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<eadid encodinganalog="856$u" mainagencycode="RPPC" countrycode="us" publicid="-Providence College::Phillips Memorial Library::Library Archives//TEXT(US::RPPC::rppc_msvonsiatsky ::Anastase Vonsiatsky and Marion Ream papers)//EN">rppc_msvonsiatsky</eadid>

<filedesc>
	<titlestmt>
		<titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Guide to the Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream papers</titleproper>

<author encodinganalog="245$c">Finding aid prepared by Shannon McNamara.</author>
	</titlestmt>
<publicationstmt>
	<publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library, Special and Archival Collections</publisher>
	<date encodinganalog="260$c" type="publication" normal="2008">2008</date>

	<address><addressline>Phillips Memorial Library, Special and Archival Collections</addressline><addressline> 1 Cunningham Square</addressline><addressline> Providence, RI 02918-0001</addressline><addressline> http://www.providence.edu/library/spcol</addressline></address>

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<profiledesc>
<creation encodinganalog="500">Finding aid encoded by Shannon McNamara, 
<date normal="2008">2008</date>
</creation>
<langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="546" scriptcode="215">English</language></langusage>
</profiledesc>
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<!-- BEGIN TOP LEVEL METADATA -->

<archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="MARC21">
<did>
	<head>Collection Overview</head>
		<origination label="Creator:">
		<persname encodinganalog="100" normal="Vonsiatsky,  Anastase A.">Vonsiatsky, (Anastase A.)</persname> and <persname encodinganalog="100" normal="Ream, Marion B.">Ream, (Marion B.)</persname>
	</origination>

	<unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245$a"> Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream papers</unittitle>

	<unitdate normal="1861/1970" label="Dates:" type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f">1861-1970</unitdate>

	<physdesc label="Quantity:" encodinganalog="300$a"><extent encodinganalog="300">12 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (6.0 linear feet)</extent></physdesc>

	<abstract encodinganalog="520$a" label="Abstract:">The collection of Anastase Andreivich Vonsiatsky, self-appointed leader of a Russian fascist group which operated in America, and his wife Marion Buckingham Ream, heiress to the Norman Bruce Ream fortune, consists of their personal correspondence, books, newspapers, legal documents, pamphlets, photographs, phonograph records, and printing blocks. </abstract>

  <repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a">
<corpname>Providence College</corpname>
<subarea>Phillips Memorial Library</subarea>
<address>
<addressline>Providence, RI 02918-0001</addressline>
<addressline> <extptr href="http://www.providence.edu/library/spcol"/></addressline>
</address>
</repository>

	<unitid encodinganalog="099" label="Identification:" countrycode="us" repositorycode="RPPC">rppc_msvonsiatsky </unitid>

	<langmaterial>The records are in 
<language langcode="eng">English</language>, 
<language langcode="fre">French</language>,   
<language langcode="ger">German</language>, and
<language langcode="rus">Russian</language>.		
	</langmaterial>

 </did>

<bioghist encodinganalog="545"><head>Biographical Information</head><dao linktype="simple" href="../images/vonsiatsky.jpg"
                    actuate="onload" show="embed"/>
<p>Anastase Vonsiatsky and Marion Ream are associated with a branch of the White Russian Fascist movement, which developed in response to the Communist takeover of Russia in 1917. 

A political émigré, Vonsiatsky sought to advance the fascist cause, and found the means to do so through his marriage to Marion Buckingham Ream, a wealthy American. 

Ream's fortune allowed for Vonsiatsky's schemes to manifest itself into the All Russian National Revolutionary Party (VNRP). Based in Putnam, Connecticut, the group had broad international ambitions. However, due to the unrealistic manner in which Vonsiatsky conducted this organization, his dreams of dismantling the Communist regime in Russia were never realized.
</p><p>
Anastase Andreivich Vonsiatsky was born in the Citadel of Warsaw, Poland on June 12, 1898, to Andrei Nicolaevich, a commander of Warsaw's gendarmerie, and Nina Anastasevna.  Vonsiatsky attended a military preparatory school in Moscow, as well as the Emperor Nicholas II Cavalry Academy in St. Petersburg, and also served with the anti-Bolshevik forces after the October Revolution in 1917. 
</p><p>
In January of 1920, Vonsiatsky who was recoperating from typhus at Yalta, in the southern Ukraine, met and married Lyuba Murmosky. The spread of the revolution, however, caused Vonsiatsky to seek work abroad effectively abandoning his new wife. 
</p><p>
The following year, in 1921, Vonsiatsky met Mrs. Marion Stephens (Marion Buckingham Ream) in Paris. Ream was the daughter of Norman Bruce Ream, an affluent livestock and grain businessman of Chicago. 

