Overview
Correspondence, writings, etc., of Barbara Deming, feminist lesbian author and activist.
Dates
- Creation: 1886-1995
Language of Materials
Materials in English.
TERMS OF USE
Access. Unrestricted.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright. Judith McDaniel retains copyright in Barbara Deming's writings, including school papers, throughout her lifetime. Copyright in correspondence and other writings is held by the individual writer or publisher, or her/his heirs or assigns.
Copying. Unrestricted.
Extent
33.57 linear feet ((80 + 1/2 file boxes) 33 photograph folders, 3 folio folders, 6 folio+ folders, 3 oversize folders, 1 supersize folder, 5 audiotapes)Barbara Deming's papers consist primarily of her correspondence, and also include her writings and some material she collected.
The papers document Deming's activities, thoughts, and friendships. They provide an overview of her early writings and a complete view of her writing and attempts to publish after the late 1960s. For more about her earlier work, see the papers Deming gave to Boston University's Twentieth Century Collection in the early 1970s; these include articles on movies and theatre, correspondence about her trips to Vietnam, and papers used in writing Prison Notes (including logs kept by other prisoners in the Albany City Jail), Running Away from Myself, Wash Us and Comb Us, Revolution and Equilibrium, and the poems in We Cannot Live Without Our Lives.
This collection provides information about numerous female and male writers, publishers, photographers, painters, and political activists from the early 1940s through the early 1980s, mostly in the United States. The papers document the peace movement in the 1960s and its use of nonviolent direct action in the 1960s, particularly the War Resisters League, the Committee for Nonviolent Action, and Women Strike for Peace. The papers also shed light on the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and the women's movement of the 1970s and 80s. The anti-pornography movement is well documented through Deming's files on Women Against Violence Against Women and other organizations. Documentation of lesbian activists and women witches is scattered throughout the collection. For Burritt family genealogical information see #496.
Because correspondence appears throughout the collection, the processor has prepared an index of selected individual and organizational correspondents, which appears at the end of this finding aid. Although the name index does not include subjects, it is useful for topical research, as one can look up the names of people and organizations involved in a given subject.
The original order of the collection and Deming's file divisions have been maintained almost in their entirety. Deming kept separate alphabetical, chronological, and writings files; older folders that she had segregated, perhaps to make room for new ones, were reintegrated. Because it appears that Deming kept most organizational and subject files in the alphabetical sequence in Series II, any such files not already in that series were moved there. Almost all folder headings are based closely on Deming's. "[Sic]" follows those that are unusual or that shed additional light on the reasoning behind her filing practices; titles that appear to have little to do with a folder's contents or that are particularly odd are in quotation marks. The arrangement of the collection reflects the unity of all aspects of Deming's life: her personal, political, and professional life were integrated and cannot be separated. For information about any aspect, researchers are advised to peruse the entire finding aid.
A few of the files in Series I, II, and III were kept jointly by Deming and Vida (Ginsburg) Deming, Mary Meigs or, especially, Jane Verlaine; they therefore contain letters those women wrote and received. Some of the files kept partially or entirely by Verlaine are #47-55, 57-59, 76, #298, 636f+-655, 676-702. Most dried flowers and leaves were removed. Deming marked some folders, "Not for B.U. [Boston University]." In some cases this meant that she was retaining the file for her own work; in others, that she wished to keep its contents private during her lifetime. Only in the latter cases have the words "not for B.U." been included in the folder heading.
Before Judith McDaniel transferred these papers to the Schlesinger Library, she and her assistants compiled a database describing the contents of the folders. Copies of the information sheets they prepared on each folder appear in Box 1. McDaniel donated photocopies of some material to the Lesbian Herstory Archives in Brooklyn, New York.
Series I, Biographical (#1-83), contains articles about and interviews with Deming (including an audiotape), correspondence, engagement calendars, programs, clippings, and some bills and other financial material. In addition to a biographical overview, this series provides information about Deming's daily life, Jane and Oscar Verlaine's custody battle, and houses owned by Deming with Mary Meigs or Verlaine. Many of the engagement calendars were published by organizations with which Deming was involved (e.g., the War Resisters' League) and some contain longer, journal-like entries, correspondence, or notes; the few blank pages were discarded.
Series II, Alphabetical correspondence (#84-723o), includes letters to Deming; carbon copies, drafts, and some originals of her letters; notes from telephone conversations; and poems and other writings. There are also letters to others that were forwarded to Deming; correspondence prepared for publication; drafts, articles, poems, and other writings by correspondents; clippings, flyers, programs, posters, and other printed material from and about organizations and individuals; and photographs of Deming, her correspondents and others, some taken by professional women photographers. Many of the correspondents and authors are notable; see the index at the end of this finding aid.
For Deming these were not only files of personal and business correspondence, but also subject files. Some folders contain only clippings or a single letter; letters from the same person may appear under her name and under the names of one or more organizations or projects. Additional correspondence appears throughout the collection; consult the index at the end of this finding aid.
The folder titles include the names that Deming used on her folder headings, as she wrote them (i.e., not necessarily a person's formal or full name); many folders include correspondents not listed in her titles. Dates were added by the processor, as were the names of recipients of letters not from Deming; these names are not in the index. Many of Deming's "see also" notes have not been retained as they are reflected in the index. Deming kept most files in reverse chronological order; the processor reversed the order, but did not attempt to put letters in precise chronological order.
Correspondence between Mary Meigs and Deming that Meigs donated was not interfiled; see #415-20. Because Deming often kept carbon copies, many of the letters Meigs received from her are duplicated in Deming's files.
Series III, Chronological correspondence (#724-958o), contains letters to Deming, carbon copies, drafts, some originals of her letters, and notes from telephone conversations. As in Series II, there are also letters to others that were forwarded to Deming; drafts, manuscripts, and printed writings by correspondents; clippings, flyers, maps, programs, and other printed material from and about organizations and individuals; photographs of Deming, her correspondents, and others, some taken by professional women photographers; and a paper crane, purple cord, four-leaf clovers and other objects, most sent as tokens of luck or for their magical properties to help Deming recover from cancer.
Many correspondents who appear in this series also appear in Series II and elsewhere in the collection. The correspondence from before 1970 that appears in this series tends to be less personal than that in Series II. After the early 70s, however, Deming was less diligent in filing correspondence alphabetically; the more recent correspondence is therefore more personal. This series includes letters Deming wrote and received while abroad, in jail, or in the hospital, and correspondence regarding her work as a writer in the 1940s and 1950s.
Most files, particularly from the early 1960s on, were in rough reverse chronological order; in most cases the processor simply reversed the order. When files were not in any apparent order, or when they contained letters grouped by correspondent, the processor usually left them in their original order and left the dates as Deming had them; there are many letters without dates, but there is generally no reason not to accept her dates as recorded on the folders. Letters from files labeled "answered" or "answer" but dating from different years were refiled into folders with the same labels for the appropriate years. Files kept in years when Deming was not able to maintain them (e.g. 1983-1984) were put in order by month. Most month divisions, however, are approximate; when searching for a letter written in a particular month of a particular year, it is best to check the whole year.
Series IV, Writings (#959-1394), is divided into six subseries. Each subseries consists primarily of drafts and notes, most of them typed, that Deming kept in the process of writing; each also includes correspondence, most with publishers and editors. Subseries IV.B-IV.E also contain printed articles by Deming and others, reviews and critiques, and material regarding submission for publication. Folders containing submission material may include correspondence, drafts of writings, copies of the submissions, or printed copies of the work; the inventory does not distinguish among these possibilities. Submissions are especially numerous in Subseries IV.B. There is additional correspondence regarding Deming's writings in Series II and III; consult the index under the names of editors or publishers.
Subseries IV.A, For schools/courses, contains papers and notes Deming wrote during high school, college, and graduate school.
Subseries IV.B, Poems. Deming kept multiple carbon copies of many of her poems, presumably so that she could send them to friends and prospective publishers. Only one copy of each was kept unless a second copy was part of a collection Deming was preparing.
Subseries IV.C, Specific pieces and projects, includes drafts and final copies, etc. of stories, essays, articles, plays, speeches, and pamphlets. Similar material appears in Series II and III and usually is not noted in the folder list.
Subseries IV.D, Film, includes the summaries and analyses Deming wrote while working for the Library of Congress, as well as promotional material for many of the movies in question. Deming retained an extensive file of promotional photographs; they were sent to the Film Still Archive at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. This subseries also includes material about Running Away from Myself, the book Deming based on her film research.
Subseries IV.E, Books, contains preparatory material and correspondence for most of Deming's books. For Which Way is North (unpublished in that form), see Subseries IV.B. For Running Away from Myself, see Subseries IV.D. For more documentation of Deming's work on Prison Notes and perhaps on On Revolution and Equilibrium, see her collection at Boston University. Several of Deming's books were compilations of correspondence and of earlier work. Originals and carbon copies of correspondence she prepared for publication appear in this subseries, Subseries IV.C or IV.D, or Series II, depending on how Deming labeled the files; such correspondence is included in the index. Writings Deming published in several places appear here if Deming labeled the file with the book title; otherwise they appear in Subseries IV.C. Such duplication has not been cross-referenced.
Subseries IV.F, Journals and notes, includes daily diaries in which Deming chronicled her activities and thoughts; outlines and drafts for unidentified, or perhaps unpublished, writing projects (which she labeled "notes"); and notes she wrote during movies, lectures, sit-ins, and other events, and while in jail. Some files in this subseries were labeled "Notes, poems," "Journal in progress," or "Journal, poems"; most had been refoldered by the donor. Material similar to that in Subseries IV.F. that could be identified with a particular work appears with that work. This subseries contains almost all the documentation of Deming's travels that appears in this collection. For her diaries and notes while in Italy, Greece, and elsewhere in Europe, see #1231-35 in Subseries IV.E.
Series V, Writings by others (#1396-1421), contains manuscripts of poems, plays, stories, essays, and books by Deming's friends and acquaintances. It is arranged in alphabetical order by authors' last names. Some may have sent their work to Deming when she was an editor, or because she was helping make grant decisions for Money for Women; some wanted her comments, or thought that she would be interested in their topics. Some folders include correspondence or Deming's comments. Every series in this collection (particularly Series II) includes similar material, but Deming kept this set separate. These writings have been kept with Deming's papers because their subject matter is related to that of the collection. Copies of works published in the mainstream press were discarded, however.
Series VI. Addenda received between July 2000 and February 2014 (#1422-1509, T-248.2 - T-248.5), contains photographs, mostly of family members from earlier generations, as well as photographs used in Prisons That Could Not Hold; family correspondence, including many letters written to her aunt Eleanor, 1896-1945; Deming's personal correspondence including letters to Mary Meigs while Deming was in jail, with Deming's publishers, and with friends at the end of her life; writings by Deming; financial records including her wills and income taxes, the latter reflecting her sources of income, investment choices, and her stance as a war tax resister; and audiotapes.
BIOGRAPHY
Barbara Deming, author and activist, was born on July 23, 1917, in New York City, the daughter of admiralty lawyer Harold S. Deming (1883-1954) and former singer Katherine (Burritt) Deming (1891-?). The second of four children, Deming had three brothers: MacDonald, Quentin (Chip), and Angus (Bim). She grew up in New York City and on South Mountain Road in New City, N.Y., west of the Hudson River. The Poors (writer Bessie Breuer, painter Henry Varnum III, and their daughter, writer Annie) lived on the same road in New City. Bessie and Annie became Deming's lifelong friends.
