|
COLLECTION SUMMARY
Title:
Faculty
Papers, N.E. Hansen papers
Dates:
1873-2004 (bulk 1897-1950)
Creator:
N.E. (Niels Ebbesen) Hansen and Helen Hansen Loen, granddaughter of N.E.
Hansen
Physical description:
5.0 linear feet—5 containers, 198 photographs
Collection number:
UA 53.4
Language:
Collection material is
mainly in English with a small amount of material in Danish.
Repository:
South Dakota State
University Archives, Hilton M. Briggs Library, South Dakota State
University, Brookings, S.D.
Abstract: Collection
is composed of articles and other materials written by N.E. Hansen,
including writings for the South Dakota Experiment Station in the form
of bulletins and circulars. Includes notebooks and field records of some
South Dakota Experiment Stations. Early ledgers of the South Dakota
Horticultural Society, for which Hansen acted as secretary, are also
included. Also included is material donated by Helen Hansen Loen,
granddaughter of N.E. Hansen. This material is composed of addresses,
clippings, correspondence, journals, Loen Research, manuscripts,
notebooks, publications, and travel material. Most of this material
belonged to N.E. Hansen with the remainder being material collected by
Ms. Loen for her written histories of her grandfather.
ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
Provenance:
Much of the material is the SDSU Collection of N.E. Hansen material was
discovered in in 1997 when the Archives were first being organized. It
is believed that most of the material was transferred to the Archives
from the Agricultural Experiment Station by Kevin Kephardt, Director.
The photograph portion of this collection was transferred to the
archives from the SD State Agricultural Heritage Museum in 2001.
The Helen Hansen Loen collection of N.E. Hansen material
was donated to the Archives in July 2004 by Helen Hansen Loen,
granddaughter of N.E. Hansen. Ms. Loen used this material in compiling
written histories of N.E. Hansen (see the related material section of
the background note for titles).
Access Restrictions: This
collection is open to research without restriction.
Items in this collection do not
circulate and may be used in-house only.
Copyright Status: Copyright
2008 by South Dakota State University and SDSU Archives. Please credit
the SDSU Archives if you copy or reproduce material from this finding
aid.
It is the responsibility of anyone reproducing material
to determine the copyright holders and obtain permission from them if
necessary. Archives staff will provide available copyright information
on request. Please note that most collections, especially those received
before 1997, may not have complete information on file. (Revised 15 SEP
2003)
Preferred citation:
[Identification of item]. Faculty Papers, N.E. Hansen papers, UA
53.4, South Dakota State University Archives, South Dakota State
University, Brookings, S.D.
Processing
information:
The photographs were removed from the collected and placed in the UA
Photograph Archives for preservation. Ask staff for assistance with
these items.
This collection was processed by Crystal J. Gamradt on
August 11, 1998 with revisions on April 8, 2009 (cjg).
SELECTED SEARCH TERMS
The following terms have been used to index the
description of this collection in the subject guide. They are grouped by
name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by
occupation and listed alphabetically therein.
Persons:
Subjects:
-
Agricultural exploration.
-
Alfalfa—Varieties.
-
Bromegrasses—Research.
-
Crested Wheatgrass—Research.
-
Faculty—South Dakota State University.
-
Flowers—Varieties—South Dakota.
-
Fruit-culture—Research.
-
Fruit—Varieties—South Dakota.
-
Plant introduction—South Dakota.
-
Plant introduction—United States.
-
Plants—South Dakota.
-
Plants—United States.
-
South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station.
-
South Dakota Horticultural Society.
-
Trees—South Dakota.
BACKGROUND NOTE
On January 4, 1866, Niels Ebbesen Hansen was born to
Bodil Midtgaard and Andreas Hansen on a farm near Ribe, Denmark. His
mother died when he was an infant. Andreas remarried, and with his
second wife had two daughters, Helene and Kristine. The Hansen's left
Denmark in 1872. They lived in New York and New Jersey for three years
before migrating to Des Moines, Iowa in 1876. His father worked as a
painter and is noted for his murals on the ceilings and walls of the new
state house building in Des Moines.
As a boy, Hansen attended schools in New York and New
Jersey but completed his education in Iowa. In March 1883, Niels
enrolled at Iowa State College. He graduated with a BS degree in
Horticulture in 1887. In 1895, he received his master's degree from the
same college.
After graduation from college, Hansen went into
commercial horticulture work. He worked for a year in Atlantic, Iowa
and three years in Des Moines, Iowa. In 1895, Hansen came to South
Dakota and became head of the Horticultural Department of South Dakota
State College.
During his career, Hansen made eight world trips as an
agricultural explorer. He searched for new grasses, fruits and other
plants throughout Europe and Asia, including Siberia. He brought these
plants back to America to raise or crossbreed with American varieties to
produce a stronger plant. He was the originator of many new fruits,
among them the Hansen hybrid plums. He is credited with the discovery
and introduction of hardy Cossack alfalfa, crested wheat grass and brome
grass. He developed larger apricots and plums by crossing native
varieties with those he brought from Asia. He also developed pears
without seeds and a rose to adorn farmyards. In 1949, a monument in
recognition of Dr. Hansen and his contributions was erected on the
campus of South Dakota State College.
Hansen was married twice. He married his first wife,
Emma Elise Pammel on November 16, 1898. They had two children, Carl
Andreas and Eva (Mrs. Dave Gilkerson). Emma died December 16, 1904.
Three years later, he married Dora Sophie Pammel, his first wife's
sister. The Dora died September 14, 1945.
Hansen was a member of the International Jury of
Horticulture at the World's Fair in St. Louis, Missouri in 1904 and a
United States delegate to the First International Congress of Genetics
in London, England in 1906. He served as secretary of the South Dakota
Horticultural Society for many years. Hansen was frequently referred to
as "The Burbank of the Plains". He had been on the State College staff
for 55 years and held the title of Professor Emeritus. Hansen died at
the Brookings Hospital on October 5, 1950, after a long illness.
