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 <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" repositoryencoding="iso15511" scriptencoding="iso15924" audience="internal" id="head" relatedencoding="MARC21">
     <eadid publicid="-//us::mnsss//TEXT us::mnsss::mnsss512.xml//EN" countrycode="us" mainagencycode="mnsss">mnsss512</eadid>
	<filedesc>
	  <titlestmt>
		<titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Eastman-Goodale-Dayton Family Papers, 1861-2010</titleproper>
		<subtitle>Finding Aid</subtitle>
		<author encodinganalog="245$c">Finding aid prepared by Amy Hague.</author>

	  </titlestmt>
	  <publicationstmt>
		<publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Sophia Smith Collection</publisher>
		<address>
		  <addressline>Smith College </addressline>
		  <addressline>Northampton, MA</addressline>
		</address>
		<date encodinganalog="260$c" normal="2011">2011</date>
	  </publicationstmt>
	</filedesc>
	<profiledesc>
	  <creation encodinganalog="500">Finding aid encoded in NoteTab Pro. Encoded by Joanna Johnson. 
		<date normal="2011-12-05">2011-12-05</date>
	  </creation>
	  <langusage>Finding aid written in
		<language encodinganalog="546" langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn">English</language>
	  </langusage>
	</profiledesc>
  </eadheader>

  <archdesc level="collection" relatedencoding="MARC21">
    <did id="main">
	<head>Collection Overview</head>
	<origination label="Creator:">
		<famname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100 3">Eastman-Goodale-Dayton family</famname>
	</origination>
	<unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245$a">Eastman-Goodale-Dayton Family Papers</unittitle>
	<unitdate type="inclusive" label="Dates:">1861-2010</unitdate>
	
	<unitid label="Collection Number:" encodinganalog="099" countrycode="us" repositorycode="mnsss">53</unitid>
	
	<physdesc label="Quantity:">
		<extent encodinganalog="300$a">17 boxes</extent>
		<extent encodinganalog="300$a">(6.5 linear ft.)</extent>
	</physdesc>
	<langmaterial label="Language of Material:" encodinganalog="546">English</langmaterial>
	<repository label="Location:">
		<corpname>Sophia Smith Collection</corpname>
		<address>
		  <addressline>Smith College </addressline>
		  <addressline>Northampton, MA</addressline>
		</address>
	</repository>
	<abstract encodinganalog="520$a" label="Abstract:">
		Author; Teacher; Social reformer; Poets; Farmer. Principal family members represented in the papers are Henry S. Goodale (farmer and writer in Southern Berkshires near Pittsfield, MA);  his wife, Deborah Hill Read Goodale (writer); three sisters: Dora Read Goodale, Elaine Goodale [Eastman] (writer, teacher, poet), and Rose Sterling Goodale [Dayton] (writer, poet, and director of Uplands Sanitarium) and their families.  The bulk of the papers are those of Elaine Goodale Eastman and her husband Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman (a Santee Sioux) and include correspondence, writings, photographs and organizations related to Indians of North America. Of particular interest are photographs of South Dakota in the 1890s, particularly of Native Americans,  Pine Ridge Agency and school where she taught and he was a physician, and of the Wounded Knee massacre by American troops.  The collection also includes letters of Charles Eastman, a substantial amount of writings and correspondence of Dora Read Goodale and Elaine Goodale Eastman, and many of Charles Eastman's published writings.
	</abstract>
    </did>


<!-- Enter collection level metadata -->
    <bioghist id="bioghist">
	<head>Biographical Note</head>
	<p>The principal family members represented in the Eastman-Goodale-Dayton Family Papers are sisters Elaine Goodale Eastman (9 Oct 1863-22 Dec 1953) and Dora Read Goodale (29 October 1866-12 Dec 1953). Their mother, Deborah (Dora) Hill Read Goodale (1839-1910), teacher and writer, married Henry S. Goodale (1836 -1906), teacher, farmer, and writer, in 1862. They settled at "Sky Farm" on Fray Mountain in the town of Mt. Washington, Massachusetts, not far from where Henry was born in South Egremont. Henry's father, Chester Goodale, a successful businessman who operated a marble quarry, had settled in the Berkshires around 1820. Besides Elaine and Dora, the Goodales had two other children, Rose Sterling Goodale (Dayton) (1870 -1965) and Robert (1878-?).</p>

	<p>Following in the footsteps of their parents, who published poems and essays in local and national publications, both Dora and Elaine were writers from early childhood. Beginning in the late 1870s their poetry was published widely in newspapers and magazines such as <title render="italic">St. Nicholas </title>and <title render="italic">Scribner's Monthly. </title>They published three books of poetry between 1878 and 1881, achieving wide renown as child-prodigies. Elaine also published <title render="italic">Journal of a Farmer's Daughter </title>in 1881. In the early years, Elaine and Dora were educated at home by their mother who had taught school before her marriage, and they were briefly enrolled in a New York City boarding school in 1881. </p>
<dao linktype="simple" actuate="onload" show="embed" href="http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/eadfiles/ssc5687.jpg" altrender="right">
<daodesc><p>Page from "The Coming of the Birds," a poem by Elaine <lb />Goodale reproduced in facsimile, illustrated by Alexander <lb />Pope, Estes and Lauriat Publishers, Boston, undated</p></daodesc></dao> 
	<p>Henry was not a particularly successful farmer and the resulting financial hardships, coupled with incompatible temperaments, led to the Goodales' separation in 1882. Henry moved to New York City where he managed The Windermere Hotel on 57th Street, an apartment house for financially independent working women. </p>

	<p>With the exception of Elaine, who struck out on her own, the rest of the Goodale family left "Sky Farm" and moved to Deborah Read Goodale's hometown of Redding, Connecticut. Along with Deborah's sister, Ella, the family moved into a house owned by the Read family. Rose and Robert attended Redding schools, while Dora, now seventeen, contributed poems and articles to local newspapers and magazines. In 1887 the family moved to Northampton, Massachusetts, where Dora entered Smith College, Rose attended the Burnham School and then Smith, and Robert attended high school. Dora graduated from Smith with a degree in art in 1890. Around this time, Dora became engaged to Thomas Sanford, an engagement that lasted for eight years until it was broken off, at least in part due to Dora's feeling obliged to take care of her mother. Family finances remained tight, and Rose left Smith to teach in Southport, Connecticut. She married Redington Dayton, whom she had met while living in Redding, and joined him there in 1891. The rest of the Northampton Goodales moved to a cottage in Amherst, Massachusetts that Henry had built for his retirement, though he remained in New York. Robert left to attend Harvard in 1896. In 1897 Mrs. Goodale and Dora lost all of their belongings, including letters and manuscripts, in a fire that burned the cottage to the ground. They returned to Redding and Dora taught at the Sanford School, worked as a tutor, and cared for her mother at "Roadside" until Deborah's death in 1910. After his graduation from Harvard, Robert Goodale married Helen Brennan in 1902 and they had a daughter, Margaret, in 1903. Robert built a new house on the site of the cottage that had burned, naming it "Lodestone," and his family lived there for a time with Henry Goodale. </p>

	<p>Around the time of the family's departure from "Sky Farm," Elaine was offered a partial scholarship at "Harvard Annex" (Radcliffe), but she was unable to attend because "the required funds were not forthcoming" due to the family's financial circumstances. Instead, in 1883 she accepted a teaching position in the program for Native Americans (newly established in 1878) at Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in Hampton, Virginia. In 1885, Elaine toured Sioux Indian Reservations and published articles regarding reservation life. In 1886 she was appointed a day school teacher at White River Camp, Lower Brule Agency, Dakota Territory where she taught for three years, traveling the Sioux reservations during vacation months. In the fall of 1889 she returned east to her family in Northampton, Massachusetts, using it as a home base from which she could write and give paid lectures advocating for education of Indians at day schools on reservations, a system she favored over the removal of students from reservations for boarding school education. Thomas J. Morgan, the commissioner of Indian affairs, who sometimes shared the platform with Elaine, appointed her to the newly-created position, Supervisor of Education in the Dakotas. She headed back to the Dakotas in the spring of 1890 with a letter of introduction, horses, a wagon, and camping equipment, and began her "year on wheels," traveling between over sixty government and missionary schools. She was at the Pine Ridge Agency in December 1890 at the time of the Wounded Knee Massacre, and was one of several volunteer nurses who attempted to care for wounded Lakota Sioux brought to the Episcopal Mission chapel. </p>

	<p>During this ordeal, Elaine worked side-by-side with Dr. Charles Eastman (1858 -1939), who had recently arrived at the agency. Eastman (Ohiyesa), a Santee Sioux, was born near Redwood Falls, Minnesota, the last of the five children of Ite Wakanhdi Ota (Many Lightnings) and Wakantankanwin (Great Mystery Woman), also known as Mary Nancy Eastman. After the Great Sioux Uprising of 1862, Ohiyesa was with a band of Sioux that escaped to the Turtle Mountains of Ontario. For years it was assumed that his father had been among the Sioux captured and put to death after the Uprising (his mother had died shortly after his birth), and he was raised by his paternal uncle and grandmother. When Ohiyesa was about fifteen, his father, who had not been executed, but imprisoned and pardoned, reappeared in his life. He had converted to Christianity and taken the name Jakob Eastman, using the English surname of his late wife. While in prison Jakob had become convinced that assimilation offered the only route to survival in a white-dominated culture. He took Ohiyesa to the homestead near Flandreau, South Dakota he had established with his other sons, where Ohiyesa was baptized and given his English name. Charles attended the mission day school at Flandreau for two years and then enrolled at Santee Normal Training School in Nebraska. After two years he transferred to Beloit (Wisconsin) College where he studied for three years. He attended Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois for another two years. Charles received a scholarship to Dartmouth College, but first attended Kimball Union Academy in Meriden, New Hampshire to make up for some gaps in his previous study. He graduated from Dartmouth in 1887 and Boston University School of Medicine in 1890. </p>

	<p>Elaine Goodale and Charles Eastman married in 1891 in New York City, despite the deep disapproval of most of her family. They returned to Pine Ridge where Charles resumed his duties as agency physician. Their first child, Dora Winona, was born at the agency in 1892. (The Eastman's subsequently had five more children, Irene Taluta (1894), Virginia (1896), Ohiyesa (Charles Alexander, Jr.) (1898), Eleanor (1901), and Florence Bascom (1905?) A disagreement with the acting Indian agent at Pine Ridge prompted Charles to resign and the family moved to St. Paul, Minnesota where he set up private practice. In June 1894, Charles began working for the YMCA to organize associations among Indians throughout the country. During the five years he held the position, he traveled all over many western states and Canada to organize forty-three associations. In 1898 the family moved to Washington, D.C, where Charles spent a year as legal agent for the Santee Sioux's claims for restoration of government annuities. In 1899 Charles secured a position as outing agent (overseeing the placement of children with white families during the summer) at Carlisle Indian School, Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Elaine became editor of the school's newspaper, the <title render="italic">Red Man. </title>In 1900 Charles returned to the Indian Service as government physician at the Crow Creek Agency in South Dakota. He resigned in 1903 to take another position in the Indian Service that involved assigning surnames to Native Americans to improve their allotment rolls, and after Commissioner Jones was convinced that he did not need to be near the reservations to do the work, the family moved to Amherst, Massachusetts. </p>

	<p>Elaine hoped that the move to Amherst would allow her and Charles to achieve some financial stability by writing, and from this point on, it did provide regular, if modest, income. The two of them collaborated on nine books, Elaine contributing extensive editorial assistance (most of which were published under his name), and Elaine published seven of her own. In addition she wrote and spoke on current Indian matters and reviewed books about Indians until her death in 1953. Elaine's memoirs were published after her death as <title render="italic">Sister to the Sioux</title> (1978). The books about Charles' life added to his fame, and he was sought after as a lecturer.</p>

	<p> During the Amherst years, Charles was often away lecturing or visiting Indian reservations for months at a time and it was left to Elaine to parent six children. Around 1912 the financial situation deteriorated, and the family (Dora Winona and Irene were now away at school at Mount Holyoke College and Northfield Seminary, respectively) moved from a large home on College Street into Lodestone with the permission of Rose Goodale Dayton, to whom Deborah Goodale had left the cottage.</p> 

	<p>During the summer of 1914 Charles served as director of one of the earliest Boy Scout camps on Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, while around the same time, Irene spent two summers as a Campfire Girls counselor in Pittsburgh. In 1915 the Eastmans established their own camp for girls, "School of the Woods," on land rented from a local farmer on Granite Lake in Munsonville, New Hampshire. The next year they renamed the camp "Oahe: The Hill of the Vision," adding a camp for younger boys nearby, "Ohiyesa." Irene, who had become a talented singer and performer, "The Spirit of Oahe," according to a 1924 brochure, died in October 1918, a victim of the flu pandemic of that year. In the immediate wake of her death, Charles began an affair with Henrietta Martindale, a young camp counselor. Martindale gave birth to their daughter, Bonno Hyessa, in 1919. The loss of the Eastmans' much beloved daughter, coupled with the affair, placed great stress on an already troubled marriage. Charles and Elaine separated permanently in 1921. Charles split his time between a cabin he had built in 1928 on Lake Ontario near Desbarats, Ontario and the home of his son, Ohiyesa, Jr. and his wife in Detroit, until his death in 1939. (Ohiyesa, Jr., after serving in the military and graduating from the College of Idaho had married Marion Nutting and worked as an appliance salesman.) Elaine lived in Northampton, briefly in an apartment with her oldest daughter, Dora Winona, but primarily with either Virginia (who married Sterling Whitbeck in 1921) or Eleanor (who had married Ernst Mensel). Elaine was a prolific author during these years, producing two novels, a collection of poems, a biography, an autobiographical sketch; and numerous essays, newspaper articles, poems, letters to the editor, and book reviews. She was also active in local chapters of the Women's Club of America, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the League of Women Voters, as well as the Northampton Motion Picture Council.</p> 
	<p>Dora stayed on in Redding until 1929 when she became a staff member, then Director, of Uplands Sanatorium, Pleasant Hill, Tennessee. She worked closely with the director, Dr. May Cravath Wharton, to promote the mission of the sanatorium "to not simply heal disease but to establish habits of health and of thought, and send its patients out fortified for living a more victorious life." Dora was hospital worker and secretary, and she also used her writing skills publishing a newsletter and pamphlets to increase the hospital's visibility, especially among potential donors. Throughout this period Dora continued to publish poems, short stories, and essays on Appalachian themes in newspapers and magazines. Her book of verse, <title render="italic">Mountain Dooryards, </title>was published in 1941. She remained at the Sanatorium until deteriorating health forced her to move in with her brother, Robert, in Virginia, and finally to a nursing home. </p>

	<p>Elaine Goodale Eastman died on 22 December 1953 in Shady Lawn nursing home in Hadley, Massachusetts ten days after her sister Dora had died in a Virginia nursing home. Rose Goodale Dayton died in 1965 in Amherst, Massachusetts.</p>

    </bioghist>
    <scopecontent id="scope">
	<head>Scope and Contents of the Collection</head>
	<p>The Eastman-Goodale-Dayton Family papers consist of biographical materials, correspondence, unpublished writings and printed materials, organization and subject files, photographs, memorabilia, and scrapbooks. Some members of the family and time periods are better documented than others due to the identity of the major donors, and the circumstances influencing what was saved, or lost, in the case of the Amherst cottage fire in 1897. The bulk of the collection, given by Elaine Eastman in her later years when she was living in Northampton, best documents her life, and that of her immediate family, as well as her writing and continued interest in Native American policy, from the late 1920s until her death. Her scrapbooks provide some information about earlier decades in her life, mostly her writings, and those of other family members. Because Elaine and Charles had gone their separate ways in 1921 and never reconciled, there is little related to Charles. A second major acquisition, given in 1999 and 2002, consists of correspondence and other items saved by Rose Goodale Dayton. A third acquisition, purchased from a book dealer in 2010, significantly augmented the books and other writings authored by family members, including Charles Eastman.</p>

	<p>The Henry Goodale and Deborah Read Hill Goodale material consists of a small amount of correspondence and writings (1861-98). The Dora Read Goodale papers include biographical information, extensive correspondence, primarily with her sister Rose, and her manuscript and published writings (1892-1950). The bulk of the papers are those of Elaine Goodale Eastman and consist of biographical materials, correspondence, and writings; her controversy with the Daughters of the American Revolution (1928-29); involvement with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom; and writings, photographs and organizations related to Native Americans. In addition to Elaine's writings on Native Americans and her miscellaneous writings, of particular interest are photographs of South Dakota in the 1890s, particularly of the Pine Ridge Agency, Native Americans, Wounded Knee, and American troops. Additional material relates to the family of Rose Goodale Dayton. While there are some courtship letters from Rose to her fianc&#233;, there is more about other members of her extended family as she was the recipient of many of the letters, including the sole letter from Charles Eastman. There is also a short journal written by Deborah Goodale's mother, Eleanor Rogers (Lyon) Read (1866-68).</p>

	<p>The bulk of the papers date from the 1920s to the 1950s, though there is significant late nineteenth--early twentieth century material, especially in the writings and scrapbooks, but also in correspondence.</p>

	<p>Writings, including scrapbooks, comprise about half of the collection, and correspondence makes up approximately one-third of it. The bulk of the correspondence is between family members. Other notable correspondents include Samuel Armstrong, John Collier, Henry Dawes, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Rosika Schwimmer, and Mary Heaton Vorse.</p>

    </scopecontent>

    <arrangement id="scope-org" encodinganalog="351$a">
	<head>Organization of the Collection</head>
	<p>This collection is organized into six series:</p>
	<list>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser1">I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser2">II. CORRESPONDENCE</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser3">III. WRITINGS</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser4">IV. ORGANIZATION AND SUBJECT FILES</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser5">V. PHOTOGRAPHS</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-ser6">VI. SCRAPBOOKS</ref>
		</item>
		<item>
			<ref target="list-OV">OVERSIZED MATERIALS</ref>
		</item>
	</list>