Deming attended a Quaker school from kindergarten through high school. When she was sixteen she fell in love with a friend of her mother's, Norma Millay (sister of Edna St. Vincent); they were involved for about two years, probably until Deming left for college. Although she had long-term relationships with several women and lived, as she said, as a lesbian, Deming did not "come out" publicly until she was in her fifties.
Deming looked back on this event, falling in love for the first time, as a doubly significant moment: when she realized that she was a lesbian, and when she began to write. Writing served as an outlet to express lesbian feelings frowned upon by society, and as a process through which, as she said, "I struggle to know more truly or to affirm more stubbornly what it is that I feel and that I know--or intend" (Kalliope; see #14). In a 1984 interview, she described her writing as a kind of activism. Another form of activism that, in hindsight, she said she had undertaken was "as a woman and a lesbian...to claim my life as my own, to affirm that it didn't belong to the patriarchs, it belonged to me" (Ms.; see #5). Decades of such personal activism prepared her for the public political activism that she undertook in the 1960s.
Deming majored in drama at Bennington College in Vermont (B.A., 1938) and earned an M.A. from Cleveland's Western Reserve University (later Case Western Reserve) in 1941. She worked as a stage manager at Mercury Theatre in New York City for a winter term during college and for two months the winter after graduation. She co-directed the Bennington stock theater during the summers of 1938 and 1939, and was a teaching fellow at the Bennington School of the Arts the summers of 1940 and 1941. In the late 1930s she began to write essays about plays and the theater. She wrote poetry throughout her life.
Perhaps as the result of a job at the American Film Center in New York City in the spring and summer of 1942, Deming's interest in the stage was augmented by an interest in movies. As an analyst for the Library of Congress (LC) film project (1942-45), she worked at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In the late 1930s and early 40s, along with the jobs listed here, Deming did editorial work for Bessie Breuer Poor, William Scott Publishers, and others, and sometimes worked as a secretary.
In 1945, Deming decided to become a full-time freelance writer. Through the 1950s, her film reviews and some theater pieces and poems were published in New Directions, Chimera, Wake, Voices, Vogue, Partisan Review, The New Yorker, Charm, City Lights, Paris Review, Hudson Review, Tulane Drama Review, and other periodicals. Many of her short stories, poems, and books did not reach print until the early 1970s, however, especially those that analyzed social values. She finished Running Away from Myself: A Dream Portrait of America Drawn from the Films of the Forties, based on viewings she began when she worked for LC, in 1950, but it was not published until 1969.
In the 1940s, Deming began a love relationship with a fellow Bennington graduate, Vida Ginsburg. Ginsburg was a professor at Bard College during some of their years together. Deming and Ginsburg lived together for eight years. Her brother Quentin also fell in love with Ginsburg, however, and, once Deming gave him her "blessing," he courted Ginsburg and they were married in 1949. By 1947, Deming had moved from New York to New City. With money from her maternal grandmother and from her father, she traveled to Europe from June 1950 through the following July, spending most of her time in Italy and Greece. When she returned to the U.S., she began a "fictional" chronicle of her emotional and physical travels, which included falling in love with Annie Poor (not reciprocated), and becoming a friend of Truman Capote and others. Friends who read the first chapter responded unfavorably; Deming later realized that they were embarrassed for her because she "revealed [herself] in it as a lesbian" (Kalliope; see #14). Deming put the book aside until 1972, when she began ten years of work writing it, and several more trying to get it published.
In 1954, Deming met artist Mary Meigs at the Poors'. They became lovers and lived together in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod and in a rustic house in Somerset County, Maine, until 1969. Deming traveled in Mexico in 1953 and again in 1956, and in 1959 Deming and Meigs went on a "world trip" that included Israel, Japan, and India. Upon her return, Deming began to read the writings of Mohandas Gandhi; his ideas of active pacifism and nonviolent resistance to injustice struck a chord and served as her bridge to public political activity
Deming realized that Gandhi's philosophy of satyagraha (which she translated as "clinging to the truth") made sense of her life up to that point. A three-week trip to Cuba in 1960 opened her eyes to the vast gulf between Cuban reality and the Cuba portrayed in the U.S. media; she saw too that Cubans wished to be free of United States intervention. These revelations led her to attend a sixteen-day training program in nonviolent methods run by The Peacemakers in New London, Connecticut, in August 1960. There she met a number of Committee for Nonviolent Action (CNVA) activists who were protesting the Polaris submarine. Among such people, and in their movements, she finally found a sense of community and meaning.
That same year, 1960, Deming wrote her first journalistic essays, based on her experiences in Cuba; one was published in The Nation. She became active in the national and New England Committee for Nonviolent Actions and the War Resisters League (WRL). She began taking part in nonviolent actions against nuclear weapons testing and for unilateral disarmament. Her ability to analyze literature and film and their social and historical context had been evident in her reviews and other work. She now used this talent to write essays about current events. These writings were published much more rapidly than her earlier pieces, appearing in such magazines as The Nation, The Catholic Worker, CNVA Bulletin, Liberation (for which she was an editor, 1962-69), and WIN.
Because there does not yet exist a chronicle of Deming's life as an activist for peace and civil rights in the 1960s, the following information is provided in some detail to help make sense of these papers. In May 1961 Deming spent a week participating in protests in Pennsylvania and Maryland. In October she briefly joined, and wrote articles about, the San Francisco to Moscow Walk for Peace. In late 1961 she attended a conference near Beirut, Lebanon, to establish a World Peace Brigade for Nonviolent Action. The first of Deming's many experiences in prison came in March 1962, after a sit-in against nuclear testing in New York City, when she spent time (probably a day) in the Women's Detention Center. Later that year she participated in a Nashville to Washington, D.C., Walk for Peace, which, upon Committee for Nonviolent Action's decision to integrate it, turned into an interracial walk for peace.
Deming was involved in Women Strike for Peace, and attended its hearings before the United States House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) in April 1963. In May, she was in the South, arranging accommodations for the Quebec-Washington-Guantanamo Walk for Peace (QWGWP), when lone integration walker William Moore was shot to death. She went to Birmingham to join the demonstrations led by Martin Luther King, Jr., and was jailed there. In October she joined the Quebec-Washington-Guantanamo Walk for Peace; since it was integrated, this walk was also a civil rights march once it reached the South. Deming was arrested for handing out leaflets in Macon, Georgia, in November. On January 27, 1964, Deming, Yvonne Klein, Mary Suzuki, Kit Havice, Ray Robinson, and others were arrested and imprisoned; Deming left the walk after she was released on February 22. After she recuperated from the rigors of jail, she began to write what became Prison Notes (1966).
Although she continued to be concerned about civil rights, in 1966 Deming's focus shifted to the war in Vietnam. That spring, she, A.J. Muste, Brad Lyttle, and others went to Saigon, seat of the U.S.-supported South Vietnamese government, to stage a protest. They were expelled from the country. At the end of the year, she went with three other American women to North Vietnam to meet Ho Chi Minh and members of the National Liberation Front, and to tour areas devastated by United States forces. When she spoke against the war, she made a point of criticizing "our" rather than "the U.S." government.
In October 1967 Deming took part in a demonstration at the Pentagon, where she was one of many arrested but was not sent to jail. For three weeks during the summer of 1968, Deming lived in the Poor People's Campaign's Resurrection City, organized by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. That October she went to Baltimore to support the "Catonsville Nine," on trial for burning selective service records.
By 1968, Deming was having some difficulties in the relationships among Deming, Mary Meigs, and artist Marie-Claire Blais. She renewed her acquaintance with Jane Gapen (Watrous) Verlaine, a fellow Bennington graduate, painter, and writer. They began to fall in love and Deming moved to North Carolina to be with Verlaine. An ugly custody battle erupted between Verlaine and her ex-husband Oscar, who vehemently disapproved of Verlaine's new relationship. In 1969 Deming and Verlaine, and eventually the children, moved to Monticello, New York.
In October 1971, on the way to the National Conference of the War Resisters League in Athens, Georgia, Deming was in a serious automobile accident. As a result she spent eight months in a body cast. She never fully recovered and henceforth pursued her activism, which continued to be publicly political, through her writing.
In the early 1970s, Deming developed a radical feminist consciousness. Although she refused to repudiate men or become a separatist, she saw "sexism [as] the root of imperialism" and therefore the "fundamental political struggle" (Ms.; see #5). Eradicating sexism, she believed, would not only end wars but also free men and women alike. She and Verlaine helped organize a branch of Women Against Violence Against Women in Monticello. Deming came out publicly as a lesbian, and began to write about women's and lesbian issues in left-wing and feminist publications (including Sinister Wisdom and Quest). She never lost her interest in nonviolent tactics, however, and urged feminists to use them. In 1976, Deming and Verlaine moved to Sugarloaf Key, Florida, for Deming's health, and helped build a feminist community comprised of several households. After she received an inheritance (perhaps from a paternal aunt) in the late 1970s, Deming founded Money for Women, which provided grants and loans to feminist projects in arts and education. After Deming's death it was renamed the Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund.
In 1983 Deming joined the last part of the Feminist Walk of the New York City Women's Pentagon Action, organized by the Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice (Romulus, New York); with other women who revealed their names only as "Jane Doe" she served her final jail sentence. Early in 1984, Deming was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. After several attempts at treatment, including conventional and holistic medicine, and friends' circles, spells, and incantations, Deming realized that she was soon to die. Rather than "die discreetly," she spent two weeks putting her affairs in order, calling friends and family, and "dancing toward death." She died at home on Sugarloaf Key on August 2, 1984.
For a discussion of Deming's literary style and philosophy, see the introduction to We Are All Part of One Another: A Barbara Deming Reader. For Deming's reflections on her life's work and thought, see the interviews with her, #4-8, 11at-14, which were published in Ms., Kalliope, and Feminary; the last was reprinted in Pam McAllister's Reweaving the Web of Life: Feminism and Nonviolence, Philadelphia: New Society, 1982. For Deming and Jane Verlaine's discussion of being gay before the Stonewall riots (1969), see the film Silent Pioneers. For Mary Meigs' account of their life together, see Lily Briscoe: A Self Portrait. For a recording of "Living Her Life: Homage to Barbara Deming, Activist," the tribute to Deming held at the Schlesinger Library in October 1990, request audiotape T-196. There is also an oral history with Deming regarding her theater work in the Mercury Theatre/Theatre Union Project at Columbia University's Oral History Research Office.
BOOKS BY BARBARA DEMING
- Prison Notes. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1966.
- Running Away from Myself: A Dream Portrait of America Drawn from the Films of the Forties. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1969.
- Revolution and Equilibrium. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1971.
- Wash Us and Comb Us: Stories by Barbara Deming. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1972. Drawings by Jane Watrous.
- We Cannot Live Without Our Lives. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1974.
- Remembering Who We Are: Barbara Deming in Dialogue with Gwenda Blair, Kathy Brown, Arthur Kinoy, Bradford Lyttle, Susan Sherman, Leah Fritz, Susan Saxe. No place: Pagoda Publications, 1981. Cover by Jane Gapen.
- We Are All Part of One Another: A Barbara Deming Reader, edited by Jane Meyerding with a foreword by Barbara Smith. Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1984.
- Prisons That Could Not Hold: Prison Notes 1964 - Seneca 1984. San Francisco: Spinsters Ink, 1985. Includes reprint of Prison Notes. Also republished with additional material by University of Georgia Press, 1995.
- A Humming Under My Feet: A Book of Travail. London: Women's Press, Ltd., 1985. Drawings by Jane Gapen.
