Part of: Chadwick, Henry Dexter, 1872-
Photographs, [1929?]-1960.
38 photographs in 1 box
Call no.: PR14/P017X
Scope and Content: Henry Dexter Chadwick, M.D., was the first superintendent of Westfield State Sanatorium (Mass.), 1908-1929; controller of tuberculosis for Detroit, Mich., 1929-1933; Massachusetts commissioner of public health, 1933-1938; president of the National Tuberculosis Association, 1939-1940, and of the Massachusetts Tuberculosis League, 1940s. He also served Massachusetts as a member of the Special Commission on Public Health and the Governor’s Committee to Study State Hospitals.
Notes: Photographs document various phases of Chadwick’s career. Images include those of Chadwick himself; Maybury Sanatorium in Detroit; colleagues in Massachusetts, including Dr. Alton Pope, commissioner of public health; a 1938 testimonial dinner in Chadwick’s honor; and activities of the Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health such as Massachusetts Hospital School graduation and the chest x-ray van sponsored by the Division of Sanatoria and Tuberculosis Control. For Chadwick’s photographs of Westfield State Sanatorium see: Massachusetts. Division of Sanatoria and Tuberculosis Control. Photographs of sanatoriums ((M-Ar)1353X). Transferred to Archives from Department of Public Health (Tuberculosis Control), 1984
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Part of: Governor's Press Office
Photographs, 1909-2003.
videocassette, photographs and photographs : in 15 record center cartons, 10 document boxes, 16 boxes, and 1 volumes
Call no.: GO11/12
Scope and Content: The Governor’s Press Office is responsible for publicizing events of the governor’s administration. In fulfilling this function, it maintains photo documentation of such events, particularly those directly involving the governor, and releases photographs to the media.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically by term
Notes: Swearing-in ceremony photographs transferred to Archives from Governor’s Personnel Office
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Part of: Walter E. Fernald State School
Photographs, 1893-195-?.
2 boxes and 1 volume
Call no.: HS14.02/878X
Scope and Content: The Experimental School for Teaching and Training Idiotic Children conducted at the Perkins Institution and Massachusetts Asylum for the Blind from 1848 was incorporated by Massachusetts as the Massachusetts School for Idiotic and Feeble-Minded Youth in 1850. It was renamed Massachusetts School for the Feeble-Minded in 1883 and Walter E. Fernald State School in 1925; it was closed in 2014.
Restrictions: Mental retardation client information restricted by statutory provision MGLA c 123B, s 17. For conditions of access consult repository
Notes: Majority of original prints transferred Jan. 2011, some from: Research Unit photographs ((M-Ar)N069X)
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: Mental retardation client information restricted by statutory provision MGLA c 123B, s 17. For conditions of access consult repository
Part of: Massachusetts Board of Underwater Archaeological Resources
Photographs and slides, 1973-[ongoing].
Not available
Call no.: EN3.15/1818
Scope and Content: The Board of Underwater Archaeological Resources is responsible for encouraging discovery and reporting of and protecting and preserving such resources in Commonwealth inland and coastal waters. In fulfilling this responsibility it issues permits for investigation and excavation of underwater sites and exercises oversight authority over related exploring, salvage, and recovery operations; also artifact preservation and disposition (MGLA c 6, s 180; c 91, s 63). Series provides pictorial documentation of permit sites and operations, artifact conservation, and recovered artifacts.
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Part of: Lakeville Hospital (Mass.).
Photographs of facilities and activities, ca. 1910-ca. 1963.
10 photographs and 14 photographs : (1 file folder)
Call no.: HS6.18/1583X
Scope and Content: Lakeville State Sanatorium opened in 1910. It was renamed Lakeville Hospital in 1963, which closed in 1992.
Notes: Copied from originals, 1992
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Part of: Massachusetts State Farm (Bridgewater, Mass.).
Photographs of facilities and activities, ca. 1900-ca. 1910.
ca. 200 photographs (1 volume) in 1 box
Call no.: HS9.10/973X
Scope and Content: Bridgewater, Mass., was the site successively of a State Almshouse (1854-1872) for so-called willing and needlessly dependent paupers, and the State Workhouse (1866-1887), for paupers convicted of misdemeanors as well as paupers generally (from 1872), and incorrigible juveniles (1869-1948). The State Workhouse was renamed the State Farm (1887-1955), which also included a State Farm Hospital for the medical needs of all inmates, as well as locals and poor admitted solely for medical treatment. The change in name was in deference to the admission of insane male paupers (1886), although it was followed by the admission of aged and physically or mentally infirm inmates of the State Prison (1890). Insane admissions were then limited for a time to criminals (1894), forming a division called the State Asylum for Insane Criminals (1895), which was renamed Bridgewater State Hospital (1909). Units at Bridgewater were later added for female prisoners (1909-1930), so-called defective delinquents (males from 1922, females 1926-1954)–mentally impaired inmates requiring segregation from standard inmate or institutionalized populations–and for drug and alcohol addicts (from 1922, females to 1930 only), eventually mostly voluntary admissions. All Bridgewater State Farm facilities and divisions (including prison, almshouse, insane, and medical hospital functions) were administered by a common superintendent. The running of the State Farm, including industries and extensive agricultural operations, relied on work performed by all capable inmates.
Notes: Photographs taken by William J. Hamilton of State Farm staff (Almshouse Dept.). Transferred to Archives by his granddaughter, Margaret L. Manning Warrell, July 1, 1982
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Part of: Pondville Hospital (Norfolk, Mass.).
Photographs of facilities and activities, [193-?]-1972.
ca. 100 photographs and slides (1 volume)
Call no.: HS6.05/275X
Scope and Content: Pondville Hospital was operated by the Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health from 1927 to 1981 as a facility to conduct cancer research and to treat cancer patients. The superintendent’s office maintained files of photographs of the hospital’s buildings and activities.
Notes: Transferred to Archives, Feb. 1982
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Part of: Division of Waterways
Photographs of harbor and river projects, 1921-1941.
ca. 1050 photographs in 4 boxes; ca. 800 photographs : photonegative in 5 boxes
Call no.: EN3.02/756X
Scope and Content: As part of their function to protect and develop Massachusetts waterways and tidelands, the Division of Waterways of the Dept. of Public Works and its predecessors in this function, the Dept. of Public Works as a whole, 1927-1938, and before that the department’s Division of Waterways and Public Lands, took photographs that enabled them to make decisions concerning waterfront construction projects and proposed improvements or repairs. Photographs and negatives of photographs are mainly of harbors, rivers, shorelines, and filled-in tidal lands in the Greater Boston area.
Arrangement: Arranged by locality
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Part of: Henry Cabot Lodge Memorial Commission
Photographs of Henry Cabot Lodge, 1919-1988.
26 photographs in 1 document box
Call no.: CO51/755X
Scope and Content: The commission, charged with planning an appropriate memorial to Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., created a portion of this series of photographs as an exhibit at the dedication of a bronze bust of Lodge, October 1988, at the Massachusetts State House. Other photographs document the dedication. Those from the exhibit are copies of photographs of Lodge from 1919 to 1972 as a young man and throughout his political life.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically by date of image
Notes: Collated: 1985-1988
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Part of: Massachusetts Reformatory for Women
Photographs of inmates, 1919-1926.
ca. 800 photographs : in 26 boxes
Call no.: HS9.06/834X
Scope and Content: The Reformatory Prison for Women was opened in Sherborn in 1877. It was renamed Reformatory for Women by St 1911, c 181 and because of a redrawn boundary line its fuller designation was changed from Reformatory for Women at Sherborn to Reformatory for Women at Framingham by St 1932, c 180, s 24. Under St 1955, c 770 it received its current name, Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Framingham.
Arrangement: Arranged by inmate case no
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