1. MANUSCRIPT SOURCES IN AMERICAN RADICALISM.
- Author
-
Johnpoll, Bernard K.
- Subjects
- *
RADICALISM , *LIBRARIES , *SOCIALISM , *SOCIALISTS , *POLITICAL science , *COLLECTIVISM (Political science) , *U.S. states , *BIBLIOGRAPHY - Abstract
The article discusses manuscript sources in American radicalism. Scholars interested in American radicalism must be prepared to travel widely if they expect to inspect manuscript sources. Virtually every state, almost every university library of any stature, has some such holdings. Socialists, and other radicals, were prolific writers of letters, memoranda, speeches and pamphlets. They also tended to keep extensive minutes of meetings of branches, committees, national boards, and even of factions. Moreover, most Socialists had a sense of history and preserved their records. Unfortunately, there is no single repository for this Socialist material. At one time it was expected that the Tamiment Institute-then called the Rand School-Library in New York would house the material. But Socialists, in the course of human events, split into innumerable factions, and the leaders of different factions gave their papers to various libraries some of them thousands of miles apart. There were also geographic reasons for the dispersion: the early Socialists of the Nineteenth century lived in Indiana, New York, Massachusetts, and (after 1880) California.
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF