University of Notre Dame
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B


Baart, Peter A., 1858-1908.

Papers, 1882-1907.

5 linear feet.

3 photographs.

Restricted by contract.

Inventory with index to correspondence.

Catholic priest, pastor of St. Mary's Church in Marshall, Michigan, secretary to the school board of the Diocese of Detroit, and authority on canon law.

Correspondence, records of canon law cases, papers related to his study of Catholic orphanages, Orphans and Orphan Asylums (1885), pamphlets on Catholic problems, and photographs. Correspondents include Arthur Preuss, William H. Sadlier, Bishop Henry J. Richter, and Francesco Cardinal Satolli.

CBAA; GBAA


Bach, Ferdinand Dominic.

Correspondence, 1839-1842.

2 linear inches.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Correspondence concerning the foundation of the Fathers of Mercy in the United States. Includes 34 transcribed and xeroxed letters written between Bach and Fathers Jean Baptiste Rauzan, SPM, and Jacques Le Vassuer, SPM, both of whom were at the Fathers of Mercy House in Paris. Also includes a xerox of a 1932 letter to Thomas McAvoy, CSC, concerning Bach.

The Society of the Fathers of Mercy (SPM) became Congregation of the Fathers of Mercy (CPM) circa 1960.

In French.

CBCH


Bachofer, Cletus S. (Cletus Shelley), 1913-1964.

Papers, 1931-1964.

10 linear inches.

57 photographs.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Folder list.

Catholic priest, biology professor at the University of Notre Dame (1948, 1950-1964), and visiting research professor at the Argonne National Laboratory (1949), an Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) facility near Chicago.

Correspondence (1938-1964) with AEC officials, colleagues, and students; grant applications, contracts, reports and other material relating to his experimentation in radiation biology and neuro-physiology for the AEC (1951-1964); personal documents; a scrapbook; and photographs.

CBAC; GBAC


Badin, Stephen T., (Stephen Theodore), 1768-1853.

Papers, 1768-1943 (bulk 1830-1846).

1 linear inch.

2 microfilm reels.

1 medal.

Father Badin, the first priest ordained in the United States of America, arrived in South Bend in 1830 and established the St. Joseph Mission on the present site of the University of Notre Dame.

Baptismal register of Badin's Mission at Notre Dame (1830-1841); a few letters by Badin including one to Bishop William Quarter of Chicago (1846) and drafts of a letter to the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in Paris (1845) with translation; copies of documents of Badin's baptism and ordination; documents that mention him, some dating from the twentieth century; photocopies of Badin's accounts recorded in the ledgers of Lathrop Minor Taylor and of S. Hanna and Company (originals held by the Northern Indiana Historical Society); and microfilm containing letters from Badin to Archbishop John Carroll of Baltimore (1796-1812) concerning Badin's experience as Vicar General of Bardstown (originals in the Baltimore Archdiocesan Archives). Also a religious medal that belonged to Badin.

In English, French, and Latin.

CZCF; MZCF; OZCF


Baraga, Frederic, 1797-1868.

Papers, 1809-1908.

7 linear inches.

3 reels of microfilm.

Narrative description of each reel of microfilm.

Missionary among the Chippewas in Wisconsin and the upper peninsula of Michigan (1831-1853). Consecrated a bishop in 1853, he served as Bishop of Sainte-Marie (1857-1865) and of Sault Sainte-Marie and Marquette (1865-1868).

Copies of typewritten transcripts of documentation assembled by the Bishop Baraga Association in support of the cause for his canonization as a saint; consisting of letters, reports, journal and account-book entries, and invoices.

Also microfilm containing correspondence, 1850s-1860s; an Indian language (Ottawa or Chippewa) catechism; an introduction to Catholicism in North America, in German, possibly written for the Leopoldine Society; and correspondence and records of the Michigan Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior, 1825-1850, concerning a conflict between Baptist and Catholic officials over the proceeds coming from the sale of mission lands near Grand Rapids, Michigan, with correspondents including Bishop Peter LeFevre, John Tyler, James Polk, department officials and representatives of the litigants.

Source for Department of the Interior material: National Archives, Washington, D.C.

Other material: the Archives of the University of Notre Dame.

In English, German, and Ottawa or Ojibwa.

CBAR; MBAR


Bardstown (Ky.). Board of Trustees.

Records, 1782-1827.

1 reel of microfilm.

Typescript minutes of the Board of Trustees of the town of Bardstown, Kentucky, including sale of lots with names, deeds and transfers, construction of market houses, slave rules, expenses, elected officials, election results, and fire protection.

MKYB


Baroni, Geno C. (Geno Charles), 1930- .

Papers, 1962-1984.

37 linear feet.

1 linear foot of photographs.

Folder list.

Monsignor Baroni was Director of Urban Affairs for the Archdiocese of Washington (1967), program director of USCC Urban Task Force (1970), founder and president of the National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs (1971), and founder of the Catholic Conference on Ethnic and Neighborhood Affairs (1974). He was appointed Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development by President Carter (1977).

Correspondence, speeches, scrapbooks, clippings, agenda, reports, newsletters, pamphlets, photographs, plans, bills, questionnaires, statistics, training courses, and background papers; concerning catechetics, teaching, work with youth, race relations, black power, civil rights, fair housing, integration, poverty, birth control, minimum wage, credit unions, co-op housing, welfare, crime, Catholic Action, voter registration, urban rehabilitation, and ethnic populations of cities all over the United States; with material concerning the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, United States Catholic Conference, Citizens' Crusade against Poverty, home rule for the District of Columbia, Upward Bound, and Baroni's work at HUD.

CBRN; ABRN; GBRN


Bartholomew, Paul Charles, 1907-1975.

Papers, 1930s-1975.

12 linear feet.

12 audio tapes.

47 photographs.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Series description, folder list.

Professor of political science at Notre Dame (1930-1975); Republican Party activist.

Includes correspondence; manuscripts and reprints of his articles; drafts, research notes, and copies of three of his books: Profile of a Precinct Committeeman (Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.: Oceana Publications, 1968), The Indiana Third (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1970), and The Irish Judiciary (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Dame Press, 1971); transcripts of his lectures and speeches; grade books and course outlines; correspondence, reports, and minutes relating to his work with the Community Conservation Board of Chicago, the Indiana Commission on State Tax and Financing Policy, and the Republican National Committee; newspaper clippings relating to the Notre Dame mock political convention and Washington tour for Notre Dame students, two programs started by Bartholomew; tape recordings of lecture and research notes; and photographs.

CBRW; ABRW; GBRW


Bauer, Burnett C. (Burnett Calix), 1916- .

Papers, 1947-1962.

3 linear inches.

Folder list.

South Bend (Indiana) businessman and activist in the Christian Family Movement (CFM).

Correspondence with Pat and Patty Crowley and others; minutes, lecture notes, newspaper clippings, and newsletters (Christian Family Notes, 1948, and Christian Family Bulletin, 1949-1950) concerning Bauer's involvement in the founding and early activities of CFM. The documents in the collection are all photocopies; Bauer has retained the originals.

CZAR


Bayley, James Roosevelt, 1814-1877.

Papers, 1839-1872.

2.5 linear inches.

Calendar with index.

First bishop of Newark and eighth archbishop of Baltimore.

Personal correspondence, 1839-1872, mostly from members of Bayley's family.

CBAY


Beichner, Paul E., 1912- .

Papers, 1943-1974.

4 linear inches.

Priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross; professor of English, University of Notre Dame, 1945-1952, 1971- , and Dean of the Graduate School, 1952-1971.

Woodcuts used in Beichner's Once Upon a Parable: Fables for the Present, 1974, and copies of published papers by Beichner, 1943-1960.

CBEI; OBEI


Belloc, Hilaire, 1870-1953.

Diary and sketchbooks, 1889-1912.

1 linear inch.

Item list.

Diary dating from 12 April to 11 October 1889, including some sketches and drafts of poems; sketchbook dating from 1891, with monochromatic drawings of American landscape; sketchbook dating from 1893-1894, with watercolors of French landscape and buildings; sketchbook dating from 1912, with pencil drawings of European scenes, including mountains, bridges, cathedrals, steeples, towers, soldiers, and Robespierre's house.

Acquired by purchase from estate of Douglas Woodruff in 1978.

CBEL


Benavides, Alonso de, fl. 1630.

Memorial, 1634 Feb. 12 .

58 leaves.

Franciscan missionary to New Mexico, 1625-1630.

Photostat of a report concerning Franciscan missions among the Indians of New Mexico, written by Alonso de Benavides and presented to Pope Urban VIII, 12 February 1634.

In Italian. Source: Propaganda Fide Archives, Vatican City. Photocopied from Monsignor Peter Guilday's copy, 1944.

CZCH


Benet, Mary.

Papers, 1963-1978.

2 linear feet.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Folder list.

Educator, civil rights activist, founder of the Chicago Urban Apostolate for Sisters, and chair of the personnel task force of the Archdiocese of Chicago School Study Commission.

Correspondence, clippings, and publications of Sister Mary Benet, including The New Sister (1969); and correspondence, reports, minutes, and clippings from the School Study Commission, 1970-1971.

CBEN


Benoit, Peter L.

Diary, 1875.

1 linear inch.

Josephite visitor to the United States.

Photocopy of typewritten transcript of Canon Benoit's diary of a trip to America, 6 January to 8 June 1875, including descriptions of Josephite missions among freed slaves.

Original diary in three volumes remains in the Mill Hill Fathers Archives, St. Joseph's College, Mill Hill, London, N.W. 7, England.

The Josephite Fathers have a microfilm copy of the diary in their archives: 1130 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD, 21202.

Transcribed from microfilm by Peter E. Hogan, SSJ, in 1965.

CBNO


Berkery, John J., d. 1989.

Papers, 1932-1988.

9 linear feet.

4 linear feet of printed material.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Inventory.

Roman Catholic priest; one of the founders of the Young Christian Workers in the United States.

Correspondence; manuscripts of Berkery's memoirs of the Catholic Action movement; newsletters; clippings, including articles by and about Joseph Cardinal Cardijn; photocopies and mimeographed material including pieces by Pat Keegan and Paul McGuire.

With the exception of one folder concerning St. Therese of Lisieux, the papers all pertain to the Young Christian Workers, Young Christian Students, Christian Family Movement, and other Catholic Action organizations. Also books, booklets, magazines, pamphlets, papal encyclicals, tracts, and other printed material related to Catholic Action, YCW, YCS, CFM, the Second Vatican Council, and St. Therese of Lisieux.

CBRK; PBRK


Bertrand Family.

Genealogical material, ca.1665-1964.

.15 linear inches.

Copies of lineages and official documents concerning the Bertrand family of Niles, Michigan, and its forebears.

CZAO


Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana.

Biblioteca Barberiniana.

Manuscripts, 1600s-1700s (bulk 1600s).

15 reels of microfilm.

Library founded by Francesco Barberini in 1632, acquired and made part of the Vatican Library by Pope Leo XIII in 1902.

Correspondence and manuscripts in the Barberini collection of the Vatican Library, including documents concerning activities of Pope Urban VIII, a member of the Barberini family. The Vatican Library's manuscript collections are divided according to language group; languages using the Latin alphabet are classified as Latin. The Barberini Library contains over 10,000 Latin codices; this microfilm contains Barberini Latin codices 8614-8660.

Vatican Library.

In Latin, Italian, and French.

MBBR


Binsfeld, Edmund L. (Edmund Louis), 1905-1985.

Papers, [ca. 1920-1950s].

3.75 linear feet.

Box list.

Catholic clergyman, writer, librarian, and archivist of the Kansas City Province of the Society of Precious Blood.

Articles, newspaper clippings, lectures, unpublished papers, and a small amount of correspondence relating to writers and literary topics. Correspondents include Jean Charlot and Sister Mary Madeleva, CSC, president of St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, Indiana, 1934-1961.

CBIN


Bishops' Memorial Hall.

Collection, [ca.1870-ca.1910].

6.5 linear feet of photographs.

20 linear feet of artifacts.

2.5 linear inches of manuscript material.

Inventory.

Photographs and photomechanical prints of individual Catholic clergy and religious, especially portraits of the popes and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church; religious artwork; groups of Catholic religious, clergy, and lay people; Catholic missions and missionaries in the United States, Japan, and India, specifically the Bengal region which became East Pakistan and then Bangladesh; and Catholic churches, schools, orphanages, and other institutions. The photographs and prints were collected largely by James F. Edwards for the Bishops' Memorial Hall at Notre Dame, which was a museum and archives dedicated to preserving the history of American Catholicism. The collection concentrates on the American church, but it also includes photographs and prints relating to Catholics and their institutions elsewhere, most notably Canada and Europe.

Also vestments, crucifixes, candles, and other religious artifacts associated with American bishops and prominent priests; and an inventory of the contents of Bishops' Memorial Hall (1908-1909).

GBMH; OBMH; UBMH


Bitting, William C. (William Coleman), 1887- .

Papers, 1927-1932.

3 linear inches.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Member of the investment securities firm of Bitting and Co.

Correspondence, memoranda, bonds, printed announcements, circulars, clippings, photographs, and religious pictures; concerning the issue of mortgage bonds and loans to churches, hospitals, religious orders, and charitable organizations including the Roman Catholic dioceses of St. Augustine, Baltimore, Detroit, Manila, San Antonio, Santa Fe, Seattle, Galveston, El Paso, Toledo, Chicago, Indianapolis, Altoona, Fort Wayne, Wheeling, Cleveland, Monterey-Fresno, Vancouver, Mobile, and Richmond; the Catholic Church in Bavaria, Methodist Episcopal Church, Protestant Episcopal Church, Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist General Convention of Texas, Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, and Salvation Army; Chautauqua Institution, Neighborhood Association of St Louis, Baylor University; Franciscans, Dominicans, Sulpicians, Lorettines, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, Sisters of Charity, and other religious orders; and many individual hospitals and Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Campbellite, Lutheran and Episcopalian churches.

CBIT


Blanchet, Francis Norbert, 1795-1883.

Papers, 1846-1902 (bulk 1846-1882).

2.5 linear inches.

Item list.

Missionary in the Pacific Northwest in the 19th century; named vicar-general of the Oregon country in 1838 and first bishop of Oregon City (later known as the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon) when the episcopal see was created in 1846; developed the Catholic Ladder (1859) as a teaching device for the Indians to illustrate the history and beliefs of the Christian faith.

Letters and papers from Blanchet's trips to France (1846) and South America (1856-1857); correspondence with Major Edward Mallet (1881-1882), with a few letters exchanged between Mallet and Bishop Augustin Magloire Alexander Blanchet (1883); letters, pamphlets and clippings involving Archbishops F.N. Blanchet, Charles J. Seghers, William H. Gross, and Alexander Christie; and a few papers and clippings involving the Diocese of Vancouver Island, suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Oregon City.

CBLN


Blanqui, Louis Auguste, 1805-1881.

Papers, [1830s-1880s].

21 reels of microfilm.

Manuscript inventory on microfilm dated 27 March 1899. It generally provides a brief physical description without indicating contents.

French socialist and architect of secret societies who participated in the revolutions of 1830, 1839, 1848, and 1871.

Correspondence, journals, manuscripts, notes, printed articles, newspapers and other periodicals; concerning Blanqui's life, philosophy, and revolutionary activities, including his account of the events of 1848.

Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris.

In French.

MBLQ


Blayney, Lindsey, 1874-1971.

Papers, 1959-1973.

.15 linear inches.

An educator and a veteran of World War I; received an honorary degree from the University of Notre Dame.

Copies of reminiscences by and of Blayney. Includes some information on the Blayney family.

CZAC


Boland, John P., 1888-1968.

Papers, 1910-1968.

5 linear feet.

33 scrapbooks.

1 folder of photographs.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Series outline and folder list.

Diocesan priest and labor activist. He served in several Buffalo parishes before being named the first chairman of the New York State Labor Relations Board, a position he held until 1942. He helped found the Buffalo Diocesan Labor College in 1938 and was active in many labor organizations, including the Catholic Industrial Conference of America.

Following World War II, Monsignor Boland worked for War Relief Services (National Catholic Welfare Conference) in Europe and the Middle East and served as a labor relations consultant to General Douglas MacArthur in Japan. He was pastor of St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Buffalo from 1943 until his retirement in 1967.

Throughout his career, Monsignor Boland wrote and spoke extensively on the labor movement and the Catholic Church.

Correspondence, extensive newspaper clippings on labor activities of the 1930s and 1940s, notes on cases heard by the New York State Labor Relations Board (1939-1942), speeches and essays by Boland, records from his postwar trips to Europe and Japan, and photographs.

CBOL; GBOL


Bolger, Henry J., 1900-1964.

Papers, 1929-1952.

2.5 linear inches.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Professor and chairman of the University of Notre Dame physics department, 1936-1964; project director for the Manhattan Project, 1943-1945.

Correspondence, notebooks, class record books, passport and immunization record.

CBLG


Bornemann, George, 1838-1924.

Papers, 1889-1925.

3 linear inches.

Inventory.

German parish priest, pastor of St. Paul's Church in Reading, Pennsylvania.

Correspondence, notes, church documents, and printed material; concerning Bornemann's work as a leader of the German American Catholic Congresses and his interest in organizations of German American Catholics such as the Staatsverband Societies of Pennsylvania and Ohio, the Catholic Central Verein, and the Amerikanish Deutschen Priester Vereins. Correspondents include J.N. Enzlberger, William Faerber, Joseph Schroeder, and bishops Leo Haid, OSB, and P.J. Hurth, CSC.

In German, English, and Latin.

CBNM


Bowman, N. R.

Notebook, [ca.1832]-1852.

1 volume and 2 fragments.

A manuscript book of notes and comments on various scriptural passages by a Methodist minister in Indiana and two loose fragments of similar notes.

CZBA


Boyle, Paul M. (Paul Michael), 1926- .

Papers, 1960-[ongoing].

59 linear feet.

4 linear feet of printed material.

Restricted by contract.

Inventory with index.

Catholic priest and canon lawyer; Superior General of the Congregation of the Passion (1976-1989) and Bishop of Mandeville, a Vicariate Apostolic in Jamaica (1991- ).

General correspondence files (1960-1990); lecture notes and student papers from courses on canon law taught by Boyle; correspondence and reports from his tenure as president (1964-1965) of the Canon Law Society of America; subject files (1965-1974) on canon law as it affects religious life; correspondence, minutes, memoranda, and financial reports (1974-1983) from Boyle's close association with Stewardship Services Inc. (La Salette Fathers) and the Religious Communities Trust; minutes and meeting material from Boyle's tenure as president (1969-1974) of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men (CMSM), with correspondence and committee material from his work as CMSM representative to Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Center for Intercultural Formation, Sacred Congregation for Religious, and Union of Superiors General; and material concerning the 1987 Synod of Bishops on the role of the laity, Vatican finances, the Pontifical Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law, and the Pontifical Commission on Religious Life in the United States of America.

CPBY; PPBY


Breig, Joseph A. (Joseph Anthony), 1905- .

Papers, 1919-1975.

15 linear feet.

10 photographs and 40 negatives.

Catholic journalist.

Correspondence, manuscripts, photographs and printed material; including clippings and offprints of articles, columns, and book reviews representing Breig's interest in Catholicism, the Garabandal Apparitions, abortion, and Humanae Vitae; with samples of editorial work and promotional material, cartoons by Earl Wolf based on ideas suggested by Breig, and poems by Breig's friends.

CBRI; GBRI


Brennan, Thomas J.,1898-1972.

Papers, 1906-1971.

7 linear inches.

2.5 linear inches of photographs.

Folder list.

Professor of philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, 1931-1972.

Sermons and speeches collected or delivered by Brennan, 1906-1964; writings on philosophy collected by Brennan; correspondence, 1952-1971; photographs; and the program from the world premiere, held in South Bend, of the film Knute Rockne: All American.

CBRE; GBRE


Brent, Daniel, 1774-1841.

Letter book, 1833-1836.

1 linear inch.

Transcription of letters, 1833-1836.

American Consul at Paris.

Letter book with entries dating from 10 August 1833 to 1 April 1836, including letters to John Quincy Adams, President Andrew Jackson, Secretary of State Louis McLane, Secretary of State John Forsyth, Edward Stubbs of the State Department, William Brent, Robert Walsh, Philip Kearny, Senator Peleg Sprague, George Law, William B. Taylor, Felix Cicognani (U.S. Consul at Rome), and John W. Parker (U.S. Consul at Amsterdam).