Ream had married a Chicago attorney, Redmond Stephens, in 1903, but the couple divorced in 1918. 

After World War I Ream joined the YMCA as a relief worker in France. It was here that she met Vonsiatsky. Using her connections she was able to obtain employment for him in the United States, and even appealed to Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes to grant Vonsiatsky citizenship.  
</p><p>
Once Vonsiatsky and Ream returned to the United States, they married on February 4, 1922.

The union was almost immediately called into question when Lyuba, whom Vonsiatsky had never divorced, appeared seeking compensation from the Reams. This scandal was squelched when the Russian Orthodox Church and the U. S. Federal Government both declared Vonsiatsky's first marriage void. Vonsiatsky and Ream then relocated to Quinnatisset Farm in Putnam, Connecticut in 1925, which they later on would refer to as the "Nineteenth Hole." 
</p><p>
On March 10, 1933, Vonsiatsky founded the All-Russian National Revolution Toilers and Worker Peasants Fascist Party (VRO), in which he assumed the leadership position as vohzd. The sole purpose of this new organization was the overthrow of the Soviet government in Russia.  To help create the illusion that fascists forces were actively working to dismantle the USSR Vonsiatsky edited and self-published the "Fashist" newspaper, from his home in Putnam. 
</p><p>
In the spring of 1934, Vonsiatsky merged with the Tokyo based Russian Fascist Party (RFP), led by Konstantin Vladimirovich Rodzaevsky, and formed the All Russian Fascist Party (VFP). Opposing views quickly terminated this alliance, although Rodzaevesky continued to use the name VFP. Vonsiatsky returned to the United States and reorganized his group under the name of All Russian National Revolutionary Party (VNRP).   
</p><p>
The VNRP did not share many of the core ideologies espoused by the Nazis, specifically in regards to anti-Semitism, and after the Nazis-Soviet Pact in 1939 Vonsiatsky began showing real signs of disenchantment. By 1940, he asked the VFP in the Far East to assume control of the VNRP, and stopped publication of the Fashist. Nevertheless, when the Germans invaded the USSR in June of 1941, Vonsiatsky resumed his ambitious plans of overtaking the Soviet Union. 
</p><p>
In 1941, Vonsiatsky met with the German-American bundführer, Wilhelm Kunze. Unknown to either of the men their meeting was infiltrated by undercover FBI agent, Alexius Pelypenko. Vonsiatsky's fabrications of the VNRP's activities in Russia had come under FBI scrutiny during the 1930s. FBI investigations, however, had produced no substantial evidence that Vonsiatsky's claims were true. But with the United States entry into World War II, the Justice Department took Pelypenko's report that Vonsiatsky was a threat to national security seriously and indicted Vonsiatsky in April of 1942 for espionage.
</p><p>
The prosecution against Vonsiatsky, led by Thomas J. Dodd, was able to "prove" its case. And Vonsiatsky was found guilty under the 1917 Espionage Act for conspiring to transmit national defense secrets to Germany and Japan. He was sentenced to five years imprisonment, which he served at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri. When the war was over Vonsiatsky was granted early release in 1946.
</p><p>
In 1948, Vonsiatsky began a relationship with Edith Priscilla Royster and in July of 1950, Royster gave birth to Vonsiatsky's child, Andre Anastase Vonsiatsky. Ream sought a legal separation from Vonsiatsky, although it remains unclear whether they ever officially divorced. It is also indeterminable whether Vonsiatsky and Royster ever married. Vonsiatsky and Ream, however, remained friends, and there is evidence Ream doted on Andre and continued to give Vonsiatsky financial assistance until her death on November 11, 1963. 
</p><p>
Vonsiatsky lived in Florida after the birth of Andre, and opened up the Tsar Nicholas II Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida. There he wrote articles for several Russian émigré newspapers and journals, and published his book, Rasplatat (Retribution), in which he accused the Japanese government, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and his personal nemesis, Thomas J. Dodd, of hampering the anti-Soviet cause. On February 5, 1965 Vonsiatsky died from coronary thrombosis at the age of sixty-six.
</p>

<chronlist>
<head>Biographical Timeline</head>
<chronitem>
<date>1877 Jan 9</date>
<event>Marion Buckingham Ream born in Woodlawn                                                        Park, Illinois to Norman Bruce Ream and Caroline Putnam</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1898 Jun 12</date>
<event>Anastase Andreivich Vonsiatsky born in the                                                         Citadel of Warsaw, Poland to Andrei Nicolaevich and Nina Anastasevna</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1903</date>
<event>Ream marries Redmond Stephens</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1908</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky attends the Moscow Military Preparatory School</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1916</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky enrolls in the Emperor Nicholas II Cavalry Academy in St. Petersburg</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1917-1919</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky joins the anti-Bolshevik forces and fights for two years in the eastern Ukraine</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1918 Apr 6</date>
<event>Ream and Stephens divorce</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1920 Jan 31</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky marries Lyuba Muromsky</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1921</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky meets Ream in Paris</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1922 Feb 4</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky and Ream marry at the Russian Cathedral of St. Nicholas, New York</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1922 Apr 6</date>
<event>Lyuba Muromsky formally files a complaint against Vonsiatsky for bigamy</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1922 Nov 22</date>
<event>New York ecclesiastical courts decreed the Vonsiatsky-Muromsky marriage void and the Vonsiatsky-Ream union valid</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1925 Jun 12</date>
<event>Ream buys "Quinnatisset Farm," later known as the "Nineteenth Hole"</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1927 Sep 30</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky becomes a naturalized American citizen</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1927-1928</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky joins the Brotherhood of Russian Truth</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1932</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky resigns from the Brotherhood of Russian Truth</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1933 Feb</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky befriends fellow Russian émigré and future fascist supporter, Donat Yosifovich Kunle</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1933 May 10</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky and Kunle formally establish the All-Russian National Revolutionary Toilers and Worker-Peasant Fascist Party, also known as the All-Russian Fascist Organization (VFO)</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1933 Aug</date>
<event>First issue of the Fashist is published</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1933 Sep</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky and Ream travel to Germany in an attempt to legitimize the VRO with the Nazi party</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1934-1935</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky begins renovations on the Nineteenth Hole to turn it into a fortress against military and political enemies</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1934 Mar-1934 May</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky meets with Vladimir Rodzaevsky for summit meetings in Tokyo, Japan and Harbin, Manchuria</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1934 Apr 3</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky and Rodzaevsky merge the Russian Fascist Party (RFP) and VFO via "Protokoll Number 1" into the All-Russian Fascist Party (VFP)</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1935 Jun-1935 Jul</date>
<event>The Third Congress of Russian Fascists in Harbin formally dissolves the VFP in favor of Rodzaevsky, leading Vonsiatsky to regroup under the All-Russian National Revolutionary Party (VNRP)</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1935-1939</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky works towards turning the VNRP into a legitimate fascist party</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1936 Jun</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky opens the "Young Avantgarde Camp" for New York's Russian youth </event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1937-1939</date>
<event>The FBI begins investigate Vonsiatsky's activities in order to determine if he has violated the Roosevelt-Litvinov agreement</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1940-1941</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky begins to distance himself from VNRP activity</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1941 Jul</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky issues his last publication of the Fashist.
Vonsiatsky gives Bundführer, Wilhelm Kunze $2800 in exchange for Kunze's promises to further Vonsiatsky's prestige in Berlin 
</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1941 Jul-1941 Aug</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky unknowingly meets with undercover FBI agent, Alexius Pelypenko, who alerts FBI to Vonsiatsky as a possible threat</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1942 Apr</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky is indicted for having violated section 32 of the Espionage Act of 1917</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1942 May 14</date>
<event>Formal judicial proceedings commence with Thomas J. Dodd as the prosecution </event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1942 Jun 22</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky pleads guilty and is sentenced to five years imprisonment</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1942 Jul-1946 Feb</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky is released after serving three years and seven months at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1948</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky begins an affair with Edith Priscilla Royster</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1950 Jul 2</date>
<event>Royster gives birth to Vonsiatsky's son, Andre Anastase Vonsiatsky</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1952 May 22</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky and Ream legally separate</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1953</date>
<event>Vonsiatsky opens The Tsar Nicholas II Museum of St. Petersburg, Florida </event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1958</date>
<event>Ream establishes a $12,000 trust fund for Andre Anastase Vonsiatsky</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1963</date>
<event>Ream adds to her will a provision which leaves Vonsiatsky $25,000</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1963 Nov 11</date>
<event>Marion Buckingham Ream passes away at age eighty-six</event>
</chronitem>

<chronitem>
<date>1965 Feb 5</date>
<event>Anastase Andreivich Vonsiatsky dies from coronary thrombosis</event>
</chronitem>
</chronlist>
</bioghist>

<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head><p>The correspondence, books, newspapers, photographs, audio recordings and printing blocks, which encompass this collection, pertain to either the personal lives of Anastase Andreivich Vonsiatsky and Marion Buckingham Ream, or to the All Russian National Revolutionary Party (VNRP), founded and led by Vonsiatsky. 
</p><p>
Many of the documents relate directly to Ream's first marriage to Redmond Stephen, including private correspondence and documents from their divorce. Pamphlets linked to Ream's service in the YMCA, novels which held a personal interest to her, and a scrapbook about the life of Chicago entrepreneur Marshall Field, are also included. 
</p><p>
The remaining materials in the collection focus on Anastase Vonsiatsky and his activities as the vozhd of the VNRP. These include pamphlets written in Russian, the complete set of the newspaper Fashist published by Vonsiatsky, maps of the USSR, copies of the periodical the “Gentiles Review,” photographs featuring Vonsiatsky, the VNRP, and the Vonsiatsky-Ream home in Putnam, Connecticut, and printing blocks utilized for party propaganda. 
</p><p>
In addition, there are audio recordings of Vonsiatsky and members of the VNRP singing Horst Wessel’s song, “Raise the Banner,” and recorded speeches made by Herbert Hoover and Eleanor Roosevelt, on 78 rpm phonograph albums. 
</p></scopecontent>

<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>This collection is arranged into five series.</p><list><head>Series list</head>
<item>Personal Papers</item>
<item>Publications</item>
<item>Subject Files</item>
<item>Guides to Microfilms</item>
<item>Audio Recordings</item>
</list></arrangement>

<!-- END TOP LEVEL METADATA -->

<!-- INSERT CONTROLLED ACCESS TERMS HERE: -->

<controlaccess>
     <head>Index Terms</head>
     <p> Researchers wishing to find materials related to this collection should search the HELIN catalog with these index terms --  <extref href="http://helin.uri.edu/record=b3514277~S29" actuate="onrequest" show="new">View the catalog record for this collection.</extref></p>
  
<controlaccess>
<head>Names</head>

<persname encodinganalog="100" role="creator" normal="|a Vonsiatsky, Anastase Andreivich |d1898-1965" source="lcnaf">Vonsiatsky, Anastase Andreivich, 1898-1965</persname>

<persname encodinganalog="100" role="creator" normal="|a Vonsiatsky, Marion Ream |d" source="lcnaf">Vonsiatsky, Marion Ream</persname>


<persname encodinganalog="600" normal="|a Field, Marshall, |d 1834-1906" source="lcsh">Field, Marshall, 1834-1906</persname>

<persname encodinganalog="600" normal="|a Hoover, Herbert, |d 1874-1964." source="lcnaf">Hoover, Herbert, 1874-1964.</persname>

<persname encodinganalog="600" normal="|a Roosevelt, Eleanor, |d 1884-1962." source="lcnaf">Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962.</persname>

</controlaccess>
<controlaccess>
<head>Subjects</head>

<subject encodinganalog="650" normal="|a Fascism |z United States" source="lcsh">Fascism--United States</subject>

<subject encodinganalog="650" normal="|a United States |x Politics and government" source="lcsh">United States--Politics and government</subject>
</controlaccess>
</controlaccess>

<!-- END OF CONTROLLED ACCESS TERMS -->

<!-- BEGIN ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION  -->
<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"><p>Open for research.</p></accessrestrict>

<acqinfo encodinganalog="541"><head>Acquisitions Information</head><p>Mr. Richard E. Snow, who purchased the Ream estate in 1970, discovered the collection in one of the buildings on the property grounds and subsequently donated the collection in May of that year to Providence College.</p></acqinfo>

<custodhist encodinganalog="561"><head>Custodial History</head><p>Prior its donation to the College the collection, which was discovered on the former Ream estate was presumably kept by Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream in their personal possession.</p></custodhist>

<prefercite encodinganalog="524"><head>Preferred Citation</head><p>Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream papers, Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library, Special and Archival Collections</p></prefercite>

<processinfo encodinganalog="583"><head>Processing Information</head><p>The collection was originally processed in 1970</p></processinfo>

<userestrict encodinganalog="540"><p>Some materials may be restricted. For further information contact Special and Archival Collections, Phillips Memorial Library, Providence College.</p>

<p>Terms governing use and reproduction: Photocopying and scanning of materials is a fee based service available in the repository and is allowed at the discretion of the Librarian of Special and Archival Collections when in compliance to the College's policy on copyright and publication.</p>

<p>Researchers are advised that express written permission to reproduce, quote, or otherwise publish any portion or extract from this collection must be obtained from the Providence College Phillips Memorial Library. Although Providence College has physical ownership of the collection and the materials contained therein, it does not claim literary rights. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine the owners of the literary rights and to obtain any necessary permissions from them.</p>

<p>Certain restrictions may be imposed to protect the confidentiality of living individuals.</p></userestrict>

<relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544 1"><p>For more information on Anastase A. Vonsiatsky, Marion B. Ream and the White Russian Movement, see:</p><p><bibref>Stephan, John J. <extref href="http://helin.uri.edu/record=b1202232~S29" actuate="onrequest" show="new"><title render="italic">The Russian Fascists: Tragedy and Farce in Exile, 1925-1945</title></extref> Harper &amp; Row, 1978.</bibref></p>

<p>Additional information on Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and the White Russian Movement can be found on the Online Archive of California in the 
<extref href="http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf4r29n749" actuate="onrequest" show="new">
<title render="italic"> Stephan (John J.) Collection</title></extref> held by the Hoover Institution.</p>

</relatedmaterial>

<separatedmaterial encodinganalog="544 0"><p>No materials were separated from this collection</p></separatedmaterial>

<!-- END ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION -->


<!-- START DESCRIPTION OF SUBORDINATE COMPONENTS-->
<dsc type="combined"><head>Inventory</head>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Personal Papers</unittitle>
<unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="1853/1963">1853-1963</unitdate>

<physdesc><extent encodinganalog="300">1 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (16 folders)</extent>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="letters (correspondence)">letters (correspondence)</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="notebooks">notebooks</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="financial statements">financial statements</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="legal documents">legal documents</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="certificates">certificates</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="passports">passports</genreform>
</physdesc>
</did>

<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head>
<p>
This series contains personal papers of Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream. Included is the private correspondence between Marion Ream and Redmond Stephens during their marriage and correspondence between Ream and members of her immediate family. </p>

<p>Additional documents within this series include genealogical information, manuscripts, greeting cards, a notebook by Mary Louise Weaver, Ream's sister-in-law, and Ream's passport. The personal papers of Vonsiatsky revolve around fiscal matters which were of a concern to the Vonsiatsky-Ream marriage. The business correspondence of Ream after her divorce from Vonsiatsky completes this series.  
</p>
</scopecontent>

<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>This series is arranged alphabetically.</p></arrangement>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Marion R. - Personal Correspondence</unittitle><unitdate>1913-1915</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Marion R. - Financial Statement</unittitle><unitdate>1917</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">3</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Marion R. - YMCA and the Red Cross</unittitle><unitdate>1918-1921</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">4</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Redmond and Marion R. - Divorce</unittitle><unitdate>1918</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">5</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Redmond - Personal Correspondence</unittitle><unitdate>1915-1917</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">6</container>
<unittitle>Stephens, Redmond - Probate Records</unittitle><unitdate>1931</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">7</container>
<unittitle>Ream/Putnam Family Genealogical Sources</unittitle><unitdate>1935</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">8</container>
<unittitle>Untitled Typed Manuscript</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">9</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Anastase A. - Envelopes</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">10</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Anastase A. - Standard N.R.A Target</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">11</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Marion R. - Business Correspondence</unittitle><unitdate>1956-1963</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">12</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Marion R. - Greeting Cards</unittitle><unitdate>1960</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">13</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Marion R. - Passport</unittitle><unitdate>1919</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">14</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Marion R. - Probate Records</unittitle><unitdate>1953,1957</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">15</container>
<unittitle>Vonsiatsky, Marion R. - Storage and Insurance</unittitle><unitdate>1930-1931</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">1</container>
<container type="Folder">16</container>
<unittitle>Weaver, Mary Louise - Poetry Notebook</unittitle><unitdate>1909-1912</unitdate>
</did></c02>
</c01>

<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Publications</unittitle>
<unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="1863/1970">1863-1970</unitdate>

<physdesc><extent encodinganalog="300">5 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (31 folders)</extent>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="novels">novels</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="journals (periodicals)">journals (periodicals)</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="textbooks">textbooks</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="news bulletins">news bulletins</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="bylaws (administrative records)">bylaws (administrative records)</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="guidebooks">guidebooks</genreform>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="sales catalogs">sales catalogs</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="periodicals">periodicals</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="nonfiction">nonfiction</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="postcard albums ">postcard albums </genreform>
</physdesc>
</did>

<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head>
<p>
This series encompasses numerous published works which were once part of the private collections of Anastase A. Vonsiatsky and Marion B. Ream, or pertain to their interests. The materials published in the English language include handbooks and news bulletins from the American Red Cross, alumnae announcements for graduates of Bryn Mawr College, book catalogs, nineteenth century novels, an interior design book from Atlantic Monthly Company, and a published compilation of prominent authors from the International League of Press Clubs, made expressly for Norman B. Ream. In addition, there is a guide book to Warsaw, an analytical work on Ukrainian resistance, and a 1970 article from the Political Science Quarterly which analyzes the German American Bund. 
</p><p>
There are also several literary works from the early twentieth century published in French, and a guide book for the Munich Glass Palace New Year's Display, printed in German.
</p><p>
Publications published in Cyrillic Russian include the periodicals "The Banner of Russia" (1960), the "Gentiles Review" (1923-1924), and a complete bound set (5 volumes) of the "Fashist" newspaper, which was published by Vonsiatsky and the All-Russian National Revolutionary Party (VNRP) from 1933 to 1941. The titles of the remaining Russian publications have not been translated.
</p>
</scopecontent>

<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>This series is arranged alphabetically within the designated language. Box two contains English language materials, box three contains French and German publications, and box four holds Russian language publications</p></arrangement>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>American Red Cross Abridged Textbook on First Aid</unittitle><unitdate>1917</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>American Red Cross - Chicago Chapter Bulletin</unittitle><unitdate>1918</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">3</container>
<unittitle>Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin</unittitle><unitdate>1958</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">4</container>
<unittitle>Cornell's Companion Atlas</unittitle><unitdate>1864</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized box 2</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">5</container>
<unittitle>The Fortnightly of Chicago, 1923-1924</unittitle><unitdate>1923-1924</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">6</container>
<unittitle>The Faliure of Nazism in America: The German American Bund 1936-1941</unittitle><unitdate>1970</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">7</container>
<unittitle>The Last Days of Pompeii, by Bulwar, Edward</unittitle><unitdate>1879</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">8</container>
<unittitle>Romola, by Eliot, George</unittitle><unitdate>1863</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">9</container>
<unittitle>A Short Guide to Warsaw</unittitle><unitdate>1921</unitdate>
</did></c02>	

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">10</container>
<unittitle>Tauchnitz Edition - Catalog</unittitle><unitdate>1901</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">2</container>
<container type="Folder">11</container>
<unittitle>Under the Deodars, by Kipling, Rudyard</unittitle><unitdate>1899</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">3</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>Les Dessous De L'Espionnage Anglais -(Spying Under the English)</unittitle><unitdate>1926</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">3</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>Mademoiselle De Maupin</unittitle><unitdate>1916</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">3</container>
<container type="Folder">3</container>
<unittitle>Mademoiselle La Seiglière</unittitle><unitdate>1909</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">3</container>
<container type="Folder">4</container>
<unittitle>Monsieur De Camors Par Octave Feuillet </unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">3</container>
<container type="Folder">5</container>
<unittitle>Müncheneur Jahres-Ausstellung Glaspalast - (The Munich Glass Palace - New Year's Display)</unittitle><unitdate>1900</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>The Banner of Russia</unittitle><unitdate>1960</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>Fashist</unittitle><unitdate>1933 Aug-1941 Jul</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">3</container>
<unittitle>Gentiles Review</unittitle><unitdate>1923-1924</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">4</container>
<unittitle>The Modern Times - San Francisco</unittitle><unitdate>1960 Jun 18</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized box 1</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">5</container>
<unittitle>The Russian Daily - New York</unittitle><unitdate>1960 Jul-1960 Aug</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized box 1</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">4</container>
<container type="Folder">6-12</container>
<unittitle>Untranslated titles</unittitle><unitdate>1924-1939</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">5</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>Bohemia - Official publication of the International League of Press Clubs for the building and endowment of the journalists' home</unittitle><unitdate>1904</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>The House Beautiful Furnishing Annual</unittitle><unitdate>1926</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>Ukrainian Resistance - The story of the Ukrainian national liberation movement in modern times</unittitle><unitdate>1949</unitdate>
</did></c02>

</c01>
<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Subject Files</unittitle>
<unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="1904/1949">1904-1949</unitdate>
<physdesc><extent encodinganalog="300">3 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (23 folders)</extent>

<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="black-and-white photographs">black-and-white photographs</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="engravings (prints)">engravings (prints)</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="diaries">diaries</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="military maps">military maps</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="national maps">national maps</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="regional maps">regional maps</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="world maps">world maps</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="ledgers (account books)">ledgers (account books)</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="pamphlets">pamphlets</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="visitors' books">visitors' books</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="scrapbooks">scrapbooks</genreform><genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="business records">business records</genreform>
</physdesc>

</did>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head><p>This series contains personal and business ledgers of Norman B. Ream, scrapbooks, guest books, an unpublished journal (1939) written in German, pamphlets written in Cyrillic Russian, printing blocks, Ream family photographs, photographs of Vonsiatsky, members of the All Russian National Revolutionary Party at his home in Thompson, Connecticut, and photographs taken of the frontlines in France during World War I. 
</p><p>

Finally, there are maps depicting military operations during World War I as well as the evacuation of White Army troops from Russia in 1921. Many of these maps appear to be hand drawn strategy maps detailing potential invasion routes that could be employed by the White Russian group.</p></scopecontent>
<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>The series is arranged alphabetically.</p></arrangement>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">3</container>
<unittitle>3 Jahre - Kamkameradschaft "Dietrich Eckart" (Three Years - Fellowship, "Dietrich Eckart")</unittitle><unitdate>1936 May-1939 Jan</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">4</container>
<unittitle>Grain and Provision Ledger</unittitle><unitdate>1893 Mar-1899 May</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>Details wheat commodities and transactions</p></note><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">5</container>
<unittitle>Norman B. Ream - Financial Ledger</unittitle><unitdate>1889-1892</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>Business and employee ledger</p></note><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">6</container>
<unittitle>Norman B. Ream - Financial Ledger</unittitle><unitdate>1914-1915</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>Personal and family financial records</p></note><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">7</container>
<unittitle>Norman Securities Company, Inc.</unittitle><unitdate>1919</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">8</container>
<unittitle>Quinnatisset Farm Guestbook</unittitle><unitdate>1924 Sep 2-1933 Sep 17</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">6</container>
<container type="Folder">9</container>
<unittitle>Scrapbook - Marshall Field</unittitle><unitdate>1906 Jan-1906 Mar</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>See oversized</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">7</container>
<container type="Folder">1</container>
<unittitle>Untranslated pamphlets written in Cyrillic Russian</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">7</container>
<container type="Folder">2</container>
<unittitle>Two wooden engraved printing blocks</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>


<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">8</container><container type="Folder">1-11</container>

<unittitle>Photographs</unittitle><unitdate>1861-1940</unitdate>
<note encodinganalog="500"><p>Contains Ream family photographs, snapshots of frontlines during WWI, Les Ruines De Termonde postcards, images of the Russian army, Czar Nicholas II, Anastase A. Vonsiatsky in his VNRP uniform and miscellaneous photographs unidentified individuals. </p><p>
See also oversized box 1</p></note></did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">8</container><container type="Folder">12</container>
<unittitle>Maps</unittitle><unitdate>1914-1939</unitdate>
<note encodinganalog="500"><p>Contains global and individual maps of the world powers during the first half of the twentieth century. Additional maps detail Russian and German troop movements and positions during WWI and the Russian civil war. </p><p>
See oversized box 2</p></note></did></c02>
</c01>

<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Guide to Microfilms</unittitle>
<unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="1960/1962">1960-1962</unitdate>
<physdesc><extent encodinganalog="300">1 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (0.5 linear feet)</extent>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="finding aids">finding aids</genreform>
</physdesc>
</did>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head><p>The Guide to Microfilms series specifically provides a finding aid for the Guides to German Records Microfilmed at Alexandria, Virginia, 1960. The finding aids were prepared by the Committee for the Study of War Documents of the American Historical Association. The Committee catalogued and microfilmed the declassified German records which are in the custody of the World War II Records Division of the National Archives at Alexandria, Virginia. </p><p>The project plans were directed by the Subcommittee on Microfilming, a division of the Library of Congress. The guides were released by the National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration, in Washington, D.C.</p></scopecontent>
<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>The series is arranged by numerical order.</p></arrangement>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 18 - Records of Headquarters, German Armed Forces High Command (Part III)</unittitle><unitdate>1960</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 19 - Records of Headquarters, German Armed Forces High Command (Part IV)</unittitle><unitdate>1960</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 20 - Records of National Socialist German Labor Party (Part II)</unittitle><unitdate>1960</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 21 - Records of the Deutsches Ausland - Institut, Stuttgart. (Part II: The General Records)</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 22 - Records of the Reich Ministry for Public Englightenment and Propaganda</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 23 - Records of Private Austrian, Dutch, and German Enterprises, 1917-1946</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 24 - Records of Headquarters of the German Air Force High Command </unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 25 - German Air Force Records: Luftgaukommandos, Flak, Deutsche Luftwaffenmission in Rumanien</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 26 - Records of Reich Office for Soil Exploration</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 27 - Miscellaneous SS Records: Einwandererzentralstelle, Waffen-SS, and SS-Oberabschnitte</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 28 - Records of the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories, 1941-45</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 29 - Records of Headquarters, German Army High Command (Part II)</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 30 - Records of Headquarters, German Army High Command (Part III)</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 31 - Records of the Office of the Reich Commissioner for the Baltic States, 1941-45</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 32 - Records of the Reich Leader of the SS and Chief of the German Police (Part I)</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 33 - Records of the Reich Leader of the SS and Chief of the German Police (Part II)</unittitle><unitdate>1961</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 34 - Records of German Army Areas</unittitle><unitdate>1962</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 35 - Records of the National Socialist German Labor Party (Part III)</unittitle><unitdate>1962</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">9</container>
<unittitle>No. 36 - Miscellaneous German Records Collection (Part III)</unittitle><unitdate>1962</unitdate>
</did></c02>
</c01>


<c01 level="series">
<did>
<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Audio Recordings</unittitle>
<unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="1928/">1928-</unitdate>
<physdesc><extent encodinganalog="300">1 box(es)</extent><extent encodinganalog="300"> (0.5 linear feet)</extent>
<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat" normal="78 rpm records">78 rpm records</genreform>
</physdesc>
</did>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="520"><head>Scope and Content Note</head><p>This series includes audio recordings. There are several phonographs from Herbert Hoover's acceptance speech of the 1928 Republican presidential nomination, and recorded speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt regarding how to prepare a picnic. These are in English and are on 78 rpms. </p><p>There are also a number of recorded speeches in German, given by Josef Totzauer on German Americans and the nation of Germany. In addition, there are audio recordings of Anastase A. Vonsiatsky making speeches and singing a Russian version of Horst Wessel's song, Raise the Banner, with two members of the All Russian National Revolutionary Party, Donat Yosifovich Kunle and Lev Beck Mamedov. </p></scopecontent>
<arrangement encodinganalog="351"><head>Arrangement</head><p>This series is arranged by language</p></arrangement>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Eleanor Roosevelt</unittitle><unitdate>undated </unitdate>
<note encodinganalog="500"><p>Two 78 rpm phonograph records and one disposable record.</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 1</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 4</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 6</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 7</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 10</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 12</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 14</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 16</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Herbert Hoover's Address to the Republican National Convention - No. 17</unittitle><unitdate>1940 Jun 25</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>March of the Russian Fascists - V.F.P</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Deutscher Gruss - Worte und Weise - Josef Totzauer - Amerikadeutsche Vlokschoere des A. V. - Reverse title: Heil Egerland!</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>Five 78 rpm phonograph records.</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Raise the Banner</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate><note encodinganalog="500"><p>Twenty-seven 78 rpm recordings of Russian version of Horst Wessel's Raise the Banner.</p></note>
</did></c02>

<c02 level="file">
<did>
<container type="Box">10</container>
<unittitle>Unidentified Russian title</unittitle><unitdate>undated</unitdate>
</did></c02>
</c01>
</dsc>
<!-- END DESCRIPTION OF SUBORDINATE COMPONENTS-->
</archdesc>
</ead>