ARRANGEMENT
The collection is arranged in six series:
- I. Biographical
- II. Alphabetical correspondence
- III. Chronological correspondence
- IV. Writings
- V. Writings by others
- VI. Addenda received between July 2000 and February 2014
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Accession numbers: 88-M152, 88-M173, 89-M58, 90-53, 91-M66, 2000-M115, 2009-M247, 2014-M19, 2016-M37
The papers of Barbara Deming were given to the Schlesinger Library between October 1988 and December 2009 by her literary executor, Judith McDaniel, in April 1991 by Mary Meigs, in February 2014 by Sky Vanderlinde, and in February 2016 by Beth Dingman. Those accessions given in July 2000, December 2009, February 2014 and February 2016 (2000-M115, 2009-M247, 2014-M19, 2016-M37) were added to the collection in February 2014 and February 2016 and are represented in Series VI, and in #258a..
CONTAINER LIST
- Box 1: Folders 1-10, 12, 14-16
- Box 2: Folders 17-26
- Box 3: Folders 27-37
- Box 4: Folders 38-49
- Box 5: Folders 50-63
- Box 6: Folders 70-79, 81-87
- Box 7: Folders 88-108
- Box 8: Folders 109-129
- Box 9: Folders 130, 132-152
- Box 10: Folders 153-173, 175-176
- Box 11: Folders 177-178, 180-200
- Box 12: Folders 201, 203-217
- Box 13: Folders 218-239
- Box 14: Folders 240-248, 250-262
- Box 15: Folders 263-285
- Box 16: Folders 286-302
- Box 17: Folders 303-325
- Box 18: Folders 326-330, 332-335, 337-339, 341, 343-345
- Box 19: Folders 346-367
- Box 20: Folders 368-384
- Box 21: Folders 385-398, 400-406
- Box 22: Folders 407, 409-432, 434-435
- Box 23: Folders 436-445, 447-458
- Box 24: Folders 459, 461-479
- Box 25: Folders 480-500, 502-506
- Box 26: Folders 507-517, 519-524
- Box 27: Folders 525-529, 531-546
- Box 28: Folders 547-569
- Box 29: Folders 570-589, 591-595
- Box 30: Folders 596-613
- Box 31: Folders 614-618, 620-632
- Box 32: Folders 633-635, 637-648, 650
- Box 33: Folders 651-670
- Box 34: Folders 671-691
- Box 35: Folders 692-709
- Box 36: Folders 710-716, 718-721, 724-730
- Box 37: Folders 731-742
- Box 38: Folders 743-754, 756-758
- Box 39: Folders 759-774
- Box 40: Folders 775-791
- Box 41: Folders 792-801, 803-805
- Box 42: Folders 806-813, 815-817
- Box 43: Folders 818-827
- Box 44: Folders 828-842
- Box 45: Folders 843-848, 850-857
- Box 46: Folders 858-869
- Box 47: Folders 870-882
- Box 48: Folders 883-901
- Box 49: Folders 902-920
- Box 50: Folders 921-933, 935, 938
- Box 51: Folders 940-949, 952-955, 959-962
- Box 52: Folders 963-984
- Box 53: Folders 985-1014
- Box 54: Folders 1015-1049
- Box 55: Folders 1050-1078
- Box 56: Folders 1079-1093
- Box 57: Folders 1094-1098, 1100-1114
- Box 58: Folders 1116-1130
- Box 59: Folders 1131-1152
- Box 60: Folders 1153-1168
- Box 61: Folders 1169-1188
- Box 62: Folders 1189-1203
- Box 63: Folders 1204-1223
- Box 64: Folders 1224-1229, 1231-1235, 1237-1248
- Box 65: Folders 1249-1263
- Box 66: Folders 1264-1280
- Box 67: Folders 1281-1291
- Box 68: Folders 1299-1318
- Box 69: Folders 1319-1323, 1325,-1340
- Box 70: Folders 1341-1364
- Box 71: Folders 1365-1385
- Box 72: Folders 1386-1394, 1396-1404
- Box 73: Folders 1405-1416
- Box 74: Folders 1417-1421, 80m, 446m, 755m, 814m, 913m, 936m-937m, 939m, 950m
- Box 75: Folders 1428-1446
- Box 76: Folders 1447-1454
- Box 77: Folders 1455-1470
- Box 78: Folders 1471-1482
- Box 79: Folders 1483-1494
- Box 80: Folders 1495-1502
- Box 81: Folders 1503-1508
INDEX OF SELECTED CORRESPONDENTS
This is primarily an index of writers of letters and other items sent to Deming; it includes recipients only for letters written by Deming. Printed and near-print material sent to Deming is indexed as correspondence. Information about persons and subjects is not indexed. The index is the product of work done by many people over many years and should not be seen as definitive or comprehensive.
Key:
- No symbol = Writer
- ' = Recipient (Deming is writer)
- * = Writer and recipient (from Deming)
The numbers refer to file units.
For correspondents with common names (e.g., Grace or Mary) who sometimes did not sign their complete names, the index, by indicating the folders in which there are fully identified letters, points to the portions of series in which they are likely to appear. If Deming kept correspondence with more than one person (e.g. spouses) in one folder, they generally appear in the index jointly. An organization's name is included in the index if its letterhead was used, a glance indicated that a letter was written in the course of the organization's business, or there is material issued by the organization. Substantive (and legible) notes Deming took during telephone conversations are included in the index as if they were letters from the person.
Although this is a name index and does not include information about the person or organization, it can be useful for topical research if one knows the names of people and organizations involved in a given subject: e.g., for information about the civil rights movement, see Ray Robinson or the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
- A.J. Muste Memorial Institute 439*, 838, 844, 896*, 904, 1104*
- Aberle, Kathleen Gough 808, 1396
- Abzug, Bella S. 688', 689', 691', 696', 813, 822
- Affirmations 855
- Aid to Incarcerated Mothers 924
- Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights 765', 767'
- Albany Project 85*, 86, 87, 774, 768
- Albert, Maggie (Marilyn) 800, 804-805, 811
- Albrecht, John (Jay) 758*
- Alford, Elizabeth 92*, 636f+, 784, 787, 792, 800, 803, 806-807, 808*, 809, 817, 819-825, 827, 830', 834, 836*, 838*, 839-840, 841', 843, 844*, 845, 846', 847*-848*, 850-852, 853*, 854-860, 861', 862, 863*, 864-868, 869*, 870-871, 872*, 873, 874*, 875-877, 879*-880*, 883, 887, 894, 900-901, 904-908, 918-919, 921-922, 931, 933, 940, 942-944, 946, 954, 1049
- Alford: Emily (Emmie Sweetser), Newell 88*-92*, 131, 636f+, 731, 734, 736, 739*, 741, 742, 746*, 747, 751-753, 757, 768, 773, 779, 781, 783-784, 787, 791-792, 794, 796, 800, 810, 818, 860, 876, 919, 933, 938, 946, 1321*
- Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 764
- Alice James books 838', 848, 860, 922, 924, 925
- Allees, Catherine 874*
- Alonzo, Anne-Marie 876
- Alpert, Jane 93, 94', 95*-96*, 1089', 1090', 1169', 1170'
- Alsup, Citti 799, 808-809, 815, 823'
- Alyson Publications 910*-911*, 916
- Amazon Expedition 839*
- Amazon Outrage 872
- Amazon Quarterly 835*, 859', 868
- Ambitious Amazons 881', 909, 954
- American Civil Liberties Union 783
- American Friends Service Committee (see also Canadian Friends Service Committee) 753, 756', 758*-759*, 762, 765, 768, 771, 773, 777*, 782, 785', 793*, 795, 796*, 807, 840', 844*, 855
- American Friends Service Committee. Connecticut. 855, 883
- American Friends Service Committee. Middle Atlantic Regional Office. 797*
- American Friends Service Committee. New England. 703, 796, 804, 827, 828, 836, 847, 850, 855
- American Friends Service Committee. Northeast Ohio. 920
- American Friends Service Committee. Providence (RI). 884
- American Indian Press Association 851
- American Society of Journalists and Authors, Inc. 81, 82, 874*, 885, 1447
- Anderson, Ross T. 97*, 758, 774*
- Arcus, Flynn 98*, 930, 933, 946
- Arizona Quarterly 1144
- Armstrong, Arthur 807
- Arnn: Agathe, Barbara, Mary, Homer, Gary 99*, 131, 731*, 733, 738, 741, 750, 752, 754, 768, 771, 781, 791, 807', 809-810, 812, 815-817, 825, 830-831, 833', 836, 838, 846*, 868, 869', 872, 874', 875, 877, 880, 882', 907
- Arnold: Edith (Edie Snyder), Car l 85, 100*, 764-765, 767, 785, 793-794, 797-798, 1152
- Arnold, Maris 924
- Artists Equity Association of the New York Area 821
- Association of Women Writers 793
- Astraea Foundation 915
- At the Foot of the Mountain 927, 957f+
- Atkin, Barrie 871
- Atkinson, Ti-Grace 101*, 1090'
- Atlantic Monthly 745, 749*
- Aunt Lute Book Company 942, 1278*
- Author's Guild 859, 859
- Averill, Peg 102*, 843-845, 846', 861*
- Backiel, Linda. See Sassafras.
- Baez, Joan 103*, 807, 884', 1084', 1171'-1172'
- Baker, Gail 104*
- Balderston, Daniel E. 105*, 806*, 809-812, 815, 817-818, 827, 834, 836, 868
- Ballantine Books 1000*
- Barnstone, Willis 106*, 733-734, 735*, 739-740, 743, 745, 752, 762-763, 780
- Baumgarten, Bernice 736
- Beacon Press 877, 1188
- Beaman, Mary 880, 883, 924
- Beck, Julian 761, 765*
- Becker, Norma 107*, 397, 783, 800, 810, 821, 822, 877, 935, 1104'-1105', 1447
- Bell, Olin 774*
- Bellessi, Diana 108*-111*, 131, 260, 850, 852, 853', 865, 1397
- Bentley: Eric, Joanne 112*, 733, 735, 738-739, 742, 744, 750, 753, 763', 769, 783, 827, 844, 883, 894, 902, 1049, 1159
- Bergman, George M. 837
- Bernadette Powell Defense Fund 887
- Bernikow, Louise 113*, 818
- Berrigan, Dan 114*
- Bevan, Quinn 598, 926, 942
- Bick, Barbara 115*, 791', 834, 875, 887, 904, 955', 1159
- Bickford, Sue 870
- Bird, Melinda 116*
- Biren, Joan E. See JEB.
