Skip Navigation Links The Library of Congress >> Especially for Researchers >> Research Centers
Manuscript Reading Room (Library of Congress)
  Home >> Finding Aids
------------------------------------------------------------
Outline view: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms004010
------------------------------------------------------------


Arthur D. Little

A Register of His Papers in the Library of Congress

Prepared by Joseph Sullivan with the assistance of Brian McGuire and Susie H. Moody
Revised by Michael W. Giese

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/xmlcommon/lcseal.jpg
Manuscript Division, Library of Congress

Washington, D.C.

2004

Contact information: http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/mss/address.html

Finding aid encoded by Library of Congress
Manuscript Division, 2004



2004-07-02 converted from EAD 1.0 to EAD 2002

Table of Contents

Collection Summary

Selected Search Terms

Names:

Subjects:

Occupations:

Administrative Information

Provenance:

Processing History:

Copyright Status:

Preferred Citation:

Biographical Note

Scope and Content Note

Organization of the Papers

Description of Series

Container List

Personal Papers, 1894-1936, n.d.

Tributes, 1900-1936, n.d.
Speeches and Writings, 1894-1934, n.d.

Arthur D. Little, Inc., Files, 1886-1973

Case Registers, 1909-1934
Financial Records, 1907-1939
Laboratory Notes on Experiments, 1886-1911
Laboratory Procedures, 1909-1942
Miscellany, 1891-1973

Collection Summary

Title: Papers of Arthur D. Little
Span Dates: 1884-1973
Bulk Dates: (bulk 1900-1935)
ID No.: MSS30312
Creator: Little, Arthur D. (Arthur Dehon), 1863-1935
Extent: 5,500 items; 309 containers; 84 linear feet
Repository: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Abstract: Chemical engineer, inventor, and entrepreneur. Register of clients, financial records, technical reports, laboratory notes and summaries, photographs, and other records of Arthur D. Little, Inc., pertaining primarily to chemical analysis of products or materials. Also includes correspondence, writings, speeches, biographical material, and other papers relating to Little's career in industrial research.
Language: Collection material in English

Selected Search Terms

The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically therein.



Names:
Little, Arthur D. (Arthur Dehon), 1863-1935
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company
General Electric Company
General Motors Corporation
Lever Brothers Company
Arthur D. Little, Inc.

Subjects:
Chemical industry--Massachusetts
Chemicals--Analysis
Research, Industrial

Occupations:
Chemical engineers
Entrepreneurs
Inventors

Administrative Information

Provenance:

The papers of Arthur D. Little, chemical engineer and cofounder of the firm Arthur D. Little, Inc., were given to the Library of Congress in three installments. Little's nephew, Royal Little, donated a two volume set of personal papers in 1964. The firm of Arthur D. Little, Inc., donated additional personal items in 1964 and a large number of business records in 1980.

Processing History:

The papers of Arthur D. Little were arranged and described in 1994. The finding aid was revised in 2004.

Copyright Status:

The status of copyright in the unpublished writings of Arthur D. Little is governed by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U.S.C.).

Preferred Citation:

Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: Container number, Arthur D. Little Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

Biographical Note

Date Event
1863, Dec. 15 Born, Boston, Mass.
1885-1886 Attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
1886 Chemist (later superintendent), Richmond Paper Co., Rumford, R.I.
Started Griffin and Little, analytical, consulting, and research chemists, in partnership with Roger B. Griffin, Boston, Mass.
1893 Death of Roger B. Griffin in laboratory accident
1894 Published with Roger B. Griffin, The Chemistry of Paper-Making. New York: Howard Lockwood and Co.
1900 Formed partnership with William H. Walker
1901 Married Henrietta Rogers Anthony
1909 Incorporated firm as Arthur D. Little, Inc.
1912-1914 President, American Chemical Society
1916 Organized national resources survey of Canada for the Canadian Pacific Railway
1917 Moved Arthur D. Little, Inc., to Cambridge, Mass.
1917-1918 Firm of Arthur D. Little, Inc., served as a consultant to the Chemical Warfare Service and Signal Corps
1919 President, American Institute of Chemical Engineers
1920s Instrumental in founding school of chemical engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
1928 Published, The Handwriting on the Wall. Boston: Little Brown, and Company
1928-1929 President, Society of Chemical Industry, London, England
1931 Awarded Perkin medal by special ah hoc committed composed of members from five chemical societies
1935, Aug. 1 Died, Northeast Harbor, Maine