    </arrangement>
<!-- End collection level metadata -->


<!-- Enter administrative information -->
    <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="admin-access">
	<p>The Papers are open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia Smith Collection without any additional restrictions. </p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="admin-use">
	<p>The Sophia Smith Collection owns copyright to the family's unpublished works donated by Miriam Dayton. Copyright to other unpublished works by the family in the Papers is unknown. Permission must be obtained to publish reproductions or quotations beyond "fair use." Copyright to materials authored by others may be owned by those individuals or their heirs or assigns. It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of all copyrights. Permission to publish reproductions or quotations beyond "fair use" must also be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection as owners of the physical property.</p>
    </userestrict>
    <prefercite id="admin-cite">
	<p>Please use the following format when citing materials from this collection:</p>
	<p>Eastman-Goodale-Dayton Family Papers, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton,Mass.</p>
    </prefercite>
    <acqinfo id="admin-acqinfo">
	<p>Elaine Goodale Eastman donated her Papers to the Sophia Smith Collection from 1950 to 1952. Miriam Dayton made significant additions to the collection in 1999 and 2002. Courtship letters of Rose and Redington Dayton were given to the SSC by Deborah Read Dayton Scoblick in 2002.</p> 
    </acqinfo>
    <processinfo id="admin-process">
	<p>Processed by Amy Hague, 2011</p> 
    </processinfo>

<!-- End administrative information -->


<!-- Enter controlled access terms -->
    <controlaccess id="subj">	 
		<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Dayton, Rose Sterling Goodale</persname>
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Eastman, Charles Alexander, 1858-1939</persname> 
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Eastman, Elaine Goodale, 1863-1953</persname> 
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Goodale, Deborah Hill Read</persname> 
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Goodale, Dora Read, 1863-1953</persname> 
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Goodale, Henry S.</persname> 
	<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Dayton, James L.</persname> 
	<corpname encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">Amherst College -- Students -- Correspondence</corpname>
	<corpname encodinganalog="610" source="lcsh">Massachusetts Agricultural College -- Students -- Correspondence</corpname> 
	<famname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Dayton family</famname>
	<famname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Eastman family</famname> 
	<famname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Goodale family</famname> 
	<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcsh">Berkshire Hills (Mass.) -- Description and travel</geogname>
	
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Authors, American -- Biography -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Camps -- United States -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Dakota Territory -- Description and travel</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Depressions -- 1929 -- Massachusetts</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Family -- United States -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Frontier and Pioneer Life -- Great Plains -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Gifted children -- Biography -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Great Sioux Reservation (N.D. and S.D) -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Indians of North America -- Education  -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Indians of North America -- History -- 19th century -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Indians of North America -- History -- Sources -- 20th century</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Indians of North America -- Legal Status, laws, etc. -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Northampton (Mass.) -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.) -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Sanatoriums -- Tennessee -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Santee Indians -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Teachers -- Great Plains -- Biography -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Teton Indians -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">West (U.S.) -- History -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women journalists -- United States -- Biography -- Sources</subject>
	<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890 -- Personal narratives</subject>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Child authors -- Children's poetry</genreform>
	<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Native Americans -- Fiction</genreform> 
	<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Poetry -- Authorship -- Sources</genreform> 
    </controlaccess>
<!-- end controlled access terms -->


<!-- Enter additional information -->
    <relatedmaterial id="add-related">
	<p>Additional papers related to Elaine and Charles Eastman and other family members are housed at Jones Library, Amherst, Mass.; Forbes Library, Northampton, Mass.; Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire; and Hampton University, Hampton, Virginia. Papers of Henrietta Martindale are in the Katherine Martindale Family Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, University of Wisconsin--La Crosse Area Research Center, La Crosse, Wisconsin. </p>
    </relatedmaterial>
    <bibliography id="add-biblio">
	<p><title render="italic">The Life of Elaine Goodale Eastman </title>by Theodore D. Sargent (2005)</p>

<p>"The Estrangement of Charles Eastman and Elaine Goodale Eastman" by Theodore D. Sargent and Raymond Wilson, <title render="italic">South Dakota History, </title>Vol. 40 No. 3 (Fall 2010)</p>

<p>"Finding Oneself through a Cause: Elaine Goodale Eastman and Indian Reform in the 1880s," by Ruth Anne Alexander, <title render="italic">South Dakota History, </title>Vol. 22, No. 1 (Spring 1992)</p>

<p><title render="italic">Ohiyesa: Charles Eastman, Santee Sioux </title>by Raymond Wilson (1983)
</p>
    </bibliography>

<!-- End additional information -->


<!-- Enter Series descriptions -->
<dsc type="analyticover">
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS  <unitdate>(1878-2010)</unitdate></unittitle>
	
	<physdesc>
		<extent>.25 linear ft.</extent>
	</physdesc></did>
	<scopecontent>
		<p>This series provides an overview of the lives of Dora Goodale and Elaine Goodale Eastman; there are only fragments for some other family members. Of particular interest are newspaper clippings about the "Child Poets" of Sky Farm and the wedding of Elaine and Charles. Jessica George's undergraduate honors essay provides the best available overview of Dora Goodale's life. </p>
	</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE  <unitdate>(1861-1950s, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>1.5 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>	<scopecontent>
				<p>This series is organized into two subseries: <title render="bold">Family</title> and <title render="bold">Friends and associates</title>. The Family portion is the more voluminous subseries and is arranged alphabetically by the family member who wrote the letters. The recipients are also alphabetical under the author heading. Many of the letters in this subseries were annotated, and a few were transcribed, by Ted Sargent when he was researching his biography of Elaine Goodale Eastman. Some of his notes identifying people and topics, and all of his transcriptions, are attached to the originals. Substantial correspondence to Rose from Elaine and Dora sheds light on Dora's life, especially her time at Uplands Sanatorium, and Elaine's during her years in Northampton. These letters range widely in topics from literature to social reform to child-rearing to musings (sometimes tinged with bitterness) on family history and relationships. Elaine's reflections about her early adventures and marriage to Charles are especially illuminating. The letters from the 1930s, especially Elaine's, are evocative of Great Depression-era politics.

This series includes the courtship correspondence of Rose Goodale and Redington Dayton. Of special interest are letters from James Dayton to his parents written during his residence in the Eastman household in Amherst, Massachusetts while he was attending the Massachusetts Agricultural College (now University of Massachusetts Amherst). He shared information about the Eastman family during a time in their lives when other sources are scant. There are also letters from both Rose's sons that describe their college experiences. (Theodore was attending Amherst College.) See also SERIES III. WRITINGS for correspondence regarding the childhood writings of Elaine and Dora, and Dora's later work. SERIES VI. SCRAPBOOKS also includes a few letters related to the family's writings.
</p>
</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES III. WRITINGS  <unitdate>(1866-2001, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>2.25 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>
	<scopecontent>
		<p>This series is arranged by individual author (Elaine's and Dora's childhood writings are filed under Elaine's name), and then by genre. The bulk of the writings in this series were authored by Elaine Goodale Eastman and Charles Eastman. Dora Goodale is also well represented. There are a handful of poems and essays by other family members, especially Deborah Hill Read Goodale. Most of the writings were published as books or in newspapers or periodicals, but there are also a few unpublished manuscripts and typescripts. Family members, especially Elaine, wrote prolifically in many genres: memoirs, novels, children's books, poetry, short stories, plays, biography, articles, essays, and letters to the editor. The oldest item is a short journal written at Sky Farm by Eleanor Rogers Lyon Read in 1866. Family members regularly contributed to national and local publications, such as <title render="italic">The Woman's Journal, The Woman's Home Companion, The Christian Century, The New York Times, The Springfield </title>(Massachusetts) <title render="italic">Daily Republican,</title> <title render="italic">The Daily Hampshire Gazette </title>(Northampton, Mass.), and many others. Elaine and Charles wrote about Native American life and public policy, and Elaine also addressed the topics of nature, farming, and domestic life, especially early in her career. She also contributed articles related to her organizational activities with the D.A.R., League of Women Voters, and the Northampton Motion Picture Council. Other members of the family wrote poetry and articles about nature, farming, and other subjects. SERIES VI. SCRAPBOOKS includes articles, essays, poems, reviews, and letters to the editor from magazines and newspapers. </p>
	</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES IV. ORGANIZATION AND SUBJECT FILES OF ELAINE G. EASTMAN  <unitdate>(1928-53, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>.75 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>	<scopecontent>
				<p>This series is organized alphabetically by the name of the organization or subject file. The subject matter is primarily about Native Americans, but there is also a small amount of material about the D.A.R. blacklist controversy in the late 1920s and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Northampton Branch. The bulk of the material appears to have been saved by Elaine Eastman in Northampton during the 1940s and early 1950s and dates from that period.</p>
			</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES V. PHOTOGRAPHS  <unitdate>(1860-1993, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>.25 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>	<scopecontent>
				<p>This small series is organized by individual or place. Its most notable content is the series of photographs taken by Elaine at the Pine Ridge Agency in South Dakota, documenting events surrounding the Wounded Knee Massacre. Photographs of sites related to the Eastmans were taken by Keith F. Johnson in 1993. </p>
			</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>SERIES VI. SCRAPBOOKS  <unitdate>(1877-1950, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>.75 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>
	<scopecontent>
		<p>There are ten scrapbooks in this series that overlap with each other in terms of subject matter and date span. Most, if not all, were apparently compiled by Elaine Goodale Eastman, who donated them. Most of the items in the scrapbooks have to do with the writings of the family, primarily Dora and Elaine, but Deborah Hill Read Goodale, Henry Goodale, and Rose Goodale Dayton are also represented. The scrapbooks have been numbered in an arbitrary manner. Two of the scrapbooks relate to Elaine&#198;s and Dora&#198;s childhood writings. There are four scrapbooks that contain mostly writings by Elaine relating to her career teaching and advocating for Native Americans, but also on other topics such as homemaking, children, and her organizational involvement. There is one scrapbook that mostly contains writings by others about Native Americans. Dora&#198;s post-childhood writings are collected in two of the scrapbooks. Finally, there is one scrapbook of miscellaneous writings, mostly poems, by Elaine, Dora, Rose, and their parents.</p>
	</scopecontent>
</c01>
 
<c01 level="series">
	<did>
		<unittitle>OVERSIZE MATERIALS <unitdate>(1874-1952, n.d.)</unitdate></unittitle>
		<physdesc>
			<extent>.25 linear ft.</extent>
		</physdesc></did>	<scopecontent>
				<p>One box contains two folders of miscellaneous printed materials.</p>
			</scopecontent>
</c01>
</dsc>
<!-- End Series descriptions -->