CBNT


Brent, John Carroll.

Letter book and photographs, 1848-1850.

.5 linear inches.

1 linear inch of photographs.

American lawyer.

Letter book with entries dating from 13 May 1848 to 22 April 1850, including letters to Robert Walsh (U.S. Consul, Paris), John Jay, Commodore W.C. Bolton, Daniel J. Carroll, General Jackson Morton, William Carroll, and James Richard; and photographs.

CBET; GBET


Brothers of Holy Cross. Midwest Province

(Notre Dame, Ind.)

Collection, 1822-1974.

5 linear inches.

Folder list.

Obituary book of deceased brothers (1822-1878); last wills of many brothers (1843-1885); register of brothers at Notre Dame (1842-1850); list of brothers associated with Notre Dame (1923-1948); correspondence and personal documents of various brothers.

CSCB


Brownson, Henry F., (Henry Francis), 1835-1913.

Papers, 1855-1908.

2 linear feet.

Calendar with index.

Son of Orestes and Sarah (Healy) Brownson; one of the leaders of the American Catholic Congress of Baltimore in 1889; author of a three-volume biography of his father and editor of his father's works in twenty volumes.

Correspondence, material on the American Catholic Congress of Baltimore (1889), and miscellaneous material including one scrapbook of clippings.

CBRH


Brownson, Orestes Augustus, 1803-1876.

Papers, 1823-1876.

9 linear feet.

90 volumes of printed material.

1 photograph.

1 walking stick.

Calendar with index; also A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of the Orestes Augustus Brownson Papers (University of Notre Dame Archives, 1966).

Associate of the New England Transcendentalists; convert to Roman Catholicism; founder, editor, and chief author of the Boston Quarterly Review (1838-1842) and Brownson's Quarterly Review (1844-1864 and 1873-1875). He wrote essays on Church and State, civil and religious freedom, Catholic education, the philosophy of science, and the conflict between conservative and progressive forces in the Church.

Correspondence, journal, clippings, and manuscript drafts of books, speeches, articles, and essays, both published and unpublished, 1823-1876; including correspondence with the Comte de Montalembert, Louis Veuillot, Lord Acton, John Henry Cardinal Newman, George Bancroft, Salmon Chase, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Isaac Hecker, Henry David Thoreau, and Archbishops John Hughes, Francis Patrick Kenrick and Martin Spalding; manuscripts of essays by Albert Brisbane, Archbishop Francis P. Kenrick, George Thompson and others; a photograph of Orestes Brownson and his walking stick.

Also printed material consisting of The Boston Quarterly Review (1838-1842), Brownson's Quarterly Review (1844-1864, 1873-1875); a twenty-volume set of The Works of Orestes A. Brownson (1882-1887) edited by his son Henry and annotated by his biographer, Thomas R. Ryan; and books by and about Brownson.

Papers available on microfilm from the Archives of the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, 46556. Gift of Henry F. Brownson, 1890.

CBRO; GBRO; MBRO; OBRO; PBRO


Bruté, Simon, 1779-1839.

Papers, 1810-1839.

2 reels of microfilm.

1 missal.

Microfilm of correspondence of Simon Gabriel Bruté, first Bishop of Vincennes (1834-1839), both before and after his appointment as bishop, made from documents in various collections held by the University of Notre Dame Archives. Consists mainly of letters handwritten by Bruté, with some printed material and correspondence received by Bruté.

Correspondents include William Gaston, Rev. Stephen T. Badin, and bishops Joseph Rosati, CM, John Timon, CM, John Baptist David, SS, Guy Ignatius Chabrat, and Anthony Blanc. Also a missal used by Bruté as a missionary priest in Maryland.

In English, French, and Latin.

MSGB; OSGB


Buell, Don Carlos, 1818-1898.

Papers, 1841-1862.

5 linear inches.

United States Army General, Adjutant General of the Department of Texas (1853-1856) and Commander of the Department of the Ohio (1861-1862).

A manuscript book of special orders of General William S. Harney, General Persifor Frazer Smith, and Colonel Albert S. Johnston (1853-1856); a manuscript book of letters sent by Buell to assorted military departments and units, primarily concerning orders and monthly strength returns (1853-1856); a book of printed General Orders of the Department of the Ohio (1861-1862); a four-page biography of Buell; and an unidentified index (1841-1846).

