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D (90 collections) CHC

Director of research study proposal and report files [Massachusetts Advisory Council on Education]

Part of: Advisory Council on Education

Director of research study proposal and report files, 1968-1973.

2 record center cartons
Call no.: ED3/807X

Scope and Content: The Massachusetts Advisory Council on Education was established by St 1965, c 572, s 2 to recommend policies that would improve the performance of public education systems in the Commonwealth.  Through its director of research, the council coordinated and sponsored studies of educational issues, drawing on the expertise of individuals and organizations both inside and outside state government.  Study proposal and report files relate to topics being considered by the council as well as draft and final reports of studies completed under its sponsorship.
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Director of research subject files [Massachusetts Division of Drug Rehabilitation]

Part of: Massachusetts Division of Drug Rehabilitation

Director of research subject files, 1965-1974.

4 record center cartons
Call no.: HS6.19/1169X

Scope and Content: State oversight of treatment for drug abuse in Massachusetts was successively the responsibility of the Drug Addiction Rehabilitation Board, established 1963 in the Dept. of Public Health, and of the Division of Drug Rehabilitation, established 1969 in the department of the attorney general, transferred to the Dept. of Mental Health effective 1971, and then to the Dept. of Public Health, effective 1982.  In 1986 the division was merged with that department’s Division of Alcoholism to form (as of 1989) the Division of Substance Abuse Services.
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Director’s administrative files [Massachusetts Department of Mental Health Division of Legal Medicine]

Part of: Massachusetts Department of Mental Health Division of Legal Medicine

Director's administrative files, 1959-1976.

2 record center cartons and 1 document box
Call no.: HS7.06/1295X

Scope and Content: The Division of Legal Medicine was established in 1956 to provide psychiatric services to courts and correctional institutions and to ensure that persons who came into contact with the criminal justice system received needed mental health care.  Director’s administrative files, consisting of correspondence, minutes, memorandums, drafts, and legal files, were created in the course of carrying out these responsibilities and reflect the director’s activities in this area as well as participation in broader departmental activities.
Restrictions: Criminal offender record information restricted by statutory provision MGLA c 6, ss 167-178. Mental health client information restricted by statutory provision MGLA c 123, s 36. Mental retardation client information restricted by statutory provision MGLA c 123B, s 17. For conditions of access consult repository
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Director’s correspondence [Massachusetts Metropolitan District Commission Water Division]

Part of: Massachusetts Metropolitan District Commission Water Division

Director's correspondence, 1983-1985.

1 document box
Call no.: EN4.05/569X

Scope and Content: The Water Division of the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC) was responsible for both the adequacy of supply and the purity of water provided to the Metropolitan Water District (Boston and surrounding communities).  For this purpose, the division was empowered to contract, operate, and maintain reservoirs, aqueducts, and other waterworks (GL 1932 (Ter Ed) c 92, s 10 et seq.).  This series was created to assist the director in the oversight of the Water Division.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically
Notes: Correspondence was part of an administrative file that was selectively retained by the Archives.  See also series (M-Ar)570X, (M-Ar)894X, and (M-Ar)895X
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Director’s correspondence files [Massachusetts Office of State Planning]

Part of: Governor’s Office of Economic Development

Director's correspondence files, 1975-1978.

3 record center cartons
Call no.: GO15/501X

Scope and Content: The Office of State Planning was formed in 1975 (along with the Management Bureau) by splitting into two units the Office of State Planning and Management of the Executive Office for Administration and Finance.  It became the Governor’s Development Office ca. 1979, was renamed Governor’s Office of Economic Development ca. 1983, and was terminated by 1991.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically
Notes: Scheduled under (DS6/79) and transferred from Division of Capital Planning and Operations. Also known as: Director’s chronological file; and in part as: MSD 4/101-102
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Director’s policy files [Massachusetts Governor’s Office of Economic Development]

Part of: Governor's Office of Economic Development

Director's policy files, 1983-1989.

28 record center cartons
Call no.: GO15/1368X

Scope and Content: The Office of State Planning was formed in 1975 (along with the Management Bureau) by splitting into two units the Office of State Planning and Management of the Executive Office for Administration and Finance.  It became the Governor’s Development Office ca. 1979, was renamed Governor’s Office of Economic Development ca. 1983, and was terminated by 1991.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically by term, thereunder by subject
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Director’s subject files [Massachusetts Governor’s Office of Community Services]

Part of: Governor's Office of Community Services

Director's subject files, 1983-1989.

7 record center cartons and 2 document boxes
Call no.: GO14/1361X

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Director’s subject files [Massachusetts Governor’s Office of Educational Affairs]

Part of: Massachusetts Governor's Office of Educational Affairs

Director's subject files, 1983-1989.

3 record center cartons and 3 document boxes
Call no.: GO36/1374X

Scope and Content: The Governor’s Office of Educational Affairs, established by Gov. Michael Dukakis in 1983, was intended to serve during his second administration as an official link to all public and private educational constituencies, and to support gubernatorial commitment to improving the quality of public education and delivery of all educational services.  Series was created to advise the governor on educational issues and to represent the governor to the community.
Arrangement: Arranged in three alphabetical sequences, 1983-1988 (box 1), 1986-1989 (boxes 2-4), 1984-1989 (boxes 5-6)
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Disbursement books of Revolutionary War expenses [Massachusetts General Court Committee for Methodizing Accounts]

Part of: Committee for Methodizing Accounts

Disbursement books of Revolutionary War expenses, 1774-1791.

6 volumes in partial box; v. 5 with: Massachusetts. Quartermaster General's Dept. Record books, 1775 (M-Ar)2352X
Call no.: CO92/2350X

Scope and Content: Massachusetts paid for many expenses in fighting the Revolutionary War, especially during the 1775-1776 period when Washington’s army and the British army were in the Boston area.  These expenses included soldier’s pay and bounties, clothing, medical and other supplies, ships, arms, coastal defense as well as support to towns for refugees (the poor) of Boston and Charlestown.  Expenses, taken from collected vouchers and receipts, warrants, Council minutes, and other sources, were compiled into books, divided into categories, and often broken down by roll (list) and roughly arranged by date paid by the state.  They were then submitted to the federal government for reimbursement.  Massachusetts had sought such reimbursement from early on, but final settlement of these accounts did not take place until 1793. –Reimbursement was a lengthy process caused by financial difficulties of the new federal government and the complications of establishing methods of receiving, organizing, exhibiting, and getting approval of expenses.  Initially, a committee of the General Court prepared two books of disbursements (war expenses covered by the Massachusetts government) paid out during the years 1774-1775 and 1775-1776. These were submitted to the Continental Congress by Joseph Henderson, but reimbursement was not forthcoming.  Another committee was appointed per Resolves 1777-78, c 563 (Dec. 13, 1777) to determine and prepare disbursements made since Dec. 31, 1776, for additional submission. –A joint committee for stating and methodizing public accounts was first established per Resolves 1777-78, c 974 (Apr. 20, 1778).  It was responsible for reviewing accounts and collecting vouchers for all of the various sections of the government from the time of the Provincial Congresses onward to determine the state of the public accounts in Massachusetts.  Per Resolves 1778-79, c 433 (Feb. 3, 1779), responsibility for disbursement submission was also given to this committee, as the Dec. 13, 1777 committee had not yet fulfilled its charge.  The form of the committee varied over the years; usually John Deming and Peter Boyer were members. (For examples of specific mandates to the committee relating to its original mission see Resolves 1787, May Sess, c 113 (where it is called the Committee on Methodizing Accounts) and Resolves 1787, Oct Sess, c 107).  Eventually Deming alone was appointed to continue receiving and collecting claims against the United States (Resolves 1790, May Sess, c 77, June 23, 1790), and was later involved in certifying amounts owed to various persons for Revolutionary War expenses.  He was officially discharged as of July 15, 1794, per Resolves 1794, May Sess, c 36 (June 17, 1794) –Congress, per a resolve of Feb. 1782, called for states to submit expenses (within a six-month deadline, per an ordinance of May 7) and appointed commissioners to review and settle such submissions; those responsible for Massachusetts claims were, successively, William Imlay, 1783-1785, Royal Flint, 1785-1787 (see: Massachusetts. Office of the Secretary of State. Massachusetts archives collection ((M-Ar)45X), v. 288, p. 220-224), and Col. Haskell, 1787-1788.  They reviewed and approved previously submitted accounts as well as current submissions, and issued Massachusetts interest-bearing certificates as reimbursement.  Per Resolves 1789, Jan Sess, c 154 (Mar. 8, 1790), Nathan Dane was appointed agent to represent Massachusetts in settling its claims against the federal government before a board of commissioners appointed by Congress.  Dane continued to collect additional claims for Revolutionary War expenses through Deming.  By 1792 the time for exhibiting accounts to Congress had expired, and in 1793 a final settlement between the federal government and the various states was reached.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically
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Discharge leave and release stub books [Massachusetts Reformatory for Women]

Part of: Massachusetts Reformatory for Women

Discharge leave and release stub books, 1888-1913.

10 volumes in 2 record center cartons
Call no.: HS9.06/316X

Scope and Content: The Reformatory Prison for Women was opened in Sherborn in 1877.  It was renamed the Reformatory for Women by St 1911, c 181, and because of a redrawn boundary line its fuller designation was changed from the Reformatory for Women at Sherborn to the Reformatory for Women at Framingham by St 1932, c 180, s 24.  Under St 1955, c 770 it received its current name, the Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Framingham.
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically
Notes: Volumes 1-4 have spine title: Ticket of leave, Records prior to August 1888 are missing
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