Showing Collections: 226 - 250 of 1459
Collection of Abram Moses scores
Abram Moses was a composer and violinist who attended and taught at the Peabody Institute. The collection includes 11 manuscript and Ozalid scores of chamber music and songs by Moses written between approximately 1900 and 1950.
Collection of Bound Volumes of Sheet Music at Johns Hopkins University
This artificial collection contains several bound volumes of sheet music and fragments of binding materials.
Collection of Charles H. Bochau scores
Charles Henry Bochau (1870-1932) was a member of the Peabody Conservatory voice faculty from 1897 to 1932, director of the conservatory's glee club, and one of the founders of the Johns Hopkins Symphony Orchestra. The collection consists of manuscript and published scores of music composed by Bochau, including vocal music, symphonic music, and chamber music.
Collection of Ebbe Hamerik scores
Ebbe Hamerik was a conductor and composer who was the son of Asger Hamerik, director of the Peabody Conservatory from 1871 to 1898. This intentionally assembled collection contains facsimile scores of Ebbe Hamerik's music composed from approximately 1935 to 1950, including chamber music, songs, symphonies, and operas.
Collection of Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji published writings and reproduced scores
Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji was an English pianist and composer. The collection contains published writings as well as photocopied scores of Sorabji's music for piano, chamber ensembles, orchestra, organ, and voice.
Collection of Metropolitan Opera scrapbooks
The collection of Metropolitan Opera scrapbooks, 1906-1909, contains six volumes of clippings and programs about the Metropolitan Opera Company. The creator of the scrapbooks is unknown.
Committee on Post-War Planning records
The Committee on Post-War Planning (first known as the Committee on the Curriculum) was set up on November 12, 1942, by President Isaiah Bowman. The records of the Committee on Post-War Planning date from January 1943 to September 1944. Consisting of minutes, correspondence, curriculum reports, and a final report, the records are concerned with projecting the role of the university after the Second World War.
Committee on the Organization of a Technological School records
Commonplace Book
The collection consists of one manuscript commonplace book, with the holographic title, "Miscellanies in prose and verse."
Commonplace Book
This Commonplace book is a handwritten, bound manuscript of the late seventeenth century written in English. Subjects in the Commonplace book include asking advice and counseling, battles, boasting, how to make a conquest of another country, fear, the way to procure friends, and how to deal with a vanquished enemy.
Commonplace Book
The collection consists of one commonplace book, perhaps created in Norfolk, England.
Commonplace book collection
This collection consists of two commonplace books dating from the 19th century.
Communist propaganda poster reproduction postcards
This collection contains seventeen postcards published by the Central Museum of the Revolution in Moscow, printed in Leningrad in approximately 1932. There is no biographical or historical information available on the creator at this time.
Community Concerts at Second records
Community Concerts at Second, formerly known as the Second Presbyterian Concert Series, is a nonprofit organization established in 1987 in Baltimore that invites classical musicians to perform free concerts. The collection contains administrative records, concert programs, photographs, clippings, and recordings related to the organization and its concerts.
COMSAT Corporation collection
Confederate Naval letters
A collection of almost 260 letters and documents dating 1861-1864, written by various officers of the Confederate States Government and the Confederate Navy.
Confiscations of Loyalists' Holdings documents
The collection consists of one bound holographic ledger (1787-1801) containing copies of petitions from citizens who hoped to purchase lots and estates in Maryland formerly held by persons loyal to the British crown during the period of the American Revolution.
Conrad Aiken letter
Conrad Potter Aiken (1889–1973) was an American writer, whose work includes poetry, short stories, novels, a play, and an autobiography. The collection consists of one letter from Conrad Aiken to an unidentified correspondent, January 26, 1969.
Conrad Aiken papers
Conrad Aiken (1889–1973) was an American poet, novelist, and critic. Collection consists of one published poem (1968) titled "A Clear, Brave, Civilizing Force" and was Aiken's contribution to the committee of Arts and Letters for Humphrey.
Conrad Gebelein papers
The collection consists of correspondence, two scrapbooks and other ephemeral material related to Gebelein's association with the Johns Hopkins University.
Constantine Music Collection
A small selection of popular songs.
Contraband's Song of Freedom lyric sheet
Joseph Eastburn Winner (1837-1918) was an American composer and music publisher. This collection consists of a lyric sheet for his Contraband's Song of Freedom, an American Civil War song dealing with African Americans and slavery, dated 1865.
Copies of letters and papers concerning the "Affaire Carrouges," a Surrealist controversy also called the "Affaire Pastoureau"
This collection contains copies of seven documents created in the 1950s concerning the Surrealist turmoil originating from the ‘Affaire Carrouges’. In 1951, a conflict between Surrealists Henri Pastoureau and Michel Carrouges due to a disagreement about religion resulted in the fracturing of the French Surrealist movement for three months. There is representation from both sides of the conflict in this collection.
Cora and Ellen Snyder papers
The Cora and Ellen Snyder papers contain class notes taken during their music studies at the Peabody Preparatory. A 1915-1916 yearbook is also included.
Corbett Reynolds Rudely Elegant and Red Party photo album and ephemera
This collection contains a photo album, clothing, and accessories associated with Corbett Reynolds' Columbus, OH gay nightclub he owned, named Rudely Elegant, and the circuit parties, which he called Red Parties, that Reynolds held after Rudely Elegant closed in 1985.