Scope and Content Note

The papers of Arthur Dehon Little (1863-1935) span the years 1884-1973, with the bulk of the material concentrated in the period 1900-1935. The papers consist mainly of business records and reports relating to Arthur D. Little, Inc., a chemical firm founded in 1886 by Little and Roger B. Griffin. Included in the series of Arthur D. Little, Inc., files are client lists, financial records, chemical reports, technical analyses, and related matter. Also in the collection is a small Personal Papers file containing letters received, correspondence and tributes on Little's death in 1935, newspaper clippings, biographical material, and drafts and reprints of speeches and articles.

Arthur D. Little came of age during the industrial expansion of the United States following the Civil War. After studying chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1885-1886, he was hired by a sulfate wood pulp mill in Rhode Island and a short time later became its chief engineer. Following Roger B. Griffin's death in 1893, Little incorporated the firm of Griffin and Little as Arthur D. Little, Inc., in 1909. The Little firm developed into a leading research, consulting, and chemical engineering organization with offices worldwide.

The first series, Personal Papers, focuses on Little as an individual and entrepreneur. Included are two volumes of scrapbooks entitled "Tributes" containing personal correspondence, notices of awards, messages of gratitude, other biographical data, and a small subseries of speeches and writings. Featured in the speeches and writings are talks, lectures, and presentations Little gave around the country and various publications regarding the efficient use of chemical processes and the importance of industrial research to economic growth and development. Topics range from commentary on the role of chemistry in society, as reflected in titles such as "The Chemist's Place in Industry" and "The Romance of Chemistry," to many of the technical expositions of the processes Arthur D. Little, Inc., developed and patented in the areas of papermaking, use of wood and wood waste, vitreous cellulose or artificial silk ("On the Making of Silk Purses from Sow's Ears"), gasoline refining (cracking), and airplane dope (antiknock gasoline additive) and filter development for military use in World War I.

The Arthur D. Little, Inc., Files treat the business and research aspects of the company from its founding in 1886 until after Little's death. Included are case registers of clients, 1909-1934, documenting the names of clients and subjects of inquiry; financial records, 1907-1939, consisting of journals and ledgers; laboratory notes on experiments, 1886-1911, containing analytical reports of calculations, drawings, and other information relevant to the firm's technical work on behalf of clients; and laboratory procedures, 1909-1942, reports compiled for staff use which recorded the exact methods employed while determining the chemical composition of substances during experiments and investigations.

The largest and most comprehensive section of the Arthur D. Little, Inc., Files consists of more than 250 volumes of certificates of analysis, miscellaneous technical reports, special reports, and other reports containing the findings and conclusions the company submitted to clients following the completion of various projects. Included in the reports are technical descriptions of problems studied, the methods and procedures used in investigating them, the outcome or final analysis, and recommendations and suggestions regarding possible implications for individual clients or for industry in general. Among the businesses and corporations which contracted with Little to undertake chemical analyses of products or materials were the E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, General Electric Company, General Motors Corporation, and Lever Brothers. Among the products, methods, and materials which the firm specialized in studying and developing were wood products, wood-waste recovery, new methods for gasoline cracking, papermaking, industrial alcohols, viscose products, foodstuff, and cost management.

Organization of the Papers

The collection is arranged in two series:

Description of Series

Container Series
BOX 1-6

Personal Papers, 1894-1936, n.d.

