed Roosevelt Memorial; and National Research Council.

B0561-01: This accretion consists of incoming and outgoing correspondence, memoranda, reports, newspaper clippings, fiscal and other administrative records documenting the cooperative relationship between the State Museum, under the direction of Charles C. Adams, and the Works Progress Administration (W.P.A.). During its existence, the Works Progress Administration provided the State Museum with the support of technical, clerical, and maintenance personnel far in excess of that attainable under the museum's own budget. W.P.A. workers participated in a vast array of projects including: preparation of catalogs and indexes; inventory of museum publications; translation of foreign language publications; organization and care of historic collections; binding of books and periodicals; collection of ground water data; ecological survey of Monroe County; and architectural survey of Shaker and other historic buildings in the state.

B0561-01: W.P.A. workers also assisted in the design and preparation of State Museum exhibits for the 1940 World's Fair, as well as in the maintenance and improvement of the museum's own exhibit facilities. In addition, the Federal Art Project of the W.P.A. in New York City provided the State Museum with numerous loans of exhibit pieces.

B0561-09: This small accretion consists of incoming correspondence and some copies or drafts of Hall's replies. Notable correspondents include Ferdinand V. Hayden, Fielding B. Meek, and Israel Slade.