CBUE


Burke Family.

Papers, 1863-1913.

6 items.

Civil War pension documents of private Mathew Burke (Company I, 23rd Regiment of New York National Guard); a contract involving Annie J. Cunningham (1893) and an undertaker's bill for the funeral of Mary C. Cunningham (1906); and jubilee cards for Sister Mary Dominic (1913). These persons are probably forebears of Joseph P. Burke, Notre Dame class of 1925.

CZBR


Burns, James A. (James Aloysius), 1867-1940.

Papers, 1880s-1940.

5 linear inches.

1 reel of microfilm.

1 audio tape.

Folder list.

Professor of chemistry, 1895-1900, and president, 1919-1922, University of Notre Dame; priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross.

Correspondence (1880s-1940), primarily with Francis W. Howard, 1905-1940; and printed material. Microfilm contains Burns' diary (1867-1940), which includes accounts of conversations with leaders and officials of the University of Notre Dame including John W. Cavanaugh, Andrew Morrissey, John A. Zahm, William Corby, and Archbishop John Joseph Keane; concerning budgetary questions and strategies, battles over educational policy, changes in parietals, campus politics, the death of Fr. Corby, the Spanish-American War, and Vatican reaction to Zahm's book on evolution in 1899. Microfilm also contains a biographical sketch of Zahm and statistical analyses of students by classes (1895-1899).

CBUR; MBUR; ABUR


Burrell, David B.

Papers, 1972-1974.

5 linear inches.

2 photographs.

Folder list.

Professor of philosophy, University of Notre Dame, 1964- .

Papers include reports of the University of Notre Dame Task Forces on academic discipline, enrollment, physical facilities, and research and instruction; correspondence, reports, and minutes, University of Notre Dame Committee on University Priorities, 1972-1974; an evaluation of the University of Notre Dame Philosophy Department; and photographs.

CBRL; GBRL


Bussard, Paul C., 1904- .

Papers, 1929-1978.

2 linear feet.

19 photographs.

Series outline.

Editor and publisher of Catholic Digest.

Clippings documenting Bussard's development of the Leaflet Missal (1929-1930), his reports from Europe (1947), and his participation in the Holy Year Press Flight (1950); correspondence, memoranda, reports, budgets, graphs, affadavits, depositions, pleadings, subpoenas, and clippings related to his suit against St. Thomas College and Catholic Digest, initiated in 1969 when the college, to which Bussard had given his stock in the magazine, removed him from his job as publisher; including legal files of Bussard's attorney, James R. McClure, and letters to and from Archbishop Leo Binz, Archbishop Leo C. Byrne, and Bishop James P. Shannon; manuscripts of Bussard's sermons on the collects of the Roman Missal and of his unpublished book The Case of the Catholic Digest; copies of his books Life and Death in the Philippines (New York: Vantage, 1978) and How to Get Ready to Die (Hicksville, NY: Exposition, 1978); and photographs.

CBUS; GBUS


Butler, Paul M., (Paul Mulholland), 1905-1961.

Papers, 1950-1960.

52 linear feet.

12 record albums.

Folder list with index.

Democrat, supporter of Adlai Stevenson, elected Indiana Committee man, 1952; member of the Executive Committee of the Democratic National Committee, 1953; Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, 1954-1960.

Correspondence, voting records and fact sheets, proceedings, newspaper clippings, phonograph recordings, and other material relating to the Democratic Party and political life, principally between 1950-1960.

Gift of Mrs. Anne Butler, widow of Paul M. Butler, 1962.

CBUT; ABUT


Byrne, James E., 1945- .

Papers, 1967-1973.

3 linear feet.

Contractual restrictions may apply.

Series description.

Graduate of Notre Dame, 1968; co-founder and coordinator of the charismatic Christian community known as True House in South Bend, Indiana; director of the Communication Center of the International Conference of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal; and author of Threshold of God's Promise, 1971.

Correspondence relating to the operation and mission of the True House community in South Bend and subject files including newsletters, minutes, community reports, and clippings of articles dealing with the Pentecostal movement.

CJEB


Notre Dame Archives