BOX 1-2 Tributes, 1900-1936, n.d.
Two volumes of correspondence, condolences, thank-you notes, messages of congratulations, awards, interviews, testimonials, certificates, photographs, newspaper clippings, biographical material, and printed articles and speeches.
Volume one contains testimonials and tributes; volume two includes messages of condolences upon Little's death.
BOX 3-6 Speeches and Writings, 1894-1934, n.d.
Holograph, typed, and printed speeches, lectures and articles by Little.
Arranged chronologically by year and thereunder by name of speech, article, or lecture.
BOX 7-309

Arthur D. Little, Inc., Files, 1886-1973

BOX 7-9 Case Registers, 1909-1934
Register of clients organized by case number, including information relating to subjects of research, assignees, dates received and reported, and remarks.
Arranged in numerical order from 1,001 through 50,000.
BOX 10-18 Financial Records, 1907-1939
Journals and ledgers.
Arranged chronologically.
BOX 19-29 Laboratory Notes on Experiments, 1886-1911
Mainly bound volumes of notes on laboratory experiments and tests.
Set A consists of two volumes organized chronologically. Set B consists of one volume relating exclusively to experiments performed for the Carbon Electric Generator Co. and seven volumes organized chronologically. Included with Set B is a small amount of unbound notes.
BOX 30-34 Laboratory Procedures, 1909-1942
Typed summaries reporting the procedures used in the chemical analysis of materials furnished by clients.
Arranged by control number assigned by the company.
BOX 309 Miscellany, 1891-1973
Miscellaneous reports and certificates of analysis, a lecture, photographs, chemical abstracts, and stock market material.
Arranged by type of material and alphabetically therein by subject, name of company, or type of report.

Container List

Container Contents
BOX 1-6

Personal Papers, 1894-1936, n.d.

