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HIST 5374-Borderlands Research Seminar

To view all finding aids (guides) to processed collections, click here. To view a list of all archival collections at the UTEP Library, click here.

Helpful Archival Collections at the University Library

  • Archie Waters papers, MS474. The Archie Waters papers date 1939 – 2001, bulk 1970 – 2000. Records include correspondence, clippings, publications and other printed material, notes, story proofs, and photographs. Arranged in seven series (Biographical information, Photographs, Articles by Archie Waters, Story proofs, Topical files, Chess materials, and Publications by others), these papers document Waters’ personal life, career as a journalist, community and political activism, and interest and expertise in chess.
  • Leona Ford Washington photograph collection, PH033. This collection contains more than 800 photographic images documenting the lives of African Americans in El Paso over more than 100 years. Formats range from snapshots to large studio portraits. Included are images of essential members of the Black community, such as Dr. Lawrence Nixon, as well as institutions and organizations like the Douglass School and McCall Center.
  • Ada Tharp photograph collection, PH038. This elaborate photo album or lap desk contains photographs of African Americans and other individuals dating from approximately 1870 to 1925. The types of photographs include tintypes, cabinet cards, cartes de visite, silver gelatin prints, and photo booth snapshots. Few of the photographs are identified. The subjects of the photographs include African American men in military uniforms, many photos of African American women and children, and other well-dressed people. Besides El Paso, Texas, many other locations are mentioned, including other cities in Texas, New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco,  Salt Lake City, and towns in Arkansas, Florida, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, and New Mexico.
  • Robert Ewing Thomason papers, MS140. Born in 1879, Robert Ewing Thomason was a lawyer and former mayor of El Paso, Texas, for two terms (1927 and 1929, respectively). He served as a United States Congressman from the 16th District of Texas from 1930-1947, and he was also a United States District Judge of the Western District of Texas from 1947-1963. Materials include biographical information, newspaper clippings, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, a bible, notebooks, legal records, and a typed, unpublished manuscript of a book by Thomason titled   Noted Cases I Have Tried. Also included are reports and photographs documenting the findings of a congressional delegation that investigated Nazi war crimes at the end of World War II.
  • C.L. Sonnichsen papers, MS141. The C. L. Sonnichsen papers consist primarily of research materials, correspondence, and manuscripts dealing with the books Sonnichsen wrote over fifty years. Included are correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper clippings, photographs, maps, scrapbooks, oral history interviews, research notes, theses, pamphlets, cassette and magnetic tapes, notecards, published material, personal materials that deal primarily with his education and teaching experience, and awards. 
  • Stout-Feldman Studio photographs, PH074. In 1895, California native Fred J. Feldman leased and later purchased the photographic business of the Bushong Studio in downtown El Paso, Texas. The Fred J. Feldman Studio thrived during the 1910s and 1920s and became the premier photographic business in El Paso. Feldman was mainly well known for his skill in portraiture. He photographed many prominent businessmen, bankers, judges, mayors, attorneys, and society women and community groups. The collection contains glass plates and film negatives from about 1900 through the early 1950s. The UTEP Library purchased the collection from Achilles Studio after the negatives had been stored in the Studio’s basement for many years.
  • El Paso Herald-Post records, MS348  Consists of the historical files of the El Paso Herald-Post newspaper. The records date from 1881 – 1997. The records contain sports files, photographs, and clippings about local people and subjects, and the El Paso Herald-Post’s library files.
  • El Paso County records, MS132. The El Paso County records include jail logs with separate listings for immigration and federal prisoners. Also of interest are probate files, deed records, criminal and civil cases, and tax rolls. The records also include some materials from other west Texas counties, including Hudspeth, Brewster, and Jeff Davis.
  • Rio Grande Compact Commission records, MS406. Formed as a result of the interstate compact signed by the states of Colorado, New Mexico and Texas in 1938, the Texas Commission’s goal is to implement the compact by assuring the equitable apportioning of waters from the Rio Grande Basin.  The records contain correspondence, reports, tables, maps, and photographs that reflect the activities of the Texas office of the Rio Grande Compact Commission.
  • CLINIC Citizenship/Immigration records, MS397. The Catholic Legal Immigration Network (CLINIC) records consist of 56 boxes that contain case files of immigrants who received legal assistance. The files are arranged in alphabetical order.
  • National Catholic Welfare Conference case files, MS173. The collection contains case files of clients who received assistance from the Border Office of the National Catholic Welfare Conference.  Types of records found in these files include forms, correspondence, notes, border crossing cards, and other legal documents. The case files are primarily arranged in alphabetical order by the name of the client.  The alphabetical sequence begins with G and goes through Z.
  • Fanny Zlabovsky – National Council of Jewish Women case files, MS508. The Fanny Zlabovsky-National Council of Jewish Women case files consist of 239 case files that include correspondence in English and Yiddish with immigrants and their families as well as with officials at the national office of the NCJW, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, and other national and international organizations that assisted immigrants in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s.  In addition to these case files, there are other items of general correspondence and reports spanning from 1922 to 1941. This collection is online via ScholarWorks@UTEP.
  • Renate Caldwell papers, MS257. Papers primarily relating to the documentary, No Key to Turn. Renate Caldwell is a graduate of the University of Texas at El Paso. She received a bachelor’s degree in Secondary Education and Mass Communications. Caldwell explained in an interview with the El Paso Herald-Post that the idea for her documentary, No Key to Turn (1983), started with a class assignment asking students to explore conditions in El Paso’s Southside. With backing from the Texas Committee for the Humanities and the Frank E. Gannett Foundation, Caldwell produced and directed No Key to Turn. The documentary explores housing discrimination, public housing, and poor living conditions in South El Paso. Caldwell also edited the film with James Burns. Rodolfo Reyes was the production manager, and Trisha Miller filmed the documentary.
  • Cleofas Calleros papers, MS231. Cleofas Calleros was the long-time director of the El Paso offices of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, a group that assisted immigrants. His papers as director of the local office of the National Catholic Welfare Conference document the role of the Catholic Church in immigration and social work on the U.S.–Mexico border. Most of the newspapers, newsletters, journals, and pamphlets in the Calleros papers relate to historical events in El Paso, Juárez, and the Southwest. The Calleros papers contain postcards from the Southwest United States and Europe. Rare photographs of Catholic missions and clergy, early religious processions, the construction of Mt. Cristo Rey, Mexican-American parish activities, the Tigua Indians, and historical photographs of early El Paso families and events are also part of the collection.
  • Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Atzlan  (MECHA - El Paso) records, MS254. The MECHA records contain minutes, agendas, flyers, correspondence, pamphlets, financial records, newspapers and clippings, programs, publications, and other printed materials. These materials help document the Chicano rights movement and the development of the Chicano Studies program at UTEP.  
  • Casasola photograph collection, PH041. Most of the photographs in this collection are from the early work of the Casasola Photograph Studio. Since Mr. Alfonso Casasola died in 1948, work by other photographers is also included in this collection. Casasola Studios employed many young photographers over the years, several of whom went on to start their own studios. For instance, Mr. José Andow started as an apprentice while still a teenager and worked for Mr. Casasola both before and after his service in World War II. The collection contains thousands of images.
  • Ana Osante collection, MS671. Ana Osante was the administrative assistant in the UTEP Chicano Studies program for many years. This collection dates from the 1980s and contains materials about UTEP, MECHA, LULAC, Ladies’ LULAC, and MALCS (Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social). Types of records include correspondence, memorandum, clippings, notes, publications, and a Mexican American Education Directory.
  • Chicano Vertical Files The Chicano vertical files date circa 1960s - 1980s and contain clippings, publications, periodicals, and other materials. These files help document Chicano history and culture, particularly in El Paso, other parts of Texas, and California.
  • Mescalero Apache Tribe collection, MS95. This collection consists of one typewritten letter and one pamphlet concerning a proposed transfer of National Forest lands to the Mescalero Apache Tribe. The Tribe had proposed to exchange certain land owned by them for land owned by the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service so that the Sierra Blanca Ski Run (operated by the Tribe) could be enlarged and, therefore, would bring in more significant revenue. The Forest Service opposed this for ecological reasons and published the pamphlet inviting comments from the general public and several institutions. The geographical area in question was southern New Mexico near Ruidoso in Lincoln County.
  • Eve Ball collection, MS117. The Eve Ball Collection consists of materials from Eve Ball (1890-1984), a historian and authority on the Apache. The collection includes photographs, business ledgers and daybooks, newspaper articles, and a partial diary transcript.
  • Planned Parenthood of El Paso records, MS286. From 1937 to 2010, the Planned Parenthood Center of El Paso provided low-cost reproductive health care, contraceptive advice, community educational materials, and other medical and social services to El Paso women. The Planned Parenthood of El Paso records date 1907 – 2000s, bulk 1947 – 1974. Records include minutes, reports, correspondence, memorandums, clippings, publications and other printed material, scrapbooks, and financial and legal records.
  • Betty Mary Goetting papers, MS316. Betty Mary Smith Goetting (1897 – 1980) worked as a librarian at the El Paso Public Library and later as the El Paso County Historical Society’s first curator. In addition to her career in librarianship, she helped found the Planned Parenthood Center of El Paso and promoted women’s social, economic, and reproductive rights in the El Paso community. The Betty Mary Smith Goetting papers date 1910 – 1979, bulk 1937 – 1979. Types of records include correspondence, clippings, publications and other printed material, scrapbooks, recordings, and photographs
  • Belle Christie Critchett papers, MS386. Belle Christie Ferguson Critchett (1868? – 1956) supported and promoted many progressive era-issues of the time, including women’s suffrage and the legal status of women, good citizenship and political reform, maternal health and child welfare, prison reform, prohibition and peace movement. Records include correspondence, clippings, publications and other printed material, maps, posters, songs, a glass lantern slide, and photographs. 
  • Woman’s Club of El Paso records, MS576. Founded in 1894, the Woman’s Club is a “non-profit organization committed to providing an educational and cultural center for its members, preserving the integrity of its historic clubhouse, improving conditions and opportunities for women, and enhancing the quality of life in our community.”   Records include minutes, correspondence, photographs, newsletters, yearbooks, scrapbooks, programs, building plans, financial ledgers, posters, oral histories, CDs, cassette tapes, computer discs, reports, receipts, contracts, clippings, and other printed materials. These records document the Club’s history, membership, and activities and provide information about the organization’s historic clubhouse.  
  • Pan American Round Table of El Paso records, MS526. Founded in 1921 by Eugenia Schuster (1865-1946), the Pan American Round Table of El Paso is a nonprofit women’s organization that promotes “mutual knowledge, understanding, and friendship among the peoples of the western hemisphere” through educational forums and lectures, community involvement and activities, and the annual celebration of Pan American Day on April 14. Types of records include minutes, agendas, correspondence, reports, financial records, clippings, photographs, negatives, slides, cassette tapes, scrapbooks, proclamations, postcards and other souvenirs, invitations, programs, notes, publications, pamphlets and brochures, and other printed material.

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