- Bissinger, Karl 117*, 355', 693, 785, 810, 824, 834, 851, 856*-857*, 874, 1098*
- Blair, Gwenda Linda 1176*, 1185*, 1189', 1206'
- Blais, Marie-Claire 118*, 119, 120*, 413*, 415'-418', 523, 764, 772, 778, 783, 787, 788, 824', 833', 875, 902-903, 938, 1447, 1449
- Bloch, Ruth 121*
- Blom: Gertrude (Trude) Duby, Frans Ferdinand, Vera 122*, 131, 501, 735, 739*, 740, 742-743, 750, 766, 777, 791, 1308
- Bobbs-Merrill Co. 791, 793, 840
- Boesing, Martha 1398
- Bollingen Foundation 1148*
- Booth, Winifred 812
- Bosco, Monique 124*
- Boston Committee for Non-Violent Action 796
- Boucher, Sandy 125*
- Boulding, Kenneth 123
- Boyd, Blanche 857'
- Boyle, Kay 126, 1159
- Braden, Anne 747', 748, 753, 760, 790', 793
- Brady, Maureen 127*, 919, 935
- Brandeis, Irma 128, 129*-130*, 131f, 728, 731-733, 734*, 737-742, 743*, 746, 747*, 748, 750, 752-754, 757, 764*, 768, 770, 772*, 778, 781-782, 784, 787, 792-793, 796-797, 799-800, 803*, 809-811, 813, 815-816, 823, 831, 833', 840, 851, 853, 855*, 862, 867, 869, 893, 897', 900', 906, 912, 929, 931, 935, 946, 1049, 1162
- Brandon, Lynne 1217*
- Brandt and Brandt 736, 740, 824', 827
- Brann, Anne 795
- Bread and Roses 880
- Breuer, Bessie. See Poor, Bessie Breuer.
- Bridgman, David Gordon 759-760
- Bristol, Jim (James E.) 773
- Brittain, Vera 773
- Broadside Communications Ltd. 886
- Bromley, Ernest 761', 762*, 763
- Bromley, Marion 766*, 811
- Broomstick 904
- Brown, Dave 803'
- Brown, Kathy 1176*, 1185*, 1189', 1206'
- Brown, Marian W. 743, 815, 822
- Brown, Rita Mae 132*-133*, 693, 833', 850, 852, 854*, 860, 865, 875'
- Brown, Sayrah (Sarah) 134, 743, 756-758, 763-764, 768-769, 772, 783, 789, 793, 797*, 805, 808, 825, 834, 850, 861*, 862, 870, 875*, 885, 899, 903, 929
- Brown, Sharon and Jo Ann Wolf 924, 1447
- Brownmiller, Susan 682', 689*, 881'
- Brysky, Clemens G. 135*, 785*, 786, 801, 818
- Buber, Martin 136'
- Buckman, Gertrude 745-746, 762, 781
- Bulkin, Elly 897'
- Burger, Rachel 852, 857
- Burgess, Mary Steele 786
- Burritt, Mary. See Christiansen, Gordon.
- Burritt: Mr. and Mrs. (Amama) William Nelson 137*-139*, 218, 724*, 725'-726', 1228', 1242'
- Cahn, Liane 766*, 767, 871
- Cakars, Maris 140*, 174, 673, 778', 791, 841', 852, 880'
- Cakars, Susan Kent 672
- Camden Defense Committee 825
- Campbell, Skye 893, 902
- Canadian Friends Service Committee 793*, 798-799
- Cantine, Holley R. 748, 750, 754, 756*, 1071
- Capote, Truman 141*, 174, 747-748
- Carter, Jimmy 882'
- Carter, Rosalynn 880'-881'
- Castillo, Sara 884
- Catholic Peace Fellowship 818, 826
- The Catholic Worker 785, 825, 853*, 855, 858, 860, 1020, 1066
- Causse, Michele 142*
- Chano, Hezen 778-779, 781
- Cheney, Joyce 919, 922
- Chernin, Kim 305'
- Chesler, Phyllis 143*, 904, 919, 940, 1186'
- Child, Dorothy 144*
- Chiles, Lawton 470
- Chillingworth, Phyllis 145*
- Chimera 988*, 989, 1140
- Chomsky, Noam 146, 707', 798', 824
- Christiansen: Gordon Secrist, Mary Burritt 123, 153, 769, 781
- Chrysalis 442*, 872, 879, 882'
- Circle of Support for Jane Alpert 93, 96', 864
- Citizens for Participation in Politication Action (Mass.). See Political Action for Peace.
- Citizens' Committee of Correspondence 777
- City Lights Booksellers and Publishers 749*
- Civil Defense Protest Committee 757
- Clark, Eleanor. See Warren, Robert Penn.
- Clement, Carol 147*, 871, 889
- Cleveland Area Peace Action Committee 798
- Cliff, Michelle 539*, 938
- Coffin, Lynne Shatzkin 824*
- Coffin, William Sloane 767*
- Cohen, Jan 916
- Coleman, Mary 148*
- Collins, Marjory 149*, 764, 767*, 773*, 933, 938, 1447
- Committee for Nonviolent Action (see also Boston CNVA and New England CNVA) 2, 123, 150*-151*, 152, 153*, 154, 378, 459, 472, 746', 751, 752, 760', 761*, 763, 774*, 778', 779, 782, 1060-1061
- Committee for Nonviolent Action - West 2, 155, 764
- Committee for the Protection of Children from Nuclear Fallout 759
- Committee of Correspondence 1061
- Committee of Women Poets for Equal Time and Space 839*
- Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East 809*, 826
- Community Church of Boston 838, 859
- Community for Nonviolent Action (Volvatown, CT) 704, 826, 847, 855
- Congress of Racial Equality 123, 618, 761*, 763-764
- Connolly, Jack. See Grier, Barbara.
- Continental Walk for Disarmament and Social Justice 858-860, 863, 868-869
- Conway, Mimi 158*
- Cooper?, Allen 842', 864
- Corrinne, Tee A. 302*
- Cosgrave, Sandy 935
- Coss, Clare 1399
- Costello, Tom 808*, 809
- Council for Cultural Relations, India 798
- Courtot, Martha 889
- Cousins, Dorothy (Dort) (McWilliams) 159*, 174, 745, 750-751, 756, 763, 765, 778, 781, 796, 817, 823, 830, 838, 840, 854, 860, 866, 869, 873, 879, 880', 895', 900', 901, 924
- Cox, Nicole 848*
- Crawford, Miriam 160, 174, 791
- Crone's Nest Project 156*-157*, 930, 932, 949
- Crossing Press 942, 946, 952
- Crowell, David 879, 901
- Crowell, Joan 862, 880, 901
- Cruikshank, Peg (Margaret) 157, 161*, 897', 904*, 905, 906, 907, 918-920, 922, 931-932, 941-942, 944, 1447
- Cumbee, Judy 871
- Cummings: Marion Morehouse, e.e. 162, 174, 729*, 731, 738, 743, 752-753, 762', 792, 799
- Daly, Mary 94', 163*, 636f+, 852
- Daniels, Marta 855, 883
- Darrin, David 757, 758*
- Davidon: Ann Morrissett and William 164*, 780, 815, 824*, 828*, 830-831, 852*, 860, 862
- Davidov, Marv 165*, 777, 786, 795, 799, 809, 830', 833', 844, 890
- Davies, Diana 166*-167*, 174, 636f+, 692, 696, 812, 828-830, 832, 848, 905-907, 942, 946, 948, 1220
- Davis, Hal 168*, 907, 911*, 918, 932, 940
- Day, Dorothy 4', 169', 765', 767', 777
- d'Celio, Nicola 170, 862-864
- de Angelo, Ximena 171, 1148
- Dear, Ruth 421, 767*, 768, 771, 775, 777, 804, 812, 893, 1071
- DeBernardo: Rose, Ellen 889, 908
- Defense Committee of Rochester Women Against Violence Against Women 877
- de Gamez, Tana 899-902, 929
- Dellinger: Dave, Betty 68, 151, 173*, 174, 175*, 636f+, 671*, 673', 682', 707', 745, 747', 756', 760', 761*, 766, 773'-774', 778', 780, 784, 790, 791', 792, 810, 818, 841', 845', 848', 850-851, 853, 859*, 861*, 862, 863', 940
- Demarest, Vittoria 825
- Demers, Joanne 845
- Deming, Agathe 1428
- Deming, Angus ("Bim") 176*-178*, 179, 180*-181*, 726, 734', 737, 740, 769, 775, 813, 816, 875, 923, 1228', 1236, 1242', 1447
- Deming, Constance 1429, 1434
- Deming, Eleanor 182*, 728, 730-732, 734-735, 738, 740-743, 746, 748, 750, 752', 753, 1432, 1459
- Deming, Guy S. and Elinor 735, 740, 754, 759, 762, 794*, 805, 821, 822', 838, 850, 872', 874, 878', 1433, 1459'
- Deming, Harold S. 183*-184*, 193, 202, 245', 724, 726-727, 1228', 1242', 1246', 1308', 1434, 1449
- Deming, Horace and Caroline 1435
- Deming, Katherine (Burritt) 4*, 43, 77', 185-194, 195*-197*, 198', 199*-201*, 202, 203*-205*, 206-212, 213*, 214, 215*-217*, 218, 245', 544, 724', 730, 731*, 733-735, 738, 740-743, 746-748, 750-753, 757, 759-760, 770-774, 781, 783, 785*, 789, 792-794, 799-800, 805-806, 808, 810-811, 813, 817, 822, 824, 827'-829', 831*, 832, 833', 836-837, 844, 858, 862, 866, 867*, 868, 869', 870, 872-874, 880, 887', 892*, 893-894, 898', 902', 903, 909'-910', 1228', 1242', 1246', 1308', 1337*
- Deming, Mac Donald 220*, 724-726, 728, 733, 803, 822'
- Deming, Madou 221*-224*, 731', 734', 741', 742-743, 753, 758*, 824', 830', 841, 842', 846', 864, 871', 900, 906, 909'
- Deming, Marco (Mark K.?) 222*-224*, 225, 741, 756, 758, 780, 785'
- Deming, Merry 226*, 739
- Deming, Quentin (Chip) 77', 227-230, 231*-234*, 248*, 249, 724*, 731', 732-733, 739, 741, 743, 748', 868', 877', 895, 903', 910', 919, 933', 1049, 1228'
- Deming, Vida (Ginsberg) 77', 234*, 235*-248*, 249, 250*-251*, 252', 253*, 415, 421, 517, 636f+, 722f, 730', 731*, 732', 733, 739, 741, 746, 748, 752, 760, 770, 785, 797-799, 806', 825, 829-830, 840, 842', 858', 866, 868*, 875, 877, 879, 880*, 884, 900, 903, 906, 908, 910*, 931, 944, 1015', 1049, 1330'
- Dengel, June Duzey? 255*
- de Rousse, Mart 172*
- Desai, Narayan 787, 817
- Desy, Pierrette 44, 256*, 876
- Deurs, Kady. See Van Deurs, Kady.
- Di Gia: Karen, Ralph 257*, 440*, 791*, 797, 844*, 858', 860, 911
- Dilts, Adda 765, 771-772, 775, 812
- Dingman, Beth 258*, 258a*, 836, 844
- Dobkin, Alix 877
- Dodge, Rick 785*
- Domestic Abuse Shelter, Inc. 82, 904, 919p
- Dorcy, Sheilah 77', 443, 444', 584*, 945
- Dorst, Nancy 848*
- Doucet, Rita 804
- Dougherty, Ariel 905
- Dowlin, John 858
- Downey, Alvira 753-754
- Dreamdigger, Ruth 928*, 1448
- Duncan, Ronald 727
- Dunne, John 766, 767*
- Dworkin, Andrea 40', 260*-262*, 671-673, 692, 697', 709, 850, 853-854, 855', 858'-859', 860, 862, 864-865, 880', 902, 920, 1088'
- Eames, Julie 263*-264*, 859, 862*, 863, 888
- Eberhardt, Dave 265*, 798*
- Edgcomb, Gabrielle Simon 815, 858-859
- Edmundson, Rozzie 824
- Eglin, Josephine 889*, 902
- Elmer, Jerry 793-795, 798, 810, 884*, 886', 1364
- Enzer, Erica 266*
- Episcopal Peace Fellowship 791*
- Epstein, Barbara 831, 873
- Ernest, Dwight Allen 267*, 1098*
- Evans: Hermene, Joe 268*
- Evans, Luther H. 1147
- Fair Play for Cuba 747, 756
- Farley, Pamella ("Tucker") 269*, 636f+, 1448*
- Farrell, James T. 270*
- Farren, Pat 897', 906, 912*, 920, 955'
- Fascell, Dante B. 902
- Federici, Silvia 845'
- Fellowship 672, 774'
- Fellowship of Reconciliation 85, 748, 751, 761, 762', 778, 793, 795-796, 806, 817, 826, 827*, 829, 864-866, 868', 947
- Femia, Frank 271*, 795*, 796', 815
- Feminary 7*-8*, 882*, 891', 899, 904
- Feminism and Non-Violence 900
- The Feminist Press 868, 869', 1186*
- Feminist Writers' Guild (U.S.) 272, 874*, 880, 887, 899, 907, 922
- Feminists vs. Militarism 893
- Fergusson, Francis 273, 727, 742
- Ferry, W.H. 274*, 758
- Field, Rita L. 855, 858
- Fifth Avenue Vietnam Peace Parade Committee 783
- Finch, Margaret Rockwell 905*
- Finger Lakes Peace Alliance 930
- Fisher, Elizabeth 275*
- Fitzpatrick, Mickey 885'
- Fix, Alice 3, 852*
- Florida Abortion Rights Action League 884
- Forest: Jim, Linda 277*, 636f+, 672, 769, 779, 807, 808*, 868
- Fort Detrick Vigil 278-279, 760
- Fowlie, Wallace 988, 1148*
- Fox, Roberta 908
- Frankel, Mortimer 766*, 767
- Frankenberg, Lloyd 280*
- Fredericks, Claude 773*
- Free Lorenzo Komboa Ervin Committee 876
- Freedom and Peace Party of New York 795
- Freedom, Elana. See Mikels, Elana.
- Freestone Publishing Co. 855
- Friede, Donald 281, 331
- Friends of the Filipino People 841-842
- Friends of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 853
- Friendshipment 869
- Fries, Charlotte 282*, 331
- Fritz, Leah 4*-5*, 77', 95*, 273, 283*-289*, 437*-440*, 441-442, 671-673, 681, 682', 688', 690, 692, 697'-698', 709*, 847', 850, 853, 855*, 864-865, 872, 890*, 892-893, 895', 896, 900*, 902-904, 906, 909', 916, 924, 929, 940, 1173, 1180', 1181, 1192, 1200, 1203*, 1206*, 1207', 1400, 1400
- Frog in the Well (press) 74, 83, 887, 1189*-1192*
- Fuller, Thomas 290, 797, 804*
- The Furies 822'
- Furman, Wallace 783
- Gage-Colby, Ruth 767
- Gallagher, Janet 291*, 810, 851
- Gardner, Kay 39', 440, 899, 948
- Gay Community News 880, 882*, 892
- Geddes, Maggie 292*
- Geiger, Nicola 851
- Gendler, Mary 832'
- Gilliatt, Penelope 1082
- Gilpin, Richard (Dick) 293*, 780-782, 815
- Ginsburg, Tania 743*, 747
- Gitlin, Irving 784
- Gitlin, Todd 832, 833'
- Goldman, Harry 894, 896, 897'
- Gonski, Ann 869
- Goodman, Denise Levertov 818*, 821, 824, 871, 1082
- Goodman, Gerre 1401
- Goodman, Mitchell 799
- Goodman, Paul 295*, 296', 816
- Gordon, Jesse 791*
- Gordon, Rebecca 943
- Gore, Robert Brookings 123, 761*, 764
- Gotlieb, Edward P. 807, 816
- Gottlieb, Saul 751
- Gough, Kathleen. See Aberle, Katheleen.
- Grajewski, Julian 297*, 298, 827, 853
- Grajewski, Stanley 299*-300*, 658, 800, 869, 875, 899
- Grajewski, Stash 906
- Grand Jury Project 862, 869*
- Grass Roots 859'
- Great Neck Students for Peace in Vietnam (NY) 793-795
- Greenwich Village Peace Committee 758*, 764
- Grier, Barbara 301*-303*, 304, 906, 914', 952, 1274'
- Griffin, Susan 149, 305*
- Grosberg, Carol (Kali) 306*-307*, 308*, 829, 831, 850, 852*, 856, 866
- Grossman, Dick 828', 855', 856
- Grossman Publishers 83, 777', 785', 794', 855', 856-857, 1159, 1169', 1174*, 1185', 1186*
- Gwenwald, Morgan 914
- Gynaceum 838
- Hagan, Roger 754*, 763
- Hagan, Sandy 309
- Hall, Emma (Swan) 624*, 729, 733-734, 739, 746, 763
- Hamilton, Mary 310
- Hansen, Ronda 311*
- Hapworth, John 782
- Harding: Vincent G., Rosemarie Freeney 312*, 787, 791
- Hardman, Kay 766
- Hardy, Helen L. 313*
- Harvey, Arthur 150, 759, 760*
- Hatch, Bob 748*, 797'
- Hatch, Margaret L.D. 779, 817
- Havelis, Jim 794*
- Havice, Doris 861
- Havice, Kit (Harriet Katherine) 86-87, 315*
- Hawley, Beatrice (Bibi) 314*, 331, 852, 857, 860, 864-865, 873, 909, 919, 922, 925, 1447
- Haworth, Neil 150-152, 153*, 473
- Hayashi, Sally 757*, 758, 759*
- Hayden, Tom 254, 316*, 707'
- Hayes, Jim 798*
- Hazel, Perry 317*
- Hebert, Jacques 785'
- Henry, Linda 854
- Hentoff, Nat 1159
- Henze, Laura 9*
- Heresies 867, 869, 874', 1021
- Herr, Ernestine (Thelma) 783
- Herrick, Scott 815
- Herron, Jeannine 767*, 771
- Hicks, Hugh 827
- Hilderley, Jeriann 108*, 318*, 850, 852*, 854, 856-857, 863, 866, 872, 873, 879', 941
- Hinke, C.J. 319*, 796
- Hirschberg, Eleanor 902
- Hirshkowitz, Barbara 924
- Hite, Shere 696', 709, 954
- Hodges, Beth 320*
- Hoffman/Sheedy Literary Agency 1186*
- Hoi Lien Hiep Phu N Viet Nam. See Union des Femmes Vietnamiennes.
- Holden, Anne 693
- Holloway, Raymond 321*
- Hook, Edith 854, 857
- Hopkins, Anne 834
- Horizon Press 736*
- Horowitz, David 1150'
- Hortenstine, Virgie 323*
- Houghton Mifflin 1146*
- House, David William 1402
- Houseman, John 1147
- Howe, Florence 787, 795, 797, 801
- Howes, Barbara 988*
- Hubbs, Jan 324*, 881'
- The Hudson Review 1000*, 1052*, 1144
- Hughes, Stuart. See Stuart Hughes for Senate Committee.
- Huizinga, Nina 477*, 1221, 1220*-1223*, 1278', 1445*, 1446*, 1456
- Huld, Judy 845
- Independent Research Group 806*
- Indo-China Curriculum Group 858
- Indochina Resource Center 277
- Inglis, Jean 832
- Institute for Community Economics 912
- Institute for New Communications 839*, 840-841, 848*, 850
- Institute for Policy Studies 787*, 874
- Institute for the Study of Nonviolence (Golden, CO) 800, 804
- Institute for the Study of Nonviolence (Palo Alto, CA) 854, 862-863, 958o
- International Conference of Peace Researchers and Peace Activists 853
- International Festival of Women Artists 442
- International Seminars on Training for Nonviolent Action 445, 883, 910
- Iowa City Women's Press 301, 303, 1440'
- JEB (Joan E. Biren) 6, 330*, 331, 923, 930, 932, 935, 938, 942, 947
- Jackson, Charles T. 586, 813, 817, 825, 833
- Jackson, David 756
- Jackson, Ella 770
- Jackson, Tyrone 325'
- James, Selma 326*, 827', 887
- Jane Doe 2 (Barbara White) 948
- Jane Doe Marian 935, 938, 942
- Javits, Jacob K. 824
- Jay, Karla 95*, 327*-329*, 443', 444*-445*, 672*, 673, 682', 692, 697', 852-853, 856*, 857, 858', 859, 860, 863, 875, 894, 905, 909', 915, 916, 923, 1220, 1502
- Jezer, Marty 332*, 830
- Johanna, Betty 333*, 334, 335*, 336, 337*, 904, 935, 942-943
- John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation 1147*
- Johnson, Eleanor 338*-339*, 340+, 341*, 342, 723o, 860, 914, 921
- Johnson, Irene 781
- Johnson, Nancy 77', 343*-345*, 441*, 1440*
- Johnson, Russell 794*, 795-796, 799, 828*
- Johnson, Sonia and Susan Hoffman (or Hollman) 346*-347*, 711, 714, 893, 897', 938, 942, 948-949
- Johnston, June 724*
- Jolly, Laura 898*, 903
- Kady. See Van Deurs, Kady.
- Kalliope 14*
- Kanaga, Consuelo. See Putnam, Wallace.
- Kantor, Martha Ryther 348*, 818
- Karlin, Patty 830
- Karp, Lila 349*, 831, 833, 851
- Kashuba, Marty 787, 790, 792*
- Katz, Neil 830, 842*, 861'
- Kaye, Bill 350, 729, 735
- Kelly, Mary F. 437*, 439-440, 929, 1489*, 1492', 1501*, 1502*
- Kelly: Nancy, Jack 351*, 732*, 734, 740, 742, 747, 757, 769, 791, 837, 900
- Kennedy, Anne 774'
- Kennedy, Edward M. 767*
- Kennedy, Florence 1380
- Kennedy, John F. 750', 767'
- Kennedy, Nattie 243*, 746, 780, 782, 791, 794, 804-806, 808*, 810, 812-813, 816, 818, 846, 873
- Kennedy, Pat (Gould) 353*, 1449'
- Kenyon, Dorothy 745*, 747-748, 750, 775
- Kenyon Review 988*, 1000*
- Keyes, Gene 764, 774, 780
- Kiger, Peter 150, 762*, 763-764, 765*, 793, 811, 817, 825, 838, 879
- King, C.B. 805*
- King, Martin Luther, Jr. 763
- King, Mary 781
- King, Ynestra 354*, 921-922, 1278
- Kinoy, Arthur 355*, 697*, 701*, 759', 923', 1072*, 1073', 1074*-1076*, 1077-1078, 1084'-1085', 1182'-1183', 1191', 1204', 1205, 1207'
- Kirk, Kappy and family 356*-358*, 399, 728, 730-731, 735, 748, 768, 771-772, 793, 817
- Kirkland, Will 803, 811
- Kirsch, Janet L. 627
- Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press 592, 910, 923
- Kizer, Carolyn 359', 833', 1082
- Klein, Yvonne 360*-361*, 437', 438*, 440', 443', 444*, 809, 938, 1071, 1403, 1447
- Kleinbaum, Sharon 895, 901
- Knopp, Honey 770', 810, 830, 836, 841', 842
- Knowles, Martha 1441'
- Kracauer, Siegfried 362, 747, 1162
- Krause, Charlotte G. 846
- Labas, Janis 79', 803
- Labyris Books (NYC) 840, 855', 867*
- Lacagnina, Amaldo 364
- LAIR 895
- Lakey, George 797, 947, 1401
- Lamm, Bob 365*
- Lane, Myrtle 774
- La Pointe, Jeanne 363*
- Larkin, Joan 878'
- Lashof, Judy 1401
- La Strega, Oak 935
- Latimer, Denyse 825*, 837
- Laucks, Irving F. 438*, 750, 784
- Lavender 442'-443', 487*, 883-884, 892', 906, 923-924, 929, 933, 955
- Lawford, Giovanna 366*, 733
- Leckie, Mary 367*, 693, 752, 763', 782, 784, 788, 832, 844', 903, 923
- Lehac: Jane Sherman, Ned 368*, 421, 738, 744, 748, 750, 756, 760*, 764, 767, 770, 775, 782, 787, 791-792, 797, 800, 808, 817, 824, 831, 850, 852, 859, 862, 930
- Lehmann, Jerry 150-151, 773*
- Lenya, Lotte 238*, 369*, 824, 1227p
- Lesbian Connection 909
- Lesbian Ethics 923
- Lesbian Herstory Archives 900, 932
- Lesbian Mothers' National Defense Fund 439*, 872, 874*, 878', 881*, 895-896
- Lesbian Tide 96'
- Lesbians for Employment, Action and Politics (LEAP) 953
- Lesbians on Land 919, 922
- Lester, Julius 321'
- Levertov, Denise. See Goodman, Denise Levertov.
- Lexington Grand Jury Defense Committee 852
- Lewis, Cynthia 825
- Liberation 68, 140, 173*, 175, 355, 390, 745, 748, 763*, 767-768, 774, 780-781, 790, 794, 796', 800, 804', 807, 824*, 831, 833', 839', 843, 844', 847, 848', 850, 858, 866', 872, 874*, 1071, 1176*, 1200, 1336, 1475'
- Lightman, Pandora 894, 902
- Linda Marie. See Pillay, Linda Marie.
- Lindsey, Karen 370*, 883, 905*, 1218*
- Lockey, Ottie, and Eve Zaremba 371*, 882*, 886*, 892, 895, 902-903, 906-907, 919, 929
- Loesch, Juli 478*
- Loll, John 372*, 841
- Long, Melanie (Cloud) 373*, 818, 823, 825, 829-831, 843-844, 852, 856, 861*
- Long, Sharon (Sha?) 825, 831, 846, 850, 852', 855-856, 903
- Lopopolo: Stasia, Bert 374
- Lowe, Susan Jane 834
- Lunden, Blue 43*, 77', 375*, 598*, 711, 926, 1273, 1279, 1478', 1502, 1503'
- Lurie, Allison 376*
- Lynd, Staughton 377*, 707', 781', 787, 794*, 812, 818, 823, 830, 860, 869, 1072*, 1080, 1159, 1365, 1366'
- Lyttle, Bradford 150-152, 378*-384*, 385'-387', 388*, 476, 493, 751, 756', 758*-759*, 760, 762*-763*, 766', 768*, 777, 779, 781-783, 789, 791-792, 793*, 794-795, 797, 799-800, 804, 808', 817, 823, 830-831, 833*, 837, 840, 842', 847, 850, 851*, 856, 861', 873, 887, 893, 900, 908, 923, 929, 938, 1061*, 1086*, 1191', 1200', 1438
- Macdonald, Barbara 907, 927', 1447
- Macdonald, Mike 791*
- Maenad: A Women's Literary Journal 897, 899
- Maher, Mab 940
- Majority Report 858
- Malcove, Lillian 757
- Malpede, Karen 390*-391*, 850, 853*, 854, 858, 859*, 860, 862-866, 883, 899, 919, 943-944, 1447
- Manahan, Nancy 392*
- Mandell: Marvin B., Betty 393*
- Marchessault, Jovette 1404
- Marcuse, Herbert 1150'
- Margareth and Jillian Defense Committee (lesbian mothers) 881
- Markson, Elaine 1186*-1188*, 1189', 1190*, 1192*
- Marston, Howard, E. 797*
- Martin, Noel 785*, 786, 794
- Marzani, Carl 1079
- Mass Campaign to Save People's Farm 851
- Mass Party of the People. See National Interim Committee.
- Mass Party Organizing Committee. See National Interim Committee.
- Matrices 909
- Matson, Hollis 846*
- Matteson, Joyce 810, 846
- Mayer, Milton 1364
- Mayer: Paul, Naomi 394
- Mayo, Mary 395*, 672*, 673
- McAllister, Helen 943, 1447
- McAllister, Pam 6', 396*-398*, 399, 904-905, 909', 910*, 922, 940, 943-944, 948, 1405-1407,, 1447
- McCarthy, Mary 400', 777'-778', 786', 1082, 1150', 1159
- McCormick, Margaret 60*, 868, 870, 874*
- McDaniel, Judith 303, 401*, 880, 905-906, 916, 923, 933, 935, 941, 943-944, 949, 1445
- McGehee: Luke (Lucius Polk), Ruth L. 929
- McLeester, Dick 884
- McLeod, Colin 803
- McMillan, Phyllis 882*
- McNamara, Robert 783'
- McReynolds, Dave 402*, 691, 779, 793, 799', 803*, 806, 811, 818, 821-822, 827, 854, 876, 921, 935, 946, 1447
- Meadow 403*, 938
- Mehrhof, Barbara 93, 96', 856', 860, 864
- Meigs, Mary 40', 61, 65, 404-409, 410*-414*, 415'-420', 523, 732, 735, 738, 741-742, 744, 747-748, 750-754, 758-760, 769-770, 778, 783-784, 788-789, 809, 824*, 862-863, 865-866, 875, 877, 893, 902, 904, 910', 912, 914, 933, 938, 940, 946, 1003, 1049, 1061, 1337', 1408-1409, 1442*
- Meir, Rosemary 726
- Meister, Ken 422*
- Melander, Lu 423*-424*, 460, 798, 806', 809, 813, 821, 825, 830, 833', 850, 853', 854, 856-857, 865, 924, 1410
- Merrill, Jim 425*
- Merton, Thomas 426*
- Merwin, Bill (William Stanley) 427*, 759*, 761, 763, 764*, 780, 791-792
- Meshenuk, Daria 836
- Meyer, Howard, N. 782
- Meyerding, Jane 333, 428*, 477*, 909, 935, 1219*-1222*, 1223
- Middle East Peace Project 885*, 912
- Migdal, Lester 51, 429*, 808, 821'
- Mikels, Elaine (Elana) 430*, 815, 908, 910*, 924, 933, 938
- Milgram, Morris 806
- Millay, Norma 79, 431*-432*, 433, 791, 797, 825, 842, 865, 871, 876, 879, 880, 883, 1015'
- Miller, Susan 434*, 853-854, 1072
- Millett, Kate 693*, 958o, 435*
- Moger-Williams: Susan, Tom, Benj 436, 810, 812, 816
- Money for Women 302, 437*-442*, 443*-445*, 453*, 460, 907-908
- Montesinos, Nora 447*
- Moody, Roger 853, 861
- Moon Books 1186*
- Moonwoman, Birch 438', 448*, 691, 697', 857*, 863, 872, 889, 890', 1447
- Moore, Fred 449*, 478', 787-788, 792, 858-859, 865, 880
- Moore, Honor 438', 854*
- Moose, Ron 450*
- Mora, Kay 933
- Moran, Andrea 678, 681, 689*, 690, 694*, 697', 698*, 701*-702*, 866, 870, 874', 892
- Morgan, Robin 94', 451*, 682', 692, 840, 851, 930', 938, 1170', 1502
- Morgana, Julie (a.k.a. Morgan) 156, 157', 437*-440*, 441', 442*-444*, 445, 452*-453*, 893, 896', 902', 914, 924, 949, 1444*, 1447
- Morris, Mark 153, 671, 672*, 859, 863*, 864
- Morrissett, Ann 764*
- Movement for a New Society (see also New Society publishers) 710
- Moylan, Mary 454*, 800
- Moynahan, James 768
- Moynihan, Daniel Patrick 455*, 456, 766*
- Ms. 4', 439, 833, 835*, 856', 857*, 877, 881'-882', 895', 897', 898, 938, 1090', 1173
- Murphy, Kathleen 457*
- Murphy, Robert 458*, 460
- Muste, A.J. 85-87, 150*, 151-153, 459*, 460, 472, 748*, 750', 760*-761*, 762', 765', 774*, 777', 778*-779*, 780', 1061
- Mygatt, Tracy D. 461*-462*, 764, 765*-766*, 767, 768*, 770*, 771, 774-775, 777, 784-787, 788, 793, 797-798, 812-813, 818, 824*, 825, 828'
- Naeve, Virginia 766*-777*, 778, 780, 799, 805, 816
- Naiad Press 302*-303*, 487, 904, 906, 952, 1274'
- Nash, Diane 463
- Nathan, Otto 464*, 784, 798, 807*, 810, 860, 863', 914
- The Nation 68, 741, 748*, 751, 776
- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Cape Cod Branch. 766*, 769
- National Caucus of Labor Committees 298
- National Center on Women and Family Law 888
- National Gay Task Force 841', 843
- National Interim Committee for a Mass Party of the People 355*, 465*, 466, 824', 833', 837-839, 844, 845*, 847-848, 854, 859, 863, 865*, 1072*, 1073', 1074*, 1075', 1077-1079, 1080, 1084'-1085', 1200', 1379*
- National Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam (see also New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam) 785, 793'
- National Organization for Women (NOW) 39', 260, 467*, 468, 469', 470*, 477, 834', 1379-1380
- National Organization for Women (NOW). Florida Chapter. 467*, 469*, 883, 908
- National Organization for Women (NOW). Monroe County (Fla.). 467*
- National Organization for Women (NOW). Sullivan County (NY). 620, 844
- National Taxpayers Vision 862
- National Women's Studies Association 904
- Nell, Edward J. 61*-63*, 471*, 851
- Nelson: Juanita (Morrow), Wally 771, 777, 781, 797, 1364
- Nestle, Joan 1411
- Nevin, David 778*
- New Cycle Theater 391
- New Directions 727
- New England Committee for Nonviolent Action 151, 153, 472*-473*, 474, 475*, 476, 493, 754, 761, 767', 768, 778-779, 780, 784, 786-787, 793, 795, 799, 812, 1383
- New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (see also National Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam) 254, 800, 804
- The New Republic 749
- New Society publishers (see also Movement for a New Society) 81, 396, 477*, 904, 922, 925, 931, 933, 941, 944, 1219, 1220*-1223*, 1278'
- New Victoria Printers 258, 860, 870, 879, 887, 891
- New Women's Times 876, 880', 882*, 886*, 887, 899, 914, 949
- New York Women Against Rape 942
- New York Working People's Party 862
- Newman, Grace Mora 795*
- Ngo Chi Thien Defense Committee 827
- Nichols, Cicely 833*
- Nippert, Linda 885
- Non-Violent Committee for Cuban Independence 752
- Norman (OK) Peace Council 759*
- Norton, Eleanor Holmes 321'
- Nossiter, Cal Kolbe 800, 805
- O'Brian, Bill 725, 728
- O'Brian, Casey 479*
- O'Brian, Grace Walthall 480, 731, 782, 791, 797, 806, 810, 817, 821, 843
- O'Connor, Bill 481*, 693
- O'Connor, Jessie Lloyd 813
- Off Our Backs 835', 1088', 1090'
- Operation Freedom 758, 764
- Orenstein, Gloria Feman 864, 866
- Orrbright, Doris. See #482.
- P.E.N. 826, 836, 838, 859, 864, 867, 869, 874
- Pagan, Eileen 483*, 946, 1273, 1492, 1493
- Page, Anita Leibowitz 437*-438*, 443', 444*, 445, 484*, 485*-486*, 701*, 702, 1412
- Pagoda: Temple of Love 156*, 438, 441-443, 453, 487*, 923, 932, 941, 944, 947
- Paley, Grace 488*, 682', 861, 881', 1413
- Pantheon Books 869
- Panzarino, Constance 1493*, 1494'
- Papworth, John 489*
- Park, Jacqueline 874
- Partisan Review 1141-1142
- Pattee, Christine 884, 885*
- Pauling, Linus 750, 760
- Peace Action Center 581, 750, 751'
- Peace Information Bulletin 767'
- Peace News Limited 770, 773, 782, 847, 947
- Peace Research Institute 760*
- Peacemakers 764, 767, 871
- Peacework 860, 886*, 897'
- Penelope, Julia 885'
- People Against Pornography 887
- People Strike for Peace 924
- Peoples Coalition for Peace and Justice 355, 822
- People's Party. See National Interim Committee for a Mass Party of the People.
- Perkins, Penny 494*
- Perry, Ruth 840
- Persephone Press 888, 890*, 896*, 899, 914, 917
- Perspective 993', 994
- Philip, Cynthia Owen 495*, 825
- Phillips, Nancy 496
- Piercy, Marge 693, 893, 897'
- Pillay, Linda Marie 497*-499*, 518, 1279
- Pitkin, Win (E. Winifred) 500*, 501, 730, 733, 737*, 739, 741-742
- Plummer, Howard 769
- Podea, Mary 767', 770-771
- Political Action for Peace (PAX) (Mass.) 760, 777
- Pomegranate Grove 502*
- Pomerlean, Pat 503*
- Poor, Annie 504*-506*, 507', 508, 509*-512*, 513*-515*, 517*, 518, 520, 522, 636f+, 735, 746, 748, 750, 754, 770, 797-799, 805, 809, 811, 817, 824, 827', 830-832, 836, 839-840, 842*, 844-845, 855', 858'-859', 860, 861', 870, 872, 875, 901, 906, 929, 940, 947, 957f+, 1049, 1102, 1228', 1236, 1309', 1414
- Poor: Bessie (Breuer), Henry arnum 95', 248*, 507', 516, 517*, 518, 519*, 520, 521*-524*, 526', 534, 730, 731', 733, 747, 748, 769, 774, 777, 779, 782, 790', 811, 832', 840', 1026', 1049, 1061, 1146', 1227, 1236, 1449'
- Pratt, Denny 829
- Pratt, Marjory 527*, 758, 775, 778, 797*, 816
- Pratt, Minnie Bruce 6*-8*, 527*, 891', 893, 895', 898', 904*, 932, 935, 944, 946-947, 949, 1031, 1273
- Prinn, Elizabeth 860
- Prison Action Group 807
- Putnam, Wallace, and Consuelo Kanaga 528*-529*, 530, 723o, 739, 743-744, 746-747, 750, 752, 758-759, 762-764, 771, 773', 774-775, 778-779, 781-782, 792-796, 800, 808, 815-817, 823, 829, 833', 842', 846*, 848, 853, 858'-859', 860, 873, 887, 893, 908, 909', 924, 1029', 1041'
- Quebec-Guantanamo Walk for Peace 151-152, 378-379, 775-776, 1061*, 1337, 1342-1351
- Quest: A Feminist Quarterly 40', 487*, 848, 853*, 859, 871, 875, 879, 882', 883, 885*, 895, 1188*, 1189, 1193*
- Quinn (Dorotha Dilkes) 77', 375*, 531
- Rabin, Jules 754, 766*, 806
- Ramstetter, Victoria 532, 938, 942, 949, 1415
- Raulerson, Clare 532, 918, 930
- Reed, Evelyn 40', 533*, 864'
- Reiss, Robert 534*, 831', 833, 856, 902, 924, 1102
- RESIST 787, 796, 875
- Resistance 823'-824'
- Resurgence 78', 778-779, 782, 794
- Resurrection City 800
- Reynolds, Barbara 777', 813, 853, 860
- Reynolds, Earle 765'
- Reynolds, Ruth M. 748, 844*
- Rhodin, Tory (Victoria) 536, 850, 862, 868
- Rice, Sukie 703*, 817
- Rich, Adrienne 40', 94', 537*-539*, 590, 682', 692, 709*, 872', 904', 914, 931, 948
- Richman, Victor 804
- Riley, Karen 897'
- Robinson, Howard W. 823-824, 831
- Robinson, Jo Ann 540*, 882*, 1416*, 1417
- Robinson: Ray Jr., Cheryl (Buswell) 541*-562*, 564*, 783, 791', 829, 830', 841'-842', 850-851, 862, 864, 866, 875, 880, 901, 1084*, 1169', 1170*-1172*
- Robson, Ruthann 11at*, 12*, 13-14, 920, 924, 941, 946
- Rodd, Tom 565
- Roosevelt, Eleanor 747*, 748'
- Root, Art 566*
- Rose Printing Company 303*, 487*
- Rosenberger, Ernst 567*
- Rosenblum, Gertrude 803*, 807
- Rosenfeld, Marthe 1418
- Roumbos, Katerina 568*, 590
- Roybos, Catherine 568*, 590
- Rubik, Connie 569*
- Ruby, Clayton 777*
- Ruddick, Sara 905
- Rule, Jane 570*, 862
- Rush, Florence 93, 95*, 571*, 693
- Rusk, Pat 572*, 857-858
- Russell and Volkening Literary Agents 736*
- Russo, Tony 573*, 848*
- Russo, Vito 874*
- Rustin, Bayard 710, 751, 756, 758, 761, 763, 765'-766', 768', 1336
- Sagaris (feminist summer school) 837, 838*, 853*, 861', 868*
- Saigon Project 1064', 1357'
- Salstrom, Paul (F. Paul) 574*, 575-576, 752*, 756, 757', 764, 766*, 774-775, 777*, 782-783, 815, 871
- Saltonstall, Leverett 764, 767
- SANE 766'
- Sassafras (Linda Backiel) 577*, 829, 1419
- Saxe, Susan 276, 863, 1091*-1092*, 1094'-1095', 1096*-1097*, 1190*, 1193', 1194*-1195*, 1196'-1198', 1207'
- Schein, Sue 907
- Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr. 767
- Schlueter, Edward 578, 579*
- Schulz, Belle 758*, 762
- Schwartz, Wendy C. 847-848, 896*, 1438*
- Schwarz, Delmore 580
- Scott, Larry 278-279, 581*
- The Second Wave: A Magazine of the New Feminism 833*, 840, 866*
- Segall, Jeannie 855', 856-857, 866*, 1399
- Segrest, Mab 6*-8*, 914, 935
- Seneca Falls Peace Encampment. See Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice.
- Sessions, Barbara 783
- Seven Days 673', 839*, 840-841, 875, 878', 1185*
- Shameless Hussy Press 900
- Shapiro, Madelou 729
- Sharp, Gene 582*, 793'
- Shattuck, Kate 583*, 728
- Sheehan, Joanne 884
- Sheilah, Dorcy (also see Dorcy, Sheilah) 584*
- Sherman: Jan, Chuck 901, 912
- Sherman, Jane. See Lehac, Jane Sherman.
- Sherman, Susan 585*, 859', 1088', 1089*-1090*, 1166, 1185*, 1202*
- Shoshana. See Swinton, Patricia.
- Shoshana-Pat Swinton Defense Committee (also see Swinton, Patricia) 861
- Shub, Ellen 880
- Shurtleff, Jeffrey 803
- Siler, Anniewill (Annie Will) 55, 587*-589*, 590, 731-733, 737*, 739-742, 746-748, 750-751, 753-754, 756-757, 760, 763, 764*, 768, 771, 773-774, 775, 780-781, 783, 785-786, 789, 792-794, 796-798, 800, 808, 810-812, 815-818, 823, 824', 1049
- Siler, Daisy 587*
- Siler, Freda 882*
- Siler, Lucille 818
- Simkohvitch, Mary 591
- Sinister Wisdom 81', 899, 915, 920, 1031*, 1217*
- Sklar, Roberta 928*, 1399, 1447
- Skye, Campbell 893
- Smith, Barbara 592*, 905', 915, 1034', 1220, 1223
- Smith, Grace (Kellogg) 594*, 595, 769, 775, 781, 783, 785, 787, 792, 796, 817-818, 821, 824, 830, 837, 839, 840', 850, 855*
- Smith, Jack 760*, 761', 769, 911'
- Smith, Mary Denise 882
- Smith, Maureen 593*
- Snyder, Edith. See Arnold, Edith.
- Snyder, Patricia Giniger 15*, 949, 1447
- Society of Magazine Writers 868*
- Sojourner 879', 901, 910, 1100*
- Solomonow, Allan 597*
- Sorel, Barbara 927*
- South Vietnam National Front for Liberation 791
- Southern Christian Leadership Conference 763
- Southern Conference Educational Fund, Inc. 748, 753, 793, 821, 824
- Southern Exposure 911*
- Soviet Women's Committee 783'
- Spaugh, Diane 599*
- Spelman, Elizabeth 907*
- Spinster Ink 916, 925
- Spock, Benjamin 822'
- Springer, Art 764, 766
- Standish, Robin 783
- Stanton, Catherine (Kay Dutcher) 600-601, 602*-605*, 717, 728, 733*, 735*, 737-740, 744, 748, 751-752, 756-757, 760, 762, 768, 772, 774, 779, 783-786, 791-795, 797-798, 800, 803-807, 809, 812-813, 815-818, 822, 830, 832, 833', 834, 836, 837*-838*, 839, 840, 848*, 850-854, 855*-856*, 858*, 860, 862-863, 865-869, 870*, 872-873, 875, 893-894, 899-900, 903, 905, 908, 920, 924, 930, 933, 943-944, 946
- Stanton, Gary 792-793, 801, 817, 823
- Stears, Nancy 681*, 694*, 702'
- Steinem, Gloria 692, 709, 881'
- Stembridge, Jane 606*-614*, 794, 832, 846', 1420
- Stephens, Candy, John-i-than 615, 783
- Stevens, Ann 798*
- Stevens, William 805
- Stimpson, Catherine R. 835*
- Stokes, Ann 804
- Stoltenberg, John 260-261, 262*, 616, 671, 672*, 673, 688, 697', 853, 856-857, 858*-859*, 860, 862-863, 1185
- Stone, Ingrid 844'
- Stone, Lee 825
- Stromberg, Vivian 355, 865', 1077
- Stuart Hughes for Senate Committee (see also Political Action for Peace) 759*, 760-761
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee 617*-618*, 619, 636f+, 723o, 765', 770', 778
- Students for a Democratic Society 254, 782', 785', 1365
- Summers: U.T., Joseph Holmes, Mary 621*, 693, 728, 733, 735-736, 743, 746-747, 754, 756, 768, 773, 775, 781, 787, 796, 807, 823, 834, 840, 884, 887, 902, 924, 1049
- Support in Action 785*, 786
- Sutter, Ruth 877, 878*
- Suzuki-Hawkes, Mary 87, 476, 622*-623*, 779-780, 783, 792-793, 795-797, 805, 807, 818, 834, 840
- Swan, Emma. See Hall, Emma (Swan).
- Swann, Bob 150, 153, 472, 473*, 765'-766', 773', 777', 1061
- Swann: Marj, Judy 37', 151, 472-473, 475*, 625*, 703*, 707*, 748', 754', 756, 758, 765*, 766', 768*, 773', 774, 777-778, 780, 784, 792', 793, 841, 1061*
- Sweetser, John 626*
- Swenson, Lee 837
- Swinton, Patricia Elizabeth (Shoshana) 43', 95, 101, 586*, 1382'
- Synthesis: Women in Culture and Society 835*
- Terrell, Huntington 906, 911*
- Third World Women's Archives 592
- Thompson, Jessie 442, 627*, 903, 933
- Thorne, Erika 1401
- Tichenor, Ellen (Wertheim?) 628*, 857', 860, 866', 903', 905*, 940, 946, 1502
- Tide, Hazel 883
- Tornes, Mary Lou 629*, 853*
- Trimm, Steve 851
- Tripp, Maggie 837*
- Troy, William 746*
- Union des Femmes Vietnamiennes [Vietnamese Women's Union or Hoi Lien Hiep Phu N Viet Nam] 707*, 768, 800, 808, 818, 826, 829, 840, 862, 870
- United States Pacifist Party 388, 923, 929
- Unterclear: Jack, Ann 746, 1049
- Upshure, Annie 630*, 748, 774-775, 778', 797', 822
- Vanderlinden, Sky 375', 421, 634*, 926, 933, 935, 1445*, 1448', 1503'
- Van Deurs, Kady 44', 77', 437, 631*-633*, 694', 714, 891', 893-894, 896, 897', 900*, 902*, 903, 912, 925', 938, 940, 946-947, 948, 1273
- Van Deurs, Kay 808*, 811-812, 828, 829-830, 832, 848, 855'
- Van Meter, Betty 773
- Verlaine, George 635*, 806', 812, 821', 830, 833', 1476'
- Verlaine, Jane Gapen (Watrous) 7, 43, 47-49, 50*-51*, 52-54, 55*, 58-60, 77', 94, 259, 302, 322, 442, 493, 523, 636f+, 637*, 638, 639*-648*, 649, 650*-653*, 654, 655*, 671, 673, 677, 688-694, 696, 699, 709, 722f, 728, 785', 792, 794, 821, 828, 857, 862, 890'-891', 893, 895-896, 902, 906, 926, 1031, 1190, 1210, 1217, 1291, 1376, 1438*, 1502*
- Verlaine, Mimi 656*-657*, 805, 806', 821', 916, 949, 1476'
- Verlaine, Oscar 47, 48*-49*, 50', 51*, 52
- Vernarelli-Hacker, Lucia 659*, 739, 769, 932
- Vestal, Fon 783, 784'
- Viking Press 40', 74*, 83, 477, 487, 705*-706*, 863', 867, 898*, 907, 911, 943, 1174*, 1186*, 1446
- Villa, Jose Garcia 988*, 993*
- Virago, Ltd. 880, 881*
- ViVA 988*
- Vocations for Social Change 798, 808
- Vogue 1145
- Voluntown Peace Trust 882*
- Voluntown Staff Resistance 797
- Wagner, Anneliese 523', 660*, 888, 895', 906, 908
- Wake 993*
- Walford, Johnnie 781
- Walker, Alice 909
- Walter, Ruth 758*, 763*, 764, 765*
- Wanrow, Yvonne 636f+, 661*
- War Resisters International 799, 807, 905
- War Resisters League 2, 79', 81', 117, 153, 402*, 462, 524', 691, 750, 751, 756, 758, 763, 765', 779, 780', 791, 793-794, 797, 799', 803*, 804, 806, 807, 811-812, 816-818, 821-823, 824*, 830*, 832*, 837, 852, 857, 858, 874*, 875-876, 879, 881*, 899, 923, 926*, 935, 948, 957f+, 1061, 1098*, 1336, 1447
- War Resisters League - Southeast 82', 599, 885, 902, 923, 926, 927*, 931
- War Resisters League - Southwest 1071
- War Resisters League - West 797, 812, 815, 836, 841, 854-855, 858, 867-868, 872
- Warnock, Donna 44, 662*, 883, 887, 922, 933, 946
- Waronker, Lou 51', 786*, 794, 796, 798-800, 804', 810, 825, 946
- Warren, Elaine 910'
- Warren, Robert Penn, and Eleanor Clark 663, 727*, 988'
- War Tax Resistance 803', 821-822, 832, 857, 868
- Waterloo Incident (NY) 920, 922-923, 933, 948
- Weaver, Susan 882*
- Webster, Barbara 355*, 810, 836-838, 839*, 844, 845*, 847-848, 850, 854, 855', 861', 866, 1072', 1074*
- Weeks, Dennis 664
- Weinbaum, Batya 866
- Weinberg, Hildegard L. 823, 863
- Weintraub, Roberta 850, 852-853, 858*
- Wertheim, Ellen 665*
- Wesley, Deborah 699', 700*
- Weyer, Edward 122
- Wheelwright, Farley W. 440*, 666*, 786
- White, Barbara. See Jane Doe 2.
- White, George Abbott 838*
- Whiteford, B. 906
- Wickensheimer, Mary 874'
- Wilde, Lynn 865*, 866, 868
- Wilkinson, Frank 803*
- William Morrow and Company 853, 856
- Williams, Robert 783
- Willoughby, George 123, 150*-151*, 817, 822
- Wilson, Bill 868, 870, 887, 918
- Wilson, Dagmar 668*, 768*
- Wilson: Edmund, Elena, Rosalind, Helen 669*, 739, 742, 746', 747, 758', 776, 810, 834, 839, 853, 858, 868, 884, 1331', 1337'
- Wilson, Tona 670*, 883, 887', 889*, 891', 893, 902, 912, 942, 944, 955
- WIN (Workshop in Nonviolence) 68, 384', 395*, 671*-673*, 682, 683*, 706', 780, 792*, 800, 804, 810, 821*, 824, 830, 835, 840, 844, 852*, 853'-854', 855, 863*, 864, 866, 874', 880, 881', 886', 899, 905', 921, 926*, 1086-1087, 1101*, 1190, 1200', 1385
- Witherspoon, Frances 461*-462*, 774, 793, 833'
- Witlin, Frances 751, 757, 763*
- Wolf, Jo Ann. See Brown, Sharon.
- Wolfson, Dick 674
- Woman of Power 928*, 931, 942
- Womanbooks 81*-82*, 397, 705*, 855', 856, 858, 866, 873, 883-884, 904', 909, 910', 947, 1190'
- Woman's Salon 439, 865-867, 879, 884
- Womanspirit 81', 878*, 879, 886*, 923
- Women Against Daddy Warbucks 675
- Women Against Pornography 883
- Women Against Violence Against Women 676*, 677, 678*, 679-680, 681*-683*, 684-685, 686-687, 688*-690*, 691, 692*-694*, 695, 696*-698*, 699, 700*-702*, 708, 871, 879*, 887, 901
- Women Against Violence Against Women (Rochester). See Defense Committee of Rochester.
- Women and Power Conference 703
- Women and Violence Workshop 704, 837'
- Women Strike for Peace 115*, 668*, 756*, 758-759, 765-766, 767*, 777, 831, 832, 919, 1062', 1338*
- Women Volunteers to Vietnam 707*
- Women's Anti-Defamation League 708*-709*
- Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice 45, 710-712, 713*-715*, 716, 925-926, 931-932, 953
- Women's Experimental Theatre 1399
- Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press 718, 904, 921
- Women's Martial Arts Self-Defense 828-829, 848
- Women's Party for Survival 900, 917
- Women's Pentagon Action 715, 906, 914
- Women's Press Ltd. 942, 1278', 1500
- Women's Review of Books 919
- Women's Video Collective 82*, 922-923
- Women's Weekend 848, 853
- Womyn Having Opportunities Farm (WHO) 895*
- Wood, Sha (Sharon H.) 862, 871
- Woodward, Beverly 445, 719*, 794-795, 810, 812, 822, 853, 855', 865, 883, 910
- Workshop in Nonviolence. See WIN.
- Worthy, William 720*, 765, 766'
- Wounded Knee Legal Defense Committee 831, 847
- Writers and Editors War Tax Protest 787, 1469*
- Yankowitz, Susan 693
- Young, Allen 673, 721*, 861*, 864, 870, 881, 921, 946
- Young, Barbara 878*
- Zaremba, Eve. See Lockey, Ottie.
- Zavalloni, Marisa 1421
- Zwysohn, Van 1098*
Processing Information
Processed: September 1992
By: Kim Brookes
Updated and additional materials added: February 2014,February 2016
By: Anne Engelhart
Genre / Form
Geographic
- Albany (Ga.)--Race relations
- Cape Cod (Mass.)--Social life and customs--20th century
- Florida Keys (Fla.)--Social life and customs--20th century
- Greece--Description and travel
- Italy--Description and travel
- Mexico--Description and travel
- New York (State)--Social life and customs--20th century
- United States--Race relations
- Vietnam--Description and travel
Topical
- African Americans--Civil rights
- Antinuclear movement--United States
- Arts--Endowments
- Authors--United States
- Cancer--Alternative treatment
- Civil disobedience--United States
- Civil rights demonstrations--United States
- Demonstrations--Georgia--Albany
- Demonstrations--New York (State)
- Demonstrations--Vietnam--Ho Chi Minh City
- Demonstrations--Washington (D.C.)
- Draft resisters--United States
- Family violence--United States
- Feminism
- Feminism and art
- Feminist literature--United States
- Feminist poetry
- Feminist theater--United States
- Feminists--United States
- Gay liberation movement--United States
- Gays--United States
- Lesbian couples--Florida
- Lesbian couples--Massachusetts
- Lesbian couples--New York (State)
- Lesbians' writings
- Lesbians--United States
- Motion pictures--History
- Nonviolence
- Pacifism
- Pacifists--United States
- Peace movements--United States
- Peace--Societies, etc.
- Pornography--Social aspects--United States
- Publishers and publishing--United States
- Underground press publications--United States
- Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements
- WIN (Periodical)
- War tax resistance--United States
- Witchcraft--United States
- Women and peace
- Women and spiritualism--United States
- Women artists
- Women authors, American
- Women philanthropists--Florida
- Women poets--United States
- Women political activists--United States
- Women's periodicals, American
- Women's rights- United States
- Women--Social conditions
- Women--Societies and clubs
- Women--Southern states
- Women-owned business enterprises--United States
- World War, 1939-1945--Motion pictures and the war
Subject
- Brady, Maureen E. (Person)
- Dworkin, Andrea (Person)
- Gardner, K. (Kay) (Person)
- Hite, Shere (Person)
- Kady, 1927-2003 (Person)
- Macdonald, Barbara, 1913-2000 (Person)
- National Organization for Women (Organization)
- Rich, Adrienne, 1929-2012 (Person)
- Title
- Deming, Barbara, 1917-1984. Papers of Barbara Deming, 1886-1995: A Finding Aid
- Author
- Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
- Language of description
- eng
- Sponsor
- The collection was processed in 1992 in part with funds from Deming's estate given by the executor, Blue Lunden.
- EAD ID
- sch00057
Repository Details
Part of the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute Repository
The preeminent research library on the history of women in the United States, the Schlesinger Library documents women's lives from the past and present for the future. In addition to its traditional strengths in the history of feminisms, women’s health, and women’s activism, the Schlesinger collections document the intersectional workings of race and ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class in American history.