BOX 1-2 Tributes, 1900-1936, n.d.
Two volumes of correspondence, condolences, thank-you notes, messages of congratulations, awards, interviews, testimonials, certificates, photographs, newspaper clippings, biographical material, and printed articles and speeches.
Volume one contains testimonials and tributes; volume two includes messages of condolences upon Little's death.
BOX 1 Vol. I, 1900-1936, n.d.
BOX 2 Vol. II, 1935-1936, n.d
BOX 3-6 Speeches and Writings, 1894-1934, n.d.
Holograph, typed, and printed speeches, lectures and articles by Little.
Arranged chronologically by year and thereunder by name of speech, article, or lecture.
BOX 3 Articles
1894, "Industrial Applications of Cellulose Thiocarbonates and Products Derived Therefrom"
1899, "James Mason Crafts"
1900, "Viscose"
1903, "The Durability of Paper"
1906, "Chemistry and the Generation of Power"
1909, "A Laboratory for Public Service"
1910
"The Basis of Quality in Paper"
"Chemical Fakes"
"Chemistry and Dividends"
"The Chemist's Place in Industry"
"The Paper-maker's Trouble Book"
1915, Report of the Visiting Committee of the Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
1916
"A Five-year Course in Chemical Engineering," Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
"Industrial Research"
1917
"Industrial Research for Railroads"
Report of industrial researches
1919
"Chemistry and the Special Library"
"Developing the Estate"
Report of Omnibus Committee, American Chemical Society
1920
"The Day of the Chemical Engineer"
"The Petroleum Outlook"
1921
"The Fuel Problem"
"Natural Resources in Their Relation to Military Supplies"
"On the Making of Silk Purses from Sow's Ears"
"Science's Future with Oil"
1922
"Are We Burning Up Our Future?"
Chemical engineering education report of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers
"Let the Chemists Pay Your Bills"
1923
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering report, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
"Hidden Profits in the Product Itself"
1924
"Report of Committee on Economy of Fuel and Economy of Raw Materials"
"Physics and Civilization"
1925
"The Contributions of Science to Manufacturing"
"The Industrial Chemist-Advertising Partner"
1928
"Chemical Engineering Pervades All Petroleum Technology"
"Chemical Industry"
"Coal Consumption as Affected by Increased Efficiency and Other Factors"
"Migration of Industry"
"Some Radical Speculations about Gas"
"Progress of Chemistry in 1927"
BOX 4 1929
"Chemical Engineering in the U. S."
"Progress of Chemistry in 1928"
1930
"Appreciation of Ellwood Hendrick"
"The Value of Technological Research"
1931, "Present Developments in Chemistry"
1932, "The Silver Anniversary of Chemical Engineering in America"
1933
"Appreciation of Mr. Everett Morss"
"Baekeland of the '1000 Uses'"
"A Quarter Century in Industrial Service"
"The Technocracy Bubble"
1934, "Protean Plastics"
Undated
"Elements of Chemical Engineering"
"Industrial Research in America"
"The Industrial Research Opportunities of the South"
"Report of the Official Chemist"
"Science in Paper-making"
"Synthesis of Southern Wealth"
Notes and Outlines, 1911-1916, n.d.
Speeches and Lectures
1900, "New Cellulose Industries"
1903, "New Cellulose Industries in the U. S."
1906, "Chemist and the Community"
1908
"Official Chemist of the American Paper and Pulp Association"
"The United Field of Chemistry"
1909, "The Cotton Fiber Substance and Its Properties"
1911, "The Earning Power of Chemistry"
1912
Algonquin Club speech for visitors to the Eighth International Congress of Applied Chemistry, New York, N. Y.
American Chemical Society, Maine section
1913
Combustion
"Industrial Research in America"
Nichols-Hesse Dinner
"Paper-making and the Properties of Paper"
BOX 5 1915
"The Dyestuff Situation and Its Lesson"
Fiftieth anniversary of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.
"The Industrial Resources and Opportunities of the South"
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chemical Society, Cambridge, Mass.
"University and Business"
1916
"The Chemical Engineer As a World Factor"
"Organization, Plan and Scope of the Natural Resources Survey of Canada"
"Utilization of Wood Waste"
1917
"The Chemist"
Laboratory staff on exemption of chemists re World War I military service
"The Relationship of Research to Industrial Development"
1918
Abstract and extension of testimony before the Federal Trade Commission
"Organization of Industrial Research"
1919
"Chemistry and the South"
"Industrial Research"
"The Organization and Conduct of an Industrial Laboratory"
1920, "Natural Resources in Their Relation to Military Supplies"
1921
"The Dependence of the Lime Industry upon Nature and Science"
"Energy: Its Sources and Future Possibilities"
"The History and Manufacture of Book Papers"
Perkin medal award, Willis R. Whitney
"The Place of Chemistry in Business"
1922, "Canada Ascendant"
1923
"Chemistry and Connecticut"
"The Chemistry behind the Dollar"
"Forecast of Chemical Development"
Perkin Medal Award, Milton C. Whitaker
1924
"The Chemical Engineer"
"The Fifth Estate"
"Research: The Mother of Industry"
BOX 6 1925
"The Application of Research to Industry"
"Chemistry As an Investment"
"The Handwriting on the Wall"
"Misapplied Chemistry"
"The Romance of Carbon"
1927
"Ethics and Ideals of the Chemical Profession"
Gasoline symposium report
"Impending Changes in Our Use of Fuels"
"Some Important Research Problems of To-Day"
1928
"Chemical Industry"
"Coal Consumption As Affected by Increased Efficiency and Other Factors"
"How Scientific Research Contributes to the Welfare of Labor"
"Industrial Significance of Some Recent Developments in Organic Chemistry"
"Research--And A Greater Gas Industry"
Society of Chemical Industry, Manchester, England, word of greeting
Society of Chemical Industry, Manchester, England, dinner
"Some Radical Speculations about Gas"
1929
"How Scientific Research Contributes to the Welfare of Labor"
"Process Development"
"Science and Labor"
Society of Chemical Industry, Manchester, England, reply to mayor of Manchester
1930
"Chemistry As an Investment"
"The Contribution of Science to the Iron and Steel Industry"
1931
"The Evaluation of Chemical Projects," for Perkin medal award
"Leadership"
"'Making the Goods Move' through Chemical Research"
"New Lamps for Old"
"New Research Objectives"
Seventh chemical industries dinner, remarks
1932, "The Romance of Chemistry"
1933
"Industrial Research"
"Plastics"
Talk to class of 1933, Middlesex School, Concord, Mass.
1934
Chemical industry metal meeting presentation
"The Chemical Revolution"
Undated, "Industrial Resources and Opportunities of the South"
BOX 7-309

Arthur D. Little, Inc., Files, 1886-1973

BOX 7-9 Case Registers, 1909-1934
Register of clients organized by case number, including information relating to subjects of research, assignees, dates received and reported, and remarks.
Arranged in numerical order from 1,001 through 50,000.
BOX 7 Nos. 1,001-2,133, 4,501-5,000, 1909-1912
Nos. 5,001-10,000, 1912-1914
Nos. 10,001-15,000, 1914-1917
BOX 8 Nos. 15,001-20,000, 1917-1919
Nos. 20,001-25,000, 1919-1922
Nos. 25,001-30,000, 1922-1924
BOX 9 Nos. 30,001-35,000, 1924-1926
Nos. 35,001-40,000, 1926-1928
Nos. 40,001-45,000, 1928-1930
Nos. 45,001-50,000, 1931-1934
BOX 10-18 Financial Records, 1907-1939
Journals and ledgers.
Arranged chronologically.
BOX 10 Journals
1907-1909
1909-1911
1911-1912
BOX 11 1912-1914
1914-1915
1915-1917
BOX 12 1917-1919
Ledgers
1907
1908-1909
BOX 13 1909-1910
1911
1912
BOX 14 1913
1914
1915
BOX 15 1916-1917
1920
1921
BOX 16 1922
1923
1924
BOX 17 1925
1926
1929
BOX 18 1930
1938-1939
BOX 19-29 Laboratory Notes on Experiments, 1886-1911
Mainly bound volumes of notes on laboratory experiments and tests.
Set A consists of two volumes organized chronologically. Set B consists of one volume relating exclusively to experiments performed for the Carbon Electric Generator Co. and seven volumes organized chronologically. Included with Set B is a small amount of unbound notes.
BOX 19 Set A
1886, Nov. 20-1896, June 3
BOX 20 1909, Dec. 15-1911, Apr. 4 For additional material see Containers 57-61, Miscellaneous technical reports
BOX 21 Set B
Bound
Carbon Electric Generator Co.
1896, Mar. 3-1897, Jan. 30
BOX 22 General
1886, Oct. 22-1890, May 2
BOX 23 1894, Nov. 13-1897, June 8
BOX 24 1897, June 8-1899, Jan. 30
BOX 25 1899, June 28-1903, Dec. 16 (mostly wood pulp notes, 1899, Dec. 20-1903, Dec. 16)
BOX 26 1900, Dec. 31-1903, Oct. 5
BOX 27 1904, Feb. 4-1906, Dec. 7
BOX 28 1904, July 1-1906, Oct. 18
BOX 29 Unbound, 1890, Feb. 13-Oct. 23
BOX 30-34 Laboratory Procedures, 1909-1942
Typed summaries reporting the procedures used in the chemical analysis of materials furnished by clients.
Arranged by control number assigned by the company.
BOX 30 Number conversion list
Nos. 1-75
(6 folders)
BOX 31 Nos. 76-141
(6 folders)
BOX 32 Nos. 142-210
(6 folders)
BOX 33 Nos. 211-282
(6 folders)
BOX 34 Nos. 283-339, unnumbered
(5 folders)
BOX 35-308 Reports, 1890-1948
BOX 35-43 Certificates of Analysis, 1893-1901
Bound typed copies of one-page summaries of certified chemical analyses addressed to clients.
Arranged by case numbers assigned by the company. An index is in the front of each volume. Certificates of analysis for the years 1918-1928 were bound with miscellaneous technical reports for that period.
BOX 35 1893, Feb. 15-1894, Oct. 17
BOX 36 1894, Oct. 18-1896, Sept. 11
BOX 37 1896, Sept. 19-1898, Feb. 4
BOX 38 1896, Oct. 27-1899, Aug. 20
BOX 39 1898, Feb. 5-Nov. 9
BOX 40 1898, Nov. 10-1899, Aug. 7
BOX 41 1899, Aug. 9-1900, Apr. 2
BOX 42 1899, Aug. 21-1901, May 15
BOX 43 1900, Apr. 3-1901, July 15
BOX 44-212 Miscellaneous Technical Reports, 1890-1941
Bound typed copies of technical reports for clients, including certificates of analysis for the 1918-1928 period.
Arranged by case numbers assigned by the company. Volumes 1-31 contain two sets of indexes, one alphabetical by client, the other alphabetical by process. Volumes 32-167 contain an alphabetical index by client. A three volume main index precedes the reports. The index volumes for the period 1918-1942 also contain listings for the Special Reports subseries.
BOX 44 Indexes (by subject and client)
To vols. 1-31 (also vols. A1-A43 of Special Reports)
BOX 45 To vols. 32-133 (also vols. A44-145 and B1-5 of Special Reports)
BOX 46 To vols. 134-176 (also vols. A146-173 and B6-30 of Special Reports)
BOX 47 Vol. 1, 1890, Apr.-1899, June 23
BOX 48 Vol. 2, 1900, Nov. 17-1904, Dec. 22
BOX 49 Vol. 3, 1904, Dec. 19-1907, May 2
BOX 50 Vol. 4, 1907, May 2-July 31
BOX 51 Vol. 5, 1907, Aug. 2-1907, Oct. 3
BOX 52 Vol. 6, 1907, Oct. 8-1907, Dec. 30
BOX 53 Vol. 7, 1907, Apr. 22-1908, Mar. 23
BOX 54 Vol. 8, 1908, Mar. 25-June 30
BOX 55 Vol. 9, 1908, July 1-Oct. 29
BOX 56 Vol. 10, 1904, Dec. 23-1909, Jan. 30
BOX 57 Vol. 11, 1909, Feb. 1-Apr. 30
BOX 58 Vol. 12, 1909, Apr. 12-July 31
BOX 59 Vol. 13, 1909, Aug. 2-1910, Jan. 3
BOX 60 Vol. 14, 1910, Jan. 3-Apr. 29
BOX 61 Vol. 15, 1910, May 2-Aug. 30 See also Container 309, Hammermill Paper Co.
BOX 62 Vol. 16, 1909, Nov. 24-1910, Dec. 30
BOX 63 Vol. 17, 1911, Jan. 2-Apr. 29
BOX 64 Vol. 18, 1911, May 1-Aug. 31
BOX 65 Vol. 19, 1911, Sept. 5-Dec. 30