<!-- Insert container list here:-->

<dsc type="in-depth" id="list-contlist">
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser1">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Contents</unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>Jones Library, Amherst, MA: information about holdings related to Elaine and Charles Eastman, and Dora Goodale<unitdate>1975</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman Family: letter from Norma Kidd Green to Margaret Grierson<unitdate>1967</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale-Read-Dayton families: genealogy, notes about Chester Goodale, article re: Mt. Washington, Massachusetts, and letter <unitdate>[circa 1919], 1979, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, James W.: clipping<unitdate>1957</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose and Redington: drawing, 1886; wedding invitation, 1891; and note by Rose re: family correspondence<unitdate>1946</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Charles</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>Newspaper clippings and obituary<unitdate>1891, 1915, 1939</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>"Charles Alexander Eastman: Sioux Storyteller and Historian," by Anna Lee Stensland, <title render="italic">American Indian Quarterly</title>, Vol. 3, No. 3, autumn,<unitdate>1977</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine Goodale</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>General: newspaper clippings, including obituary<unitdate>1891, 1946, 1953</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>"Child Poets" of Sky Farm: newspaper clippings<unitdate>1878, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Letters of introduction from Samuel C. Armstrong and W.H. Hare<unitdate>1889</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>Wedding to Charles Eastman: newspaper clippings<unitdate>1891</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle>Song recital including "Ashes of Roses" by Goodale/Wood, Amherst, MA: program<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Dora Winona: brochure for Pahata camp in Granite, NH <unitdate>circa 1932</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora Read</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>General: death certificate and obituary<unitdate>1953</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>"Reading Dora Read Goodale's <title render="italic">Mountain Dooryards</title>: An American History" by Jessica George, Undergraduate Honors Essay, Cornell University<unitdate>2009</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Uplands Sanatorium: printed materials<unitdate>1944, 1946, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Mensel, Eleanor Eastman: obituary<unitdate>1999</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">19</container>
 <unittitle>Risk, Cynthia Whitbeck: obituary<unitdate>2009</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">20</container>
 <unittitle>Whitbeck, Elaine Goodale: obituary<unitdate>2010</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 </c01>
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser2">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Family</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">21</container>
 <unittitle>Cheshough, J. C. ("Uncle Collins") to Rose Goodale<unitdate>1890</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, James W. to Rose Goodale Dayton and Redington Dayton</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">1</container>
 <container type="folder">22-27</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1909-13, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>From Camp Oahe <unitdate>6 Jul 1917</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Marjorie Breckinridge (daughter-in-law) to Rose Dayton <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose Goodale and Redington</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">3-8</container>
 <unittitle>Courtship letters <unitdate>Apr 1890-Sep 1891</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">9-10</container>
 <unittitle>James Dayton<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose Goodale</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Nell<unitdate>1918</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Theodore <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Henry Sterling <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Robert (about their mother's death, never sent)<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Unidentified letters to Rose</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>"Dosia" [niece of Redington Dayton?]<unitdate>1927-29</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>[Goodale?], Margaret ("cousin")<unitdate>1958</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Al and Laura to "Mother Rose" <unitdate>1925</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Theodore R.</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, James<unitdate>1914, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose and Redington</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">19</container>
 <unittitle>from grandparents home, and the Sanford School<unitdate>1904; n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">20</container>
 <unittitle>from Amherst College <unitdate>circa 1913-16</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">21</container>
 <unittitle>from Camp William Lawrence (West Gloucester, MA)<unitdate>1914</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">22</container>
 <unittitle>from Camp Oahe (Munsonville, NH) <unitdate>circa 1915-23, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">2</container>
 <container type="folder">23</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Elmer<unitdate>1903</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Charles ("Ohiyesa") to Rose G. Dayton<unitdate>1890</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Dora Winona</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>Rose G. Dayton<unitdate>1942, 1954</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>Lewis, Ben, 1958 (includes letter from Lewis to Margaret Grierson) <unitdate>1959</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine Goodale</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Redington<unitdate>1890, [1918?]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G.</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">5-6</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1891-[late 1940s/early 1950s], n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>"Weak" letter from late in life, including a note from Virginia Eastman Whitbeck <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Deborah Read <unitdate>[circa 1904-05?]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora Read <unitdate>[circa 1898-99?]-1940, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Irene</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G.<unitdate>1917</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora<unitdate>1917</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Marion to Rose G. Dayton and Dora Goodale<unitdate>1940, 1942, 1954 </unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
</c03>
<c03>
<did>
<unittitle>Goodale, Deborah Hill Read</unittitle>
</did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G. and Redington<unitdate>1890, 1908, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Henry Sterling<unitdate>1862</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Ella<unitdate>1861-65</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora Read</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine Goodale <unitdate>[circa 1910], 1927, [circa late 1930s-40s]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Redington<unitdate>1932</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G.</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>from Seattle <unitdate>[circa pre-1918]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">19-21</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1893-1942, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">3</container>
 <container type="folder">22</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1947, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">1-2</container>
 <unittitle>from Uplands, Pleasant Hill, TN <unitdate>n.d. [circa 1930s]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>n.d. and fragments <unitdate>n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Deborah Hill Read <unitdate>circa 1904-05</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Robert<unitdate>1927</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Henry Sterling</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G.<unitdate>1896-1906, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Caroline (HSG's niece)<unitdate>1861</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>[Goodale?], "Aunt Mattie" to Rose G. Dayton<unitdate>1918</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Robert</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G. (re: Dora's deteriorating condition)<unitdate>1947, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine G.<unitdate>1947</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Samuel ["Uncle Sam"] to Rose G. Dayton and Elaine G. Eastman<unitdate>1913-15</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle>Mensel, Eleanor Eastman (re: Ohi's funeral) to Rose G. Dayton<unitdate>1940</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Eleanor Lyon (from Sky Farm) to Mary [?] and Ella Read, her daughters<unitdate>1865-67</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Ella ("Auntie") to Rose G. Dayton <unitdate>[circa 1908]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Read, George</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G. (her uncle)<unitdate>1890</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Eleanor (her son, an I.O.U.)<unitdate>1852-66</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Sanford, Edith [Redington Dayton's sister?] to Rose G. Dayton<unitdate>1916</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">19</container>
 <unittitle>[Winton?], Sarah H. to Ella Read, and Dora Goodale,<unitdate>[circa 1860s], 1896 </unitdate> </unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Friends and associates</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>to Rose G. Dayton</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">20</container>
 <unittitle>[Edwards?], Charles <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">21</container>
 <unittitle>[Fillors?], Mrs.<unitdate>1902</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">22</container>
 <unittitle>Clare [?] <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">23</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Theodore from "Doug," <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine G.</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">24</container>
 <unittitle>General, A-Z<unitdate>1890, 1912, 1932-48</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">25</container>
 <unittitle>Collier, John<unitdate>1941</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">26</container>
 <unittitle>Dawes, Anna L.<unitdate>1936</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">27</container>
 <unittitle>Dawes, Henry<unitdate>1887</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">28</container>
 <unittitle>Eliot, Samuel A.<unitdate>1934-35</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">29</container>
 <unittitle>Folsom, Cora <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">30</container>
 <unittitle>Grierson, Margaret Storrs<unitdate>1947-53</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">31</container>
 <unittitle>King, Cora Smith<unitdate>1935</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">32</container>
 <unittitle>Lindquist, G.E.E.<unitdate>1935-47</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">33</container>
 <unittitle>McCaskill, J.C.<unitdate>1941</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">34</container>
 <unittitle>Peabody, George Foster<unitdate>1929</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">35</container>
 <unittitle>Richardson, Anna Steese<unitdate>1935</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">36</container>
 <unittitle>Schwimmer, Rosika<unitdate>1930</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">37</container>
 <unittitle>Vorse, Mary Heaton<unitdate>1936</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">38</container>
 <unittitle>Young, Donald<unitdate>1933-35</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Henry S.</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">39</container>
 <unittitle>to Mrs. Benedict <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">4</container>
 <container type="folder">40</container>
 <unittitle>from Thomas Wentworth Higginson<unitdate>1877</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 </c01>
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser3">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES III. WRITINGS</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose G.: poems<unitdate>1916, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Charles</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Books</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">From the Deep Woods to Civilization</title> (including excerpts from <title render="italic">Indian Boyhood</title>), edited by A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff, Lakeside Press, R.R. Donnelley &amp; Sons Company, Chicago; reprint of original 1916 edition <unitdate>2001</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Indian Boyhood</title>: published volume<unitdate>1902</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Red Hunters and the Animal People</title><unitdate>1904</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Smoky Days Wigwam Evenings</title>, by Charles and Elaine Goodale Eastman<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">The Soul of the Indian</title><unitdate>1911</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Article: "The Indians' Gift to the Nation," <title render="italic">The Quarterly Journal of the Society of American Indians</title>, Eastman, Elaine G.<unitdate>Jan-Mar 1915</unitdate> </unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Childhood writings of Elaine and Dora Goodale</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">5</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">All Round the Year</title>: published volume<unitdate>1881</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Apple Blossoms</title><unitdate>1878</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Published volumes (small and large editions with distinct bindings)</unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>Letter, publisher's advertisement, and reviews<unitdate>1878, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">In Berkshire with the Wildflowers</title>: Published volume<unitdate>1879</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Miscellaneous verses<unitdate>1871-76, n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
	<note><p>[See also <extref href="list-OV">OVERSIZE MATERIALS</extref>]</p>
</note>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>A-Z<unitdate>1878-80</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Whiting, Charles (of the <title render="italic">Springfield Republican</title>) to Henry S. Goodale<unitdate>1878</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>Unidentified<unitdate>1878, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Books</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">6</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Hundred Maples</title>: published volume (2 copies)<unitdate>1935</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Indian Legends Retold</title><unitdate>1919</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Journal of a Farmer's Daughter</title> (1881): published volume and reviews<unitdate>1881, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Little Brother O'Dreams</title>: published volume<unitdate>1910</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Pratt: The Red Man's Moses</title><unitdate>1935</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Published volume</unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Publisher's advertisement <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Sister to the Sioux: The Memoirs of Elaine Goodale Eastman </title></unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">7</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Published volume, edited by Kay Graber<unitdate>1978</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>"Little Sister to the Sioux," typescript by E.G. Eastman. <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Voice at Eve</title>: published volume (2 copies)<unitdate>1930</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Yellow Star</title>: published volume<unitdate>1911</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Articles</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Captain Pratt and His Work for Indian Education," Indian Rights Association <unitdate>April 1886</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>"Ghost Dance War and Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890-91," <title render="italic">Nebraska History</title> (Jan-Mar 1945): published article, typescript, and correspondence <unitdate>1945-46</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>"Indian Life and Growth at Hampton," <title render="italic">The Independent</title> <unitdate>11 Jun 1885</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>"Spinner in the Sun. The Story of Helen Hunt Jackson": unpublished typescript <unitdate>n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
	<note><p>[See also <extref href="list-OV">OVERSIZE MATERIALS</extref>]</p></note>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Short stories</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>"The Hand-made House, <title render="italic">Country Life in America </title>[photocopy, issue not identified]<unitdate>1911</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>"Pagan Interlude," <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>"A Pot of Tulips," <title render="italic">New England Magazine</title> <unitdate>July 1911</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>"The Taming of the Bull": typescript <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Poems</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>General: published, manuscript, and typescript poems; and newspaper review of "Indian Pipes" <unitdate>1886-1920, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">The Coming of the Birds</title>: published facsimile <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>"Ghost Dance War," n.d.: typescript <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>"The Indian Girl's Song": handwritten, Hampton <unitdate>Feb 1885</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>Correspondence<unitdate>1904-10, 1939</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Plays</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>"The Eagle and the Star: A Play for Camp Fire Girls<unitdate>1916</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Unpublished typescripts <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">8</container>
 <container type="folder">19</container>
 <unittitle>Sheet music: "Ashes of Roses," words by Elaine Goodale, music by Mary Knight Wood<unitdate>1892</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Deborah Hill Read</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Published articles<unitdate>1900, 1903, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>"Mrs. and Miss Brotherton": short story typescript <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Poems</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Published in newspapers</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1883-1902</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>n.d., (alpha by title)<unitdate>n.d. </unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Miscellaneous manuscripts<unitdate>1886, 1888</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Correspondence: letter from S.C. [Samuel C.] Armstrong<unitdate>1890</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora Read</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Books</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Mountain Dooryards</title> [1946?]: published volume (2 copies), publisher's advertisement, and book review<unitdate>1946, 1950</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Test of the Sky</title>: published volume (2 copies)<unitdate>1926</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Articles and essays</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Published in magazines and newspapers</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1897-1924</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Manuscripts<unitdate>1926, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Short stories</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Published in magazines and newspapers</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1890-1928</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 <c05>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Manuscripts <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c05>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Poems</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>Published in magazines and newspapers<unitdate>1883-1919, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>Manuscripts and typescripts <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Note re: suicidal thoughts <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">9</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Correspondence (includes one letter to EGE): Sarah Cleghorn<unitdate>1942, 1945 </unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
</c02>
<c02>
<did>
<unittitle>Goodale, Henry S.</unittitle>
</did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>"Does Farming Pay?," <title render="italic">Harpers New Monthly Magazine</title> <unitdate>October 1880</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>"The Blowden's Day in Berkshire": manuscript play with illustrations <unitdate>[1883?]</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>Poems: manuscripts<unitdate>1872, 1878, 1903, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Read, Eleanor Rogers Lyon: original manuscript and transcription of diary excerpt re: Sky Farm<unitdate>1866</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 </c01>
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser4">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES IV. ORGANIZATION AND SUBJECT FILES OF ELAINE G. EASTMAN</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Daughters of the American Revolution: circular letters by Eastman re: blacklist controversy<unitdate>1928-29</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Native Americans</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>General</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Pamphlets<unitdate>1940-52, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>Magazine and newspaper articles<unitdate>1935-50, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>Akwesasne Mohawk Counselor Organization<unitdate>1951, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>American Indian Political Advisory Committee<unitdate>1952</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>Campfire Girls, Inc.: "Following Indian Trails" <unitdate>1950</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Eastern Regional Conference of the Fellowship of Indian Workers<unitdate>1944</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">12</container>
 <unittitle>Friends of the Middle Border (Mitchell, SD): <title render="italic">Middle Border Bulletin</title><unitdate>1944-50</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">13</container>
 <unittitle>General Federation of Women's Clubs, Indian Welfare Committee,<unitdate>1948-49, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">14</container>
 <unittitle>Home Missions Council of North America<unitdate>1948, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">15</container>
 <unittitle>The Indian Association of America, Inc.<unitdate>1951, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">16</container>
 <unittitle>Indian Rights Association (Philadelphia)<unitdate>1944-53, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">17</container>
 <unittitle>Inter-American conference on Indian Life, Cuzco, Peru<unitdate>1949</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">18</container>
 <unittitle>Michigan Indian Foundation<unitdate>1951</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">19</container>
 <unittitle>Native Americans in Minnesota</unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>National Congress of American Indians</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">20</container>
 <unittitle>General printed materials<unitdate>1947-52, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">21</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Washington Bulletin</title><unitdate>1948-52</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">10</container>
 <container type="folder">22</container>
 <unittitle>National Fellowship of Indian Workers: newsletter<unitdate>1945-51 </unitdate></unittitle>
	<note><p>[See also <extref href="list-OV">OVERSIZE MATERIALS</extref>]</p></note>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Navajo and Hopi Indians: miscellaneous printed materials<unitdate>1947-52, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>New Mexico Association of Indian Affairs: newsletter<unitdate>1949</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>South Dakota Historical Society: <title render="italic">The Wi-iyohi</title> (newsletter)<unitdate>1949-52</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Standing Rock Sioux Tribe of Indians<unitdate>1951</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>United States Congress</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Speeches re: Indians in the <title render="italic">Congressional Record</title><unitdate>1947-52</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Miscellaneous hearings and reports regarding Indian policy<unitdate>1944-45</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <unittitle>House of Representatives. Subcommittee on Indian Affairs of the Committee on Public Lands: <title render="italic">Compilation of Material Relating to the Indians of the United States and the Territory of Alaska, Including Certain Laws and Treaties Affecting Such Indians</title><unitdate>1950</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <unittitle>Department of the Interior. U.S. Indian Service: publications</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">7-8</container>
 <unittitle><unitdate>1933, 1948, 1949-50, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 <c04>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle><title render="italic">Indian Education</title>: newsletter<unitdate>1945-53</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c04>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>The Westerners: <title render="italic">The Westerner's Brand Book</title><unitdate>1945, 1948</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">11</container>
 <container type="folder">11</container>
 <unittitle>Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Massachusetts Branch<unitdate>1948-51</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 </c01>
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser5">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES V. PHOTOGRAPHS</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Redington<unitdate>1893</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Rose Sterling Goodale<unitdate>1889</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">3</container>
 <unittitle>Dayton, Theodore <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">4</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Dora Winona<unitdate>1959</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">5</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Elaine Goodale<unitdate>1890-91, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>Eastman, Irene <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Dora Read<unitdate>1908</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>Goodale, Henry Sterling <unitdate>circa 1860, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <unittitle>South Dakota groups and scenes</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">9</container>
 <unittitle>Taken by Elaine Goodale Eastman<unitdate>1890-91, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 <c03>
 <did>
 <container type="box">12</container>
 <container type="folder">10</container>
 <unittitle>Chamberlain, White River, Pine Ridge, and Wounded Knee, SD scenes, taken by Keith F. Johnson <unitdate>Aug 1993</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c03>
 </c02>
 </c01>
 <c01 level="series" id="list-ser6">
 <did>
 <unittitle>SERIES VI. SCRAPBOOKS</unittitle>
 </did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">13</container>
 <container type="folder">1-5</container>
 <unittitle>#1: Articles mostly about Native Americans by Elaine G. Eastman (includes small amount of correspondence)<unitdate>1885-1914, 1933, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">13</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>#2: <title render="italic">Mountain Dooryards</title> by Dora Goodale: reviews and correspondence<unitdate>1941-50, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">14</container>
 <unittitle>#3: Articles, book reviews, and letters to the editor about Native Americans (includes some on miscellaneous topics)<unitdate>1929-49, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">15</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>#4: Columns and articles by Elaine G. Eastman about home, children, Native Americans, and the D.A.R. blacklist from various newspapers and magazines; and programs of mother's clubs<unitdate>1896-99, 1911, 1928-29, n.d</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">15</container>
 <container type="folder">2-5</container>
 <unittitle>#5: Childhood writings of Elaine and Dora Goodale: correspondence, reviews, publisher's advertisements, portraits of Elaine and Dora, and programs<unitdate>1877-81, 1897, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">15</container>
 <container type="folder">6</container>
 <unittitle>#6: Poems by Elaine Goodale Eastman "never collected in book form": correspondence, poems published in newspapers and magazines, typescript poems, portrait (lithograph), and articles about Eastman<unitdate>1880-1943, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">15</container>
 <container type="folder">7</container>
 <unittitle>#7: Books by Elaine Goodale Eastman: correspondence, reviews, articles and letters to the editor by EGE, and publisher's advertisements<unitdate>1910-37, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">15</container>
 <container type="folder">8</container>
 <unittitle>#8: Published and manuscript articles and poems, and correspondence of Deborah Read Goodale, Henry S. Goodale, Elaine G. Eastman, Dora Goodale, and Rose Goodale Dayton<unitdate>1873-1937, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">16</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>#9: Published and manuscript poems by Dora and Elaine Goodale Eastman,articles about EGE and DRG, letter from Samuel Armstrong to Henry S. Goodale, reviews, and advertisements<unitdate>1878-1906, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">16</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>#10: Articles (mostly about travel) written for <title render="italic">The Rural New Yorker </title>by Dora Goodale<unitdate>1932-35, n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
</c02>
</c01>
<c01 level="series" id="list-OV">
 <did>
 <unittitle>OVERSIZE MATERIALS</unittitle>
</did>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">17</container>
 <container type="folder">1</container>
 <unittitle>Scrapbook #1: originals</unittitle>
 </did>
</c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">17</container>
 <container type="folder">2</container>
 <unittitle>"The Author of Ramona" by Elaine Goodale Eastman [unidentified periodical] [condensation of "Spinner in the Sun"]  <unitdate>n.d.</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">17</container>
 <unittitle>"Epithalamium" for Alfred Edwards and Arabella Stuart Magee by Elaine Goodale Eastman: printed poem <unitdate>Jun 1874</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 <c02>
 <did>
 <container type="box">17</container>
 <unittitle>"Triennial Conference, National Fellowship of Indian Workers, American Baptist Assembly, Green Lake, Wisconsin,": flyer<unitdate>1952</unitdate></unittitle>
 </did>
 </c02>
 </c01>
</dsc>

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