Marketing
Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
Dane, Dana & Company records
Collection Identifier: Mss: 766 1852-1855Overview:
Business records of the Boston, Massachusetts based tea importing merchant firm, Dane, Dana & Co. and the Boston Sugar Refinery.
Edward C. Bursk papers
Collection Identifier: Arch GA 10Overview:
The Edward C. Bursk papers spans the years 1942 to 1974 and document Professor Bursk's time as a faculty member at Harvard Business School and his work as editor of the Harvard Business Review.
John Law business records
Collection Identifier: Mss:1 1799-1838 L415Overview:
The John Law records consist of ledgers, daybooks, notebooks, receipt books, and cash books that document the business activities of John Law Sr. and his son, John Law Jr.
William Lord business records
Collection Identifier: Mss:442 1822-1869 L866Scope and Contents:
Daybooks, ledgers, and unbound papers. Some of the latter relate to shipping as well as to the manufacture of cotton goods. Two boxes contain papers relating to the manufacture and sale of twine by R. W. Lord and Company, also of Kennebunk.
Papers relating to the Higbee Company
Collection Identifier: Mss:776 1932-1944 H634Scope and Contents:
The collection consists of papers relating to a survey of the Higbee Company, a department store in Cleveland, Ohio, conducted by E. H. Stewart of the Associated Dry Goods Corporation on behalf of the store's creditors in 1932 and subsequent years. It includes a series of reports analyzing Higbee's inventory, financial picture, wages as a percentage of sales, salary ranges, competitiveness as compared to other stores, and floor plans of the store.The collection also contains...
Peirce family business records
Collection Identifier: Mss:77 1798-1852 P616Scope and Contents:
Chiefly records of a general store in Freetown, Mass. operated by Job and Ebenezer Peirce. The collection consists of ten daybooks and four ledgers. Unfortunately the books for the years 1830-1847 are missing. The accounts show that the business interests of the Peirce family were exceedingly diverse. The Peirces not only conducted a general store which supplied every variety of consumers' needs but, in order to supply the many commodities sold in their general store, they entered into West...