BOX 66 Vol. 20, 1911, Mar. 3-1912, Apr. 30
BOX 67 Vol. 21, 1912, May 2-Aug. 29
BOX 68 Vol. 22, 1912, June 14-Dec. 31
BOX 69 Vol. 23, 1913, Jan. 2-Apr. 30
BOX 70 Vol. 24, 1913, May 3-Aug. 27
BOX 71 Vol. 25, 1913, Sept. 6-1914, Feb. 27
BOX 72 Vol. 26, 1914, Mar. 2-July 31
BOX 73 Vol. 27, 1914, Aug. 1-1915, Feb. 27
BOX 74 Vol. 28, 1915, Mar. 1-Dec. 29
BOX 75 Vol. 29, 1916, Jan. 8-Dec. 30
BOX 76 Vol. 30, 1917, Jan. 2-Dec. 24 For additional material see Container 118, Vol. 72, pp. 131-163
BOX 77 Vol. 31, 1917, Nov. 19-1919, Jan. 16
BOX 78 Vol. 32, 1918, May 10-1919, Jan. 4
BOX 79 Vol. 33, 1918, June 11-Dec. 18
BOX 80 Vol. 34, 1918, July 13-Nov. 9
BOX 81 Vol. 35, 1918, Aug. 23-1919, Jan. 31
BOX 82 Vol. 36, 1918, Sept. 30-1919, May 10
BOX 83 Vol. 37, 1918, Nov. 7-1919, Apr. 4
BOX 84 Vol. 38, 1918, Dec. 11-1919, Apr. 15
BOX 85 Vol. 39, 1919, Jan. 22-June 12
BOX 86 Vol. 40, 1919, Feb. 6-Aug. 14
BOX 87 Vol. 41, 1919, Mar. 10-June 30
BOX 88 Vol. 42, 1919, Apr. 7-July 24
BOX 89 Vol. 43, 1919, May 6-1920, July 29
BOX 90 Vol. 44, 1919, June 4-1920, Feb. 4
BOX 91 Vol. 45, 1919, July 3-1921, Nov. 3
BOX 92 Vol. 46, 1919, Aug. 6-1920, Mar. 27
BOX 93 Vol. 47, 1919, Aug. 22-1920, June 9
BOX 94 Vol. 48, 1919, Sept. 24-1920, July 24
BOX 95 Vol. 49, 1919, Oct. 24-1920, Aug. 13
BOX 96 Vol. 50, 1919, Nov. 18-1920, Mar. 18
BOX 97 Vol. 51, 1919, Dec. 24-1921, Apr. 4
BOX 98 Vol. 52, 1920, Jan. 23-Dec. 6
BOX 99 Vol. 53, 1920, Mar. 9-1921, Mar. 15
BOX 100 Vol. 54, 1920, Apr. 20-1921, Mar. 15
BOX 101 Vol. 55, 1920, May 25-1921, Sept. 22
BOX 102 Vol. 56, 1920, June 20-1922, Aug. 9
BOX 103 Vol. 57, 1920, July 26-1921, Jan. 21
BOX 104 Vol. 58, 1920, Aug. 24-1921, Jan. 5
BOX 105 Vol. 59, 1920, Sept. 25-1921, July 5
BOX 106 Vol. 60, 1920, Nov. 8-1923, July 23
BOX 107 Vol. 61, 1920, Dec. 27-1921, Oct. 8
BOX 108 Vol. 62, 1921, Feb. 1-Nov. 21
BOX 109 Vol. 63, 1921, Mar. 7-Dec. 30
BOX 110 Vol. 64, 1921, Apr. 28-1923, Jan. 18
BOX 111 Vol. 65, 1921, June 23-1922, Aug. 31
BOX 112 Vol. 66, 1921, June 21-1922, May 11
BOX 113 Vol. 67, 1921, Feb. 29-1922, Mar. 31
BOX 114 Vol. 68, 1921, Oct. 28-1923, Jan. 4
BOX 115 Vol. 69, 1921, Dec. 12-1922, Aug. 26
BOX 116 Vol. 70, 1919, Apr. 12-1922, May 8, cement analysis
BOX 117 Vol. 71, 1922, Jan. 16-Nov. 1