Related material:
Loen, Helen Hansen, Dear Miss Pammel: the letters of
Hiels Hansen and Emma Pammel, 1896-1898, United States: H. Loen,
2003. [SD Collection: SB63.H3 A4 2003]
Loen, Helen Hansen, The banebryder (the trail breaker)
: the travel records of Niels Ebbesen Hansen, 1897-1934, Kalamazoo,
Mich.: H. Loen, 2002. [SD Collection: SB63.H3 A3 2002]
Loen, Helen Hansen, The journals of Niels Ebbesen
Hansen, 1879-1892, Kalamazoo, Mich.: H. Loen, 2004. [SD Collection:
SB63.H3 A3 2004]
Loen, Helen Hansen, With a brush and muslin bag: the
life of Niels Ebbesen Hansen, Kalamazoo, Mich.: H. Loen, 2003. [SD
Collection: SB63.H3 L63 2003]
Miller, John E. “Eminent Horticulturalist: Niels Ebbesen
Hansen.” South Dakota leaders: from Pierre Chouteau, Jr., to Oscar
Howe, Ed. Hoover, Herbert T. and Larry Zimmerman, Vermillion, SD:
USD Press, c1989, p.271-281. [SD Collection: CT260.S67 1989]
Rumbaugh, M.D., N. E. Hansen’s contributions to
alfalfa breeding in North America, Brookings, S.D.: Agricultural
Experiment Station, SDSU, 1979, Bulletin no. 665. [Archives: 630.7
So87.12 no. 665]
South Dakota State University Alumni Association, “The
Blooming Prairie,” State: a magazine for South Dakota State
University Alumni and Friends, Brookings, S.D., South Dakota State
University Alumni Association, Summer 2000, vol. 89, no. 2, p.6-9.
[Archives: 378.783 So8.032 v.89 no. 2 Summer 2000]
South Dakota State Horticultural Society, Annual
Report of South Dakota Horticultural Society, Aberdeen, S.D.,
1903-04- [Archives: SB21.S8 S6]
South Dakota State Horticultural Society, Biennial
Report, Brookings, n.d. [Archives: SB21.S8 S62]
South Dakota State Horticultural Society, Early
Records of the South Dakota Horticultural Society, 1864-1904, Sioux
Falls, S.D. : The Society, 1936. [Archives: SB21.S8 S58 1936]
Taylor, H. J., Mrs., To Plant the Prairies and the
Plains: the life and work of Niels Ebbesen Hansen, Mount Vernon,
Iowa, Bios. 1941. [SD Collection: SB63.H3 T3t]
SCOPE AND CONTENTS NOTE
This collection is arranged into two series: SDSU
Collection of N.E. Hansen material and the Helen Hansen Loen collection
of N.E. Hansen material.
The SDSU Collection of N.E. Hansen material series
is composed of addresses, collected works, SDSC Horticulture Department
materials, manuscripts, notebooks, publications, SD Agricultural
Experiment Station materials, and photographs.
The addresses are speeches given by Hansen at the South
Dakota State Conservation and Development and
Dry Farming Congress in 1911 and the
International Congress of
Genetics in Berlin, Germany in 1927.
The collected works consists of material collected by
Hansen and includes reports on forests, sheep and forage crops. Also
included are items filed as general. This material includes biographies
written about Hansen, one of which is written in Danish and some
material related to recognition of Hansen in 1949.
The manuscripts consist of articles written by Hansen on
the subjects of alfalfa and the fine arts. The notebooks include
planting records and field plot notations detailing where alfalfa,
clover, grasses and grains were planted. These notebooks are dated from
1888 to 1913. The photographs consist mainly of images from travels to
Siberia and Northern China in 1924. Also included are images of apples,
sheep, and Hansen with trees. The photographs were removed from the
collection and placed in the UA Photograph Archives for preservation.
Ask staff for assistance with these items.
The publications consist mainly of SD Agricultural
Experiment Station bulletins written by Hansen. Also included are some
creative works by Hansen, poems written for Hobo Day and a copy of
The Yellow and Blue, the South Dakota State College school song for
which Hansen wrote the words.
The South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station material
consists of field records for the Agronomy Department and cover mostly
the Brookings experiment station, although a few have notes for the
Highmore experiment station. This material is dated from 1915 to 1947.
The Horticulture Department material consists of ledgers,
which contain records of individuals who joined the South Dakota
Horticultural Society and a list of the free premiums they received,
usually packets of seeds, and annual reports of the Society. Also
included were miscellaneous items that were kept in the ledgers, which
were removed and placed in a separate folder for conservation purposes.
These ledgers are dates from 1908 to 1929.
The Helen Hansen Loen collection of N.E. Hansen
material is composed of addresses, clippings, correspondence,
journals, Loen Research, manuscripts, notebooks, publications, and
travel material. The material is this series was collected by Helen
Hansen Loen, granddaughter of N.E. Hansen. Most of the material belonged
to N.E. Hansen with the remainder being material collected by Ms. Loen
for her research.
The addresses are composed of speeches given by N.E.
Hansen at various venues including the SD State Horticulture Society and
the International Congress of Genetics in
Berlin, Germany in 1927. This material is dates from 1905 to
1936.
The clippings consist of newspaper and magazine article
clipping about N.E. Hansen. Topics include plant breeding, grapes,
thornless roses, alfalfa, fruit, wheatgrass, and travels. Many of the
articles are biographical.
The correspondence material is dated from 1873 to 1943.
The bulk of this material is correspondence between N. E. Hansen and his
father, Andreas. Also included is correspondence between family members,
friends. and business associates Many of the letters, especially between
Niels and his father, are in Danish. Ms. Loen had these letters
translated. These translations are included with the original letters.
Most of the material consists of original letters, envelopes (some of
which are empty), translation transcripts, and notes by Helen Loen. Also
included are postcards dated from 1913 from N.E. Hansen to his son Carl
with Hansen traveled in Russia.
The journals were kept by N.E. Hansen and cover college
and travel years. Included are loose notes, ephemera, financial
statements, and business cards. Pressed leaves were found in the journal
dates 1882-83. This material is dated between 1879 and 1922.
The Loen Research material consists of material gathered
by Helen Hansen Loen in compiling written histories of her grandfather,
Niels Ebbesen Hansen. Included in this material is correspondence,
genealogical research, N.E. Hansen biographical information; including
his academic career at Iowa State College and his professional career at
South Dakota State College.
The manuscripts consist mainly of original manuscripts
written by N.E. Hansen. Included is an unpublished manuscript titled
“Russia as Observed by an Agricultural Explorer,” written between 1934
and 1937. This includes at least two copies of each page, some of which
are handwritten, and some that are edited by cutting and taping. This
material is arranged alphabetically by title. The unpublished manuscript
“Russia as Observed by an Agricultural Explorer” is arranged by page
number. This was done to allow researchers to see the evolution of
Hansen’s editing and to show the various topics covered by the
manuscript.
The notebooks include miscellaneous notes on plants, a
calendar of events, and course work while Hansen attended Iowa State
College. This material is dated 1883 and 1908-1909.
The publications consist mainly of reprints of bulletins
written for the SD Agricultural Experiment Station. Also included are
reprints of other published articles and a copy of The Yellow and
Blue, the South Dakota State College school song for which Hansen
wrote the words. This material is dated between 1904 and 1947.
The travel material deals with Hansen’s travels to
Russia, Siberia, Central Asia, Turkestan, and
Northern Africa. Included are maps, expenses, and a permit issued by
Russia for Hansen in 1897. This material is dated between 1897.
ARRANGEMENT of the RECORDS
This collection is arranged into two series: SDSU
Collection of N.E. Hansen material and the Helen Hansen Loen collection
of N.E. Hansen materials.
SERIES 1: SDSU Collection of N.E. Hansen material
Box 1—Addresses.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
1 |
Hardy alfalfa's for northern prairies (State Conservation and
Development and Dry Farming Congress) |
1911 |
|
2 |
Relative value of homozygous and heterozygous parents in the
breeding of the apple, plum cherry, grape and other fruits
(International Congress of Genetics, Berlin) |
1927 |
Box 1—Collected works.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
3 |
Our
forests: what they are and what they mean to us, by Charles E.
Randall and Maria Foote Heisley |
1944 |
|
4 |
Preliminary report on the fringed tape worm of sheep, by E.L.
Moore |
1903 |
|
5 |
Report of forage crop investigations conducted by the Bureau of
Plant Industry at Redfield, SD, by Samuel Garver |
1914 |
Box 1—General Hansen material.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
6 |
Biographies |
1950-1951, 1990 |
|
7 |
Recognition |
1949 |
Box 1—Manuscripts.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
8 |
Alfalfa dictaform |
1931 |
|
9 |
The
Fine Arts |
1933 |
Box 1—Notebooks.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
10 |
Alfalfa & clovers plat: Book 1 |
1907
July |
|
11 |
Alfalfa & clovers plat: Book 2 |
1908
May |
|
12 |
Alfalfa book |
1913 |
|
13 |
Alfalfa's: 1911-M-1-tc |
1911
Spring |
|
14 |
Grasses for 1888 and 9: Grains for 1988 |
1888-1889 |
|
15 |
Grasses, clovers and forage |
1897 |
|
16 |
Plot
planting records |
1906 |
Box 1—Photographs.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
17 |
Bulk
of photographs is from Hansen's 1924 tour of Siberia, N. China,
Korea. Remainder are of a 1912 SD AES exhibit, SDSU crop shows,
Hansen apples, and tailless sheep (UA 53.4.1-0001 to UA
53.4.1-0143) |
1912-1924 |
Box 1—Publications.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
8 |
Northern plant novelties for 1945 (Pamphlet #34 - SD AES) |
1946 |
|
18 |
Breeding hardy fruits (Bulletin 88 - SD AES) |
1904 |
|
19 |
Co-operative tests in 1904 of peas, beans, sweet corn and
cabbage (Bulletin 91 - SD AES) |
1905 |
|
20 |
Co-operative tests of alfalfa from Siberia and European Russia
(Bulletin 141 - SD AES) |
1913 |
|
21 |
Early garden peas (Bulletin 85 - SD AES) |
1904 |
|
22 |
Elements of prairie horticulture (Bulletin 81 - SD AES) |
1903 |
|
23 |
Evergreens for South Dakota (Bulletin 102 - SD AES) |
1907 |
|
24 |
Evergreens in South Dakota (Bulletin 254 - SD AES) |
1930 |
|
25 |
Experiments in plant heredity (Bulletin 237 - SD AES) |
1929 |
|
26 |
Flowers every day in the year (Bulletin 208 - SD AES) |
1924 |
|
27 |
Fruit list of the South Dakota State Horticulture |
1923 |
|
28 |
Fruit stocks where the mercury freezes (International
Horticultural Congress, London) |
1930 |
|
29 |
Hardy roses for South Dakota (Bulletin 240 - SD AES)
click to view PDF |
1929 |
|
30 |
List
of Experiment Station bulletins by Hansen |
1897-1949 |
|
32 |
New
hardy fruits for the Northwest (Bulletin 229 - SD AES) |
1940 |
|
32 |
Northern novelties for … (Department of Horticulture, SDSC) |
1919-1926 |
|
33 |
Northern novelties for … (Department of Horticulture, SDSC) |
1930-1934 |
|
34 |
Northern novelties for … (Department of Horticulture, SDSC) |
1936-1939 |
|
35 |
Northern novelties for … (Department of Horticulture, SDSC) |
1940-1942 |
|
36 |
Northern novelties for … (SD State Horticultural Society
newsletters)) |
1927-1929 |
|
37 |
Northern plant novelties for 1944 (Pamphlet #29 - SD AES) |
1944 |
|
39 |
The
Ornamental trees of South Dakota (Bulletin 260 - SD AES) |
1931 |
|
40 |
Plant introductions (Bulletin 224 - SD AES)
click to view PDF |
1927 |
|
41 |
(1.)
Plants for Dry Western Uplands (2.) Some New Hybrid Plums (3.)
$50 in Prizes (SD State Horticultural Society) |
1916 |
|
42 |
(1.)
Plants for Dry Western Uplands (2.) Some New Hybrid Plums (SD
State Horticultural Society |
1914 |
|
43 |
Plums in South Dakota (Bulletin 93 - SD AES) |
1905 |
|
44 |
Progress in plant breeding (Bulletin 159 - SD AES)
click to view PDF |
1915 |
|
45 |
Proso and baoliang as table foods (Bulletin 158 - SD AES) |
1915 |
|
46 |
Questions and answers on fruit culture (Circular 35 - SD AES) |
1941 |
|
47 |
The
Shade, windbreak and timber trees on South Dakota (Bulletin 246
- SD AES) |
1930 |
|
48 |
The
Shrubs and climbing vines of South Dakota (Bulletin 263 - SD
AES) |
1931 |
|
49 |
Some
new fruits: Some new alfalfa's (Dept. of Horticulture, SDSC) |
1907-1908, 1910-1913, 1917-1918 |
|
50 |
Souvenir of Hobo Day - Poems by N. E. Hansen |
1923 |
|
51 |
Subsoiling (Bulletin 54 - SD AES) |
1897 |
|
52 |
Transplanting alfalfa (Bulletin 167 - SD AES) |
1916 |
|
53 |
The
Yellow and Blue, Stanza by N.E. Hansen (SDSC School Song) |
1908 |
Box 1—South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
54 |
Agronomy Department field records
click to view PDF |
1915-1916 |
|
55 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1940 |
|
56 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1941 |
|
57 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1942 |
Box 2.—South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
1 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1943 |
|
2 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1944 |
|
3 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1945 |
|
4 |
Agronomy Department field records |
1946 |
|
5 |
Agronomy Department field records: Forage crops,
legumes-Brookings |
1947 |
|
6 |
Agronomy Department field records: Legumes-Highmore |
1947 |
Box 2—Horticulture Department.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
7 |
Alfalfa orders - Ledger |
1915-1918 |
|
8 |
Loose items from ledgers |
1914-1929 |
|
9 |
Memberships - Ledger |
1912-1918 circa |
|
10 |
Order book - Ledger |
1920-1922 |
|
11 |
Plants sent out - Ledger |
1908-1914 |
|
12 |
Register for alfalfa seed - Ledger |
1914 |
|
13 |
SD
State Horticultural Society - Ledger |
1909-1912 |
SERIES 2: Helen Hansen Loen collection of N.E.
Hansen material
Box 3—Addresses.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
1 |
1923
Plant Collection Tours to Manitoba and Saskatchewan (1923 Canada
Trip) |
1924 |
|
2 |
Apples at $5.00 per Bushel |
1917 |
|
3 |
Beautifying the home grounds |
1928 |
|
4 |
Breeding hardy raspberries for the northwest |
1905 |
|
5 |
Breeding mildew-resistant sand cherries and roses |
1905 |
|
6 |
Breeding northern fruits |
1905 |
|
7 |
Breeding of cold-resistant fruits |
1906 |
|
8 |
Horticulture program for South Dakota |
1936 |
|
9 |
North Pole of pears: 1924 search for hardy pears |
1925 |
|
10 |
Northern circumpolar work in horticulture (1918-19 Canada Trips) |
1918-1919 |
|
11 |
Notes on a 1930 tour to Europe |
1931 |
|
12 |
Notes on fruit breeding |
1905 |
|
13 |
Pomology Arboretum |
1920 |
|
14 |
President's (valedictory) address to the South Dakota State
Horticultural Society |
1932 |
|
15 |
Recent developments in agriculture and horticulture in America
and Russia |
1935 |
|
16 |
Relation to Horticulture to the National Recovery Program |
1934 |
|
17 |
Top-working apple trees |
1911 |
|
18 |
What
South Dakota needs |
[n.d.] |
Box 3—Clippings.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
19 |
The
Agricultural Explorer (Daily Argus-Leader, August 4, 1948, pp.
4) |
1948
August 4 |
|
20 |
Alfalfa (American Scientist, May-June 2001, vol. 89, pp.
252-261) |
2001
May-June |
|
21 |
Arborist Award Given (Brookings Daily Register, May 4, 1989, pp.
1-2) |
1989
May 4 |
|
22 |
Article: The State Register editorially recommends the election
of Prof. N.E. Hansen … (Ames Intelligencer, vol. 30, no. 14,
July 21, 1898) |
1898
July 21 |
|
23 |
The
Blooming Prairie (State, vol. 89, no. 2, Summer 2000, p. 6-9) |
2000
Summer |
|
24 |
Burbank of the Plains (Country Gentlemen, December 1940, pp.
11-55) |
1940
December |
|
25 |
Burbank of the Plains foresees new Midwest (Sioux City Sunday
Journal) |
1947
March 23 |
|
26 |
Contributions of Dr. Hansen outstanding (Daily Argus-Leader, pp.
3) |
1947
February 17 |
|
27 |
Dakota's First Citizen (Argus-Leader) |
1950
January |
|
28 |
Dodging bullets for seedlings (South Dakota Magazine, p. 37-38) |
1987
September |
|
29 |
Dr.
Hansen off on Siberian trip (Brookings Register) |
1924
July 31 |
|
30 |
Dr.
Hansen visited noted botanical gardens in Europe and United
States (Brookings Register) |
1930
October 23 |
|
31 |
Dr.
Hansen, famed horticulturalist explains plant, fruit
reproduction (Aberdeen Morning American) |
1938
December 1 |
|
32 |
Dr.
N.E. Hansen is given honor medal at Ames (Brookings County
Press) |
1944 |
|
33 |
Early South Dakota plant explorer (by Ronald M. Peterson, Ag.
Exp. Sta.) |
1972 |
|
34 |
Experiments of S. Dakota Burbank cover wide field (Minneapolis
Journal) |
1936
January 14 |
|
35 |
An
Explorer honored for his wheat grass (Des Moines Sunday
Register) |
1942
June 7 |
|
36 |
Explorer returns (The Daily News: San Francisco, vol. 8, no. 55) |
1906
December 3 |
|
37 |
Folks not afraid of an idea (Better Homes and Gardens, pp.
34-35) |
1925
March |
|
38 |
Forgotten Russian alfalfas may boost great plains meat supply
(unknown) |
1948 |
|
39 |
Founding Farmer (Argus-Leader, pp. 1B, 4B) |
1987
March 1 |
|
40 |
Fruit culture and gardening interest gains (Daily Argus-Leader) |
1938
November 10 |
|
41 |
Fruit of the Vine (SD Magazine, pp. 64-67() |
2002
January-February |
|
42 |
Grape growers have a language of their own (Farm & Home
Research, vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 13-19) |
2001 |
|
43 |
Hansen honored for 60 years spent in horticultural work
(unknown) |
1944 |
|
44 |
Hansen named seed explorer by author of magazine article (SDSU
Collegian) |
1944
November |
|
45 |
Hansen symbol a thornless rose (Brookings Daily Register, pp.
12B) |
1979
June 29 |
|
46 |
Hansen, South Dakota professor, seeks the perfect rose (Des
Moines Tribune, pp. 8_ |
1936
June 26) |
|
47 |
His
plants transformed the plains (Coronet, pp. 58-60) |
1949
July |
|
48 |
Improving Prairie plant lift (Farm Forum, pp. 69F) |
2001
April 6 |
|
49 |
Interesting People (unknown) |
1923-1924 |
|
50 |
Items of local interest (Brookings Register) |
1897
June 9 |
|
51 |
John
Beatty articles (Brookings Register) |
1992
April 17-July 10 |
|
52 |
A
Man and his rose (Capper's Farmer, pp. 24) |
1943
February |
|
53 |
Many
strains of fruits, vegetables developed by Horticulture
Department (Collegian) |
1966
December) |
|
54 |
N.E.
Hansen's contributions to alfalfa breeding in North America
(Bulletin 665 - SD AES) |
1979 |
|
55 |
New
book of rose describes work of late Dr. Hansen (Brookings
Register) |
[n.d.] |
|
56 |
The
New manchu apricots (Country Gentlemen, pp. 94) |
1938
April |
|
57 |
New
peony, thornless rose exhibited (Argus-Leader) |
1939
June 5) |
|
58 |
Niels Hansen, grand old man of State, has many diverse talents
(SD Collegian) |
1948
November 3 |
|
59 |
North Pole of alfalfa (The Outlook by Wm. Paul Kirkwood) |
1910
June |
|
60 |
Orchards, like barns, need sound foundation (unknown) |
1953
January |
|
61 |
Permanent home for historical collection (unknown,
post-retirement) |
[n.d.] |
|
62 |
Robertson Memorial Award (North Dakota/South Dakota
Horticulture, pp. 136-137) |
1946
September |
|
63 |
The
romantic story of a scientist (The World's Work, by Wm. Paul
Kirkwood) |
1908
April |
|
64 |
The
Russian system (Daily Argus-Leader) |
1946
April 9 |
|
65 |
S.
Dak. Fruit trees grown throughout the world (Armour Chronicle) |
[n.d.] |
|
66 |
Scientist (illegible) world for plants for great plains
(Minneapolis-Tribune ?) |
1949
July 18 |
|
67 |
Scientist, 80, still seeks new plants (Minneapolis Tribune) |
1946 |
|
68 |
State College drops fruit breeding research project (unknown) |
1960
August |
|
69 |
State Extension Advisory Board meeting |
1962
January |
|
70 |
Tribute to South Dakota plant expert, almost as renowned as
Luther Burbank (Sioux City Journal) |
1941
March 5 |
|
71 |
Uncle Sam's valiant plant-hunters (Reader's Digest, pp. 94-96) |
1944
October |
|
72 |
Untitled articles |
1962, [n.d.] |
|
73 |
Virginia Safford - interview with N.E. Hansen (Minneapolis Star,
pp. 24) |
1947
July 16 |
|
74 |
We
are seeing American west and northwest (Kansas Farmer) |
1951
May |
Box 3—Correspondence.
|
Folder |
Dates |
|
75 |
Chronology of letters 1873-1895 [n.d.] |
|
76 |
[n.d.] |
|
77 |
1873 |
|
78 |
1877 |
|
79 |
1878 |
|
80 |
1879 |
|
81 |
1880 |
|
82 |
1882 |
|
83 |
1883 |
|
84 |
1884 |
|
85 |
1885 |
|
86 |
1886 |
|
87 |
1887 |
|
88 |
1888 |
|
89 |
1889 |
|
90 |
1890 |
|
91 |
1891 |
|
92 |
1892 |
|
93 |
1893 |
|
94 |
1894 |
|
95 |
1895 |
|
96 |
1894 |
|
97 |
1898 |
|
98 |
1899 |
|
99 |
1900 |
|
100 |
1901 |
|
101 |
1902 |
|
102 |
1903 |
|
103 |
1904 |
|
104 |
1905 |
|
105 |
1906 |
|
106 |
1907 |
|
107 |
1908 |
|
108 |
1909 |
|
109 |
1910 |
|
110 |
1911 |
|
111 |
1912 |
|
112 |
1913 |
|
113 |
1914 |
|
114 |
1915 |
|
115 |
1916 |
|
116 |
1917 |
|
117 |
1918 |
|
118 |
1919 |
|
119 |
1921 |
|
120 |
1922 |
|
121 |
1923 |
|
122 |
1924 |
|
123 |
1925 |
|
124 |
1926 |
|
125 |
1927 |
|
126 |
1930 |
|
127 |
1934 |
|
128 |
1939 |
|
129 |
1943 |
Box 3—Loen research.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
130 |
Ag
museum inventory |
1995 |
|
131 |
Awards received by Niels E. Hansen |
1895-1995, [n.d.] |
|
132 |
Biography & genealogy master index (Ancestry.com search - N.E.
Hansen) |
2002 |
|
133 |
Business card (SDSC) |
[n.d.] |
|
134 |
The
Challenge State (unknown, pp. 346-349) |
[n.d.] |
|
135 |
Correspondence |
1987-2003 |
|
136 |
Dedication of Hansen Hall SDSU |
1967 |
|
137 |
Dedication of Hansen Memorial at SD State College |
1949 |
|
138 |
Eminent Horticulturalist: Niels Ebbesen Hansen, by John E.
Miller (South Dakota Leaders, USD Press) |
1989 |
|
139 |
Ephemera |
1884, [n.d.] |
|
140 |
From
Prairie to Prominence: a brief history of Iowa State University
(web page, pp. 1-5) |
1999 |
|
141 |
George Washington Carver friends & colleagues |
1999 |
|
142 |
A
history of the Iowa State College, by Earle D. Ross, pp. 211-214
(photocopy) |
1942 |
|
143 |
Iowa
Congressional Districts (maps) |
1884 |
|
144 |
Iowa
State College alumni merit award |
1942 |
|
145 |
Iowa
State College Alumnus |
1909, 1911, 1913, 1924 |
|
146 |
Louis H. Pammel |
1923 |
|
147 |
Lysenko, T.D. |
1967-1968, 1975 |
|
148 |
Minnetonka Story, by Blanche Nichols Wilson, pp.. 151-154 |
1950 |
|
149 |
N.E.
Hansen Lecture Series poster |
2000 |
|
150 |
Niels Ebbesen Hansen biography (History of South Dakota, by Doan
Robinson, vol. 2, pp. 1436-1437 - via Rootsweb.com) |
1904 |
|
151 |
Niels Ebbesen Hansen, 1866-1950 (Nature's World) |
1951 |
|
152 |
Photographs - N.E. Hansen Memorial Garden at McCrory Gardens,
SDSC (UA 53.4.2-0001 to UA 53.4.2-0014) |
1934, 1939 |
|
153 |
Plant introductions of Niels Ebbesen Hansen 1898-1946, compiled
by Helen Hansen Loen) |
2004 |
|
154 |
Prairie planter (Both Sides of the River, SD Writers Project,
pp. 83-92) |
1942 |
|
155 |
Prof. N.E. Hansen (biography) (Who's Who in South Dakota, vol.
4, pp. 168-174) |
1923 |
|
156 |
SD
State College Alumnus (vol. 41, no. 6) |
1951
February |
|
157 |
SDSU
Faculty publications |
[n.d.] |
|
158 |
SDSU
Faculty record |
1927-1928, 1930 |
|
159 |
USDA
Hansen Project |
1990 |
Box 3—Travels.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
160 |
Maps |
1898-1908 |
|
161 |
Siberia |
1908-1906 |
|
162 |
Russia, Siberia, Central Asia, Turkestan, Northern Africa |
1908-1909 |
|
163 |
USDA
expenses |
1910 |
|
164 |
Russia, Siberia |
1913 |
|
165 |
Siberia |
1934 |
|
166 |
Contract for Siberian tour |
1934-1935 |
Box 5—Travels.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
87 |
Russian permit |
1897 |
Box 4—Manuscripts.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
1 |
Index (Helen Loen) |
[n.d.] |
|
2 |
Index (N.E. Hansen) |
[n.d.] |
|
3 |
Index (N.E. Hansen) Russian grasses, grains and livestock of
value to American and agricultural explorations on four
continents |
[n.d.] |
|
4 |
1906
Tour to Siberia |
1906 |
|
5 |
Action program for horticulture in wartime |
1941 |
|
6 |
Anoka apple the earliest bearer |
[n.d.] |
|
7 |
Apple insects: sprays or bounties? |
1937 |
|
8 |
Better fur from rabbits |
[n.d.] |
|
9 |
Blackberries and dewberries |
[n.d.] |
|
10 |
Breaking new trails in fruits |
[n.d.] |
|
11 |
Breeding hardy fruits and ornamentals |
1943 |
|
12 |
Breeding hardy ornamental trees and shrubs |
[n.d.] |
|
13 |
Bud-spots or Somatic mutations in plants |
[n.d.] |
|
14 |
Caragana: The great hedge plant for the northwest |
1922 |
|
15 |
Collecting hardy pears among the Hunghuitzi band |
1924 |
|
16 |
Conservation of Game |
1934 |
|
17 |
Controlling the sap flow in plants |
1940 |
|
18 |
Crested wheat grass |
[n.d.] |
|
19 |
Crossbred poultry |
[n.d.] |
|
20 |
Developing the wild flowers |
[n.d.] |
|
21 |
Disease resistant elms |
1936 |
|
22 |
Don't let seed corn freeze |
[n.d.] |
|
23 |
Drying and canning of vegetables and fruits |
1917 |
|
24 |
Early work in America (grapes) |
[n.d.] |
|
25 |
Earthquake at Straits of Messina |
1908-1909 |
|
26 |
Eat
an apple every day |
[n.d.] |
|
27 |
Five
hardy nursery understocks for fruits |
[n.d.] |
|
28 |
Four
Hundred and Fifty Years |
[n.d.] |
|
29 |
Fragrant plums |
1940 |
|
30 |
Future of American wild crabapple |
[n.d.] |
|
31 |
Giant melons of Turkestan |
[n.d.] |
|
32 |
Gigantic grape of Eshcol |
[n.d.] |
|
33 |
Gitniak or crested wheat grass |
1933-1934 |
|
34 |
Golden horse |
[n.d.] |
|
35 |
Gooseberries |
[n.d.] |
|
36 |
Grains and forage plants |
[n.d.] |
|
37 |
Grains and forage plants (partial manuscript) |
[n.d.] |
|
38 |
Grape sausages from the Land of Noah's Ark |
[n.d.] |
|
39 |
Grapes hardy without winter protection |
1944 |
|
40 |
Grapes of Turkestan |
[n.d.] |
|
41 |
Hardy wheats from Russia (Help in the battle for bread) |
[n.d.] |
|
42 |
Hedge plant from Siberia |
1917 |
|
43 |
History of American and Russian apples |
[n.d.] |
|
44 |
History of the fat rumped sheep of Siberia |
[n.d.] |
|
45 |
Imparting Jonathan apple flavor to Siberian crabapples |
1944 |
|
46 |
Improving the great plains region by shelter belt planting |
[n.d.] |
|
47 |
Improving the Native American Crabapple |
[n.d.] |
|
48 |
Indians used rose-hips |
1943 |
|
49 |
Indians used wild crabapples |
[n.d.] |
|
50 |
Insects or man |
[n.d.] |
|
51 |
International apples |
[n.d.] |
|
52 |
Joseph Lancaster Budd |
1904, 1920 |
|
53 |
Large Seedless Grapes |
[n.d.] |
|
54 |
Largest grapes in the world |
[n.d.] |
|
55 |
Latin names for plants and fruits |
[n.d.] |
|
56 |
Livestock in many countries |
[n.d.] |
|
57 |
Making jam the year around |
[n.d.] |
|
58 |
My
1922 plant-collection tour among the moose hunters of northern
Manitoba and Saskatchewan |
1922 |
|
59 |
National tree sanitation service |
[n.d.] |
|
60 |
New
fruits |
1939 |
|
61 |
New
hardy red-flowered perennial |
1946 |
|
62 |
New
nature study |
[n.d.] |
|
63 |
North Pole of apricots (Apricots from fifty degrees below zero,
1924) |
1938 |
|
64 |
Old
world grapes at home |
[n.d.] |
|
65 |
Old
world grapes in Europe |
[n.d.] |
|
66 |
On
the ancient trail of the Holy Land grape and the mammouth melons
to Turkestan |
[n.d.] |
|
67 |
Origin of fruits |
[n.d.] |
|
68 |
Originating and importing hardy plants for South Dakota |
1939 |
|
69 |
Partial manuscript on grafting |
[n.d.] |
|
70 |
Pomegranates |
[n.d.] |
|
71 |
Proso: The grain the saved Russia from famine |
1933 |
|
72 |
Rabbits in America |
[n.d.] |
|
73 |
Raspberries for the North |
[n.d.] |
|
74 |
Red
all-winter crabapple |
[n.d.] |
|
75 |
Red
apples with red flesh and red flowers - changing the color
scheme in apples |
1935 |
|
76 |
Regional planning |
1933 |
|
77 |
Review of fruit growing in South Dakota, the present and the
future |
1938 |
|
78 |
Rexing the rabbits |
1930 |
|
79 |
Rose
debate |
1926 |
|
80 |
Ruining spruce trees in the cemetery |
1922 |
|
81 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. Title page,
forward |
1934-1937 |
|
82 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 47-58 - The
farm situation in Soviet Russia |
1934-1937 |
|
83 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 59-71 - The
Commune |
1934-1937 |
|
84 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 72-77 - The
Sovhoz a social unit |
1934-1937 |
|
85 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 78 -
Control over seed sowing |
1934-1937 |
|
86 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 79 -
Bringing in the grain rent |
1934-1937 |
|
87 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 80-87 - The
doleful dodo in the limbo of the lost |
1934-1937 |
|
88 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 88 - The
milk problem |
1934-1937 |
|
89 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 89 - The
Kulak and enemy of the government |
1934-1937 |
|
90 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 90-92 -
Farm collectivization must be voluntary |
1934-1937 |
|
91 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 93-97 - The
Kulak Civil War |
1934-1937 |
|
92 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 98 -
Stalin's address to collective farmers |
1934-1937 |
|
93 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 99 - The
forgotten man |
1934-1937 |
|
94 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 100 -
Collective farming compelled by American tractor and combine |
1934-1937 |
|
95 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 101-109 -
Farming ownership increasingly impossible |
1934-1937 |
|
96 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 110-111 -
Small farming means poverty |
1934-1937 |
|
97 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 112-114 -
Eradicating capitalism from farms |
1934-1937 |
|
98 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 115-118 -
The private and public ownership of land |
1934-1937 |
|
99 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 119-121 -
The Triugolnik or Soviet Triangle |
1934-1937 |
|
100 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 122 - The
necessity of speeding-up |
1934-1937 |
|
101 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 123 -
American efficiency respected by Russia |
1934-1937 |
|
102 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 124 -
Private employment is exploitation |
1934-1937 |
|
103 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 125 - Joint
ownership is not Communism |
1934-1937 |
|
104 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 126 -
Bolshevism |
1934-1937 |
|
105 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 127 - The
Soviet Triangle |
1934-1937 |
|
106 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 128 -
Treason against the State |
1934-1937 |
|
107 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 129-131 -
The richest prize in all history |
1934-1937 |
|
108 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 132 - The
supreme authority in the Soviet Union |
1934-1937 |
|
109 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 133-139 -
Some Soviet leaders |
1934-1937 |
|
110 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 140-143 -
Notes on the collectivization of agriculture |
1934-1937 |
|
111 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 144-145 -
Stalin defines Communism |
1934-1937 |
|
112 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 146-150 -
The retreat from Communism |
1934-1937 |
|
113 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 151 - Why
Trotsky was banished |
1934-1937 |
|
114 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 152-153 -
Pure Communism an impossible idea |
1934-1937 |
|
115 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 154 - Hope
and enthusiasm |
1934-1937 |
|
116 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 155 -
Contract farming |
1934-1937 |
|
117 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 156 -
Storing grain against famine |
1934-1937 |
|
118 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 157 - The
effect of quotas |
1934-1937 |
|
119 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 158 - The
artificial insemination of livestock |
1934-1937 |
|
120 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 159-161 -
Millions of rubies from new breeds of live stock |
1934-1937 |
|
121 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 162 - The
housing problem |
1934-1937 |
|
122 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 163-165 -
Subsistence homesteads a reversion of the Middle Ages |
1934-1937 |
|
123 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 166 -
Artels of Artisans |
1934-1937 |
|
124 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 167-180 -
The trade unions |
1934-1937 |
|
125 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 171 - The
wall newspaper |
1934-1937 |
|
126 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 172 -
Practical psychology in industry |
1934-1937 |
|
127 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 173 - The
workers back to the New Deal |
1934-1937 |
|
128 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 174 -
Speeding-up not Russian |
1934-1937 |
|
129 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 175-178 -
Pensions and trade unions |
1934-1937 |
|
130 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 179 -
Plenty of work - No charity |
1934-1937 |
|
131 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 180 -
Vacation for the workers |
1934-1937 |
|
132 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 181-182 -
Wanted: One billion dollars worth of American goods |
1934-1937 |
|
133 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 183 - New
models, not standardization |
1934-1937 |
|
134 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 184 - New
factories |
1934-1937 |
|
135 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 185 - The
Ors System in Siberia |
1934-1937 |
|
136 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 186 - Hand
labor versus machines |
1934-1937 |
|
137 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 187-189 -
High profits or production at cost |
1934-1937 |
|
138 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 190-191 -
Speeding-up systems |
1934-1937 |
|
139 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 192 -
Efficient managers and stuffed shirts |
1934-1937 |
|
140 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 193 -
Anarchy in production |
1934-1937 |
|
141 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 194 - The
need for more machinery |
1934-1937 |
|
142 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 195-197 -
Unemployment in unnecessary |
1934-1937 |
|
143 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 198 -
Shortage of skilled labor |
1934-1937 |
|
144 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 199 - New
industries |
1934-1937 |
|
145 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 200 -
Bricklayers |
1934-1937 |
|
146 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 201 -
Bakeries |
1934-1937 |
|
147 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 202-204 -
More babies wanted |
1934-1937 |
|
148 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 205 -
Children |
1934-1937 |
|
149 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 206-207 -
Aid to students |
1934-1937 |
|
150 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 208 - The
wild boys of Russia |
1934-1937 |
|
151 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 209 -
Pioneers and consomols |
1934-1937 |
|
152 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 210-211 -
Children's school gardens |
1934-1937 |
|
153 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 212 - Women
soldiers |
1934-1937 |
|
154 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 213 - The
housing problem |
1934-1937 |
|
155 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 214 - All
home mortgages canceled |
1934-1937 |
|
156 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 215-218 -
Religion in the Soviet Union |
1934-1937 |
|
157 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 219-220 -
The revolution and the church |
1934-1937 |
|
158 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 221 -
Combatting (sic) famine |
1934-1937 |
|
159 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 222 -
Public health a function of the State |
1934-1937 |
|
160 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 223-224 -
The fine arts |
1934-1937 |
|
161 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 225 -
Nationalize the theatre and opera |
1934-1937 |
|
162 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 226 - A
great Kino: The first brigade |
1934-1937 |
|
163 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 227-229 -
Newspapers |
1934-1937 |
|
164 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 230 -
Writers and inventors |
1934-1937 |
|
165 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 231 - The
scientists must help |
1934-1937 |
|
166 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 232 -
Science in Moscow |
1934-1937 |
|
167 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 233-235 -
The public parks |
1934-1937 |
|
168 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 236 - The
postal service |
1934-1937 |
|
169 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 237 -
National minorities |
1934-1937 |
|
170 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 238 - State
loans and gold |
1934-1937 |
|
171 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 239-240 -
Soviet money |
1934-1937 |
|
172 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 241 -
Double-tracking the Siberian Railway |
1934-1937 |
|
173 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 242-243 -
The increase in production |
1934-1937 |
|
174 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 244 - The
Agricultural College at Moscow |
1934-1937 |
|
175 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 245 - Plant
explorations |
1934-1937 |
|
176 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 246 -
Besadas or public conferences |
1934-1937 |
|
177 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 247 -
Increase in stock raising |
1934-1937 |
|
178 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 248 -
30,000 varieties of wheat |
1934-1937 |
|
179 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 249-253 - A
perennial wheat |
1934-1937 |
|
180 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 254-256 -
I.V. Michurin, premier fruit breeder of the Soviet Union |
1934-1937 |
|
181 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 257-258 -
Stalin as a leader |
1934-1937 |
|
182 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 259 -
Foreign plant introductions at Michurinsk |
1934-1937 |
|
183 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 260-261 -
The geographical limits of the Siberian crabapple |
1934-1937 |
|
184 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 262 -
Fruits in the south |
1934-1937 |
|
185 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 263 - A new
potato culture |
1934-1937 |
|
186 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 264 - Sweet
lupines |
1934-1937 |
|
187 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 265 - Sugar
beets |
1934-1937 |
|
188 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 266 - The
future of the cotton industry |
1934-1937 |
|
189 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 267 - A
disease-resistant elm |
1934-1937 |
|
190 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 268 - Cork
and rubber |
1934-1937 |
|
191 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 269 - Hemp
and native rubber plants |
1934-1937 |
|
192 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 270 -
Cucumbers |
1934-1937 |
|
193 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 271-272 -
Soy bean milk |
1934-1937 |
|
194 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 273 -
Perfume farms |
1934-1937 |
|
195 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 274 -
Camel's thorn |
1934-1937 |
|
196 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 275 - Soft
drinks |
1934-1937 |
|
197 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 276 - Black
currants and rice |
1934-1937 |
|
198 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 277 - The
vitamin laboratory |
1934-1937 |
|
199 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 278 - Wine
made from currants |
1934-1937 |
|
200 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 279 - Bread |
1934-1937 |
|
201 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 280 - Honey |
1934-1937 |
|
202 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 281 -
Irrigation vs. drouths (sic) |
1934-1937 |
|
203 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 282 -
Providing steady employment |
1934-1937 |
|
204 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 283 -
Anthracite coal in Siberia |
1934-1937 |
|
205 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 284 - A
tractor factory |
1934-1937 |
|
206 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 285 - Tea
rooms |
1934-1937 |
|
207 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 286 -
Resistance to new ideas |
1934-1937 |
|
208 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 287 -
Learning languages by phonograph |
1934-1937 |
|
209 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 288 - A
canal to the Arctic Ocean |
1934-1937 |
|
210 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 289-290 -
Austria and Germany |
1934-1937 |
|
211 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 291-292 -
Kakutians visit Moscow |
1934-1937 |
|
212 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 293-294 -
The Tartar Republic |
1934-1937 |
|
213 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 295-296 -
Sverdovsk in the Ural Mountains |
1934-1937 |
|
214 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 297 -
Barbar shops |
1934-1937 |
|
215 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 298 -
Candies |
1934-1937 |
|
216 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 299 - Pipe
lines |
1934-1937 |
|
217 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 300-301 -
Some Siberian towns |
1934-1937 |
|
218 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 302 - Lake
Baikal |
1934-1937 |
|
219 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 303-304 -
The war danger in east Siberia |
1934-1937 |
|
220 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 305-306 -
The Red Army |
1934-1937 |
|
221 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 307 - Two
revolutions: French and Russian |
1934-1937 |
|
222 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 308 - The
red flag newspapers |
1934-1937 |
|
223 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 309 - The
danger of intervention |
1934-1937 |
|
224 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 310 - Why
old Russian was defeated |
1934-1937 |
|
225 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 311 - The
Red Army in Siberia |
1934-1937 |
|
226 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 312 - The
problem of electricity |
1934-1937 |
|
227 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: pp. 313-315 -
Will Asia turn from pink to red? |
1934-1937 |
|
228 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
1934 Life in Soviet Union |
1934-1937 |
|
229 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Agricultural exploration on four continents |
1934-1937 |
|
230 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Arctic explorers |
1934-1937 |
|
231 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Athletics: Personal or vicarious |
1934-1937 |
|
232 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Autarchy and foreign trade |
1934-1937 |
|
234 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
The basis of fruit breeding and agricultural exploration |
1934-1937 |
|
235 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Brief items |
1934-1937 |
|
236 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
The collective farms solved the farm problem |
1934-1937 |
|
237 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Curing the hard drinkers |
1934-1937 |
|
238 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Disarming nations |
1934-1937 |
|
239 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Education begins early |
1934-1937 |
|
240 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Fruit farms |
1934-1937 |
|
241 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Germany and Russia |
1934-1937 |
|
242 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
The Koklhoz for America |
1934-1937 |
|
243 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Liquidating laziness |
1934-1937 |
Box 5—Manuscripts.
|
Folder |
Description |
Dates |
|
1 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Liquidation |
1934-1937 |
|
2 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
The machine tractor stations |
1934-1937 |
|
3 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Machines in the Soviet Union |
1934-1937 |
|
4 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural Explorer: unnumbered -
Management necessary |
1934-1937 |
|
5 |
Russian as observed by an Agricultural E | |