BOX 118 Vol. 72, 1917, Feb. 17-1923, May 25
BOX 119 Vol. 73, 1922, Mar. 28-Sept. 29
BOX 120 Vol. 74, 1922, May 9-1924, Mar. 17
BOX 121 Vol. 75, 1922, June 15-1923, Mar. 31
BOX 122 Vol. 76, 1922, July 24-1923, Jan. 6
BOX 123 Vol. 77, 1922, Aug. 29-1924, Mar. 12
BOX 124 Vol. 78, 1922, Oct. 7-1923, Sept. 25
BOX 125 Vol. 79, 1922, Nov. 9-1923, May 23
BOX 126 Vol. 80, 1922, Dec. 12-1923, May 25
BOX 127 Vol. 81, 1923, Jan. 19-1924, Oct. 9
BOX 128 Vol. 82, 1923, Mar. 5-1924, Mar. 4
BOX 129 Vol. 83, 1923, Apr. 10-1924, Mar. 10
BOX 130 Vol. 84, 1923, May 12-1924, Sept. 19
BOX 131 Vol. 85, 1923, May 3-1924, Feb. 16
BOX 132 Vol. 86, 1923, July 19-1924, Apr. 18
BOX 133 Vol. 87, 1923, Aug. 23-1925, May 8
BOX 134 Vol. 88, 1923, Sept. 22-1924, Apr. 18
BOX 135 Vol. 89, 1923, Oct. 24-1924, Feb. 19
BOX 136 Vol. 90, 1923, Oct. 31-1924, Nov. 11
BOX 137 Vol. 91, 1923, Dec. 24-1924, May 22
BOX 138 Vol. 92, 1924, Feb. 2-May 5
BOX 139 Vol. 93, 1924, Mar. 4-June 26
BOX 140 Vol. 94, 1924, Apr. 1-Aug. 26
BOX 141 Vol. 95, 1924, Apr. 30-Oct. 29
BOX 142 Vol. 96, 1924, May 23-1925, July 14
BOX 143 Vol. 97, 1924, June 30-1925, July 2
BOX 144 Vol. 98, 1924, July 29-1925, June 9
BOX 145 Vol. 99, 1924, Sept. 5-1925, Dec. 1
BOX 146 Vol. 100, 1924, Oct. 6-1925, June 16
BOX 147 Vol. 101, 1924, Nov. 4-1925, Feb. 16 See also Container 309, Edison Electric Illuminating Co.
BOX 148 Vol. 102, 1924, Dec. 4-1925, Apr. 24
BOX 149 Vol. 103, 1925, Jan. 5-1926, May 17
BOX 150 Vol. 104, 1925, Jan. 31-Oct. 7
BOX 151 Vol. 105, 1925, Mar. 3-Sept. 22
BOX 152 Vol. 106, 1925, Mar. 27-1926, Sept. 27
BOX 153 Vol. 107, 1925, Apr. 23-Dec. 12
BOX 154 Vol. 108, 1925, May 19-1926, Mar. 10
BOX 155 Vol. 109, 1925, June 20-1926, Sept. 14
BOX 156 Vol. 110, 1925, July 25-Nov. 16
BOX 157 Vol. 111, 1925, Aug. 18-1926, Sept. 24
BOX 158 Vol. 112, 1925, Sept. 18-1926, June 2
BOX 159 Vol. 113, 1925, Oct. 14-1926, Jan. 11
BOX 160 Vol. 114, 1925, Nov. 17-1927, Mar. 14 See also Container 309, Magnolia Petroleum Co.
BOX 161 Vol. 115, 1925, Dec. 19-1926, Sept. 2
BOX 162 Vol. 116, 1926, Jan. 16-1927, June 29
BOX 163 Vol. 117, 1926, Mar. 5-1928, May 14
BOX 164 Vol. 118, 1926, Apr. 22-1927, Feb. 26
BOX 165 Vol. 119, 1926, June 8-Oct. 23
BOX 166 Vol. 120, 1926, July 27-Dec. 31
BOX 167 Vol. 121, 1926, Sept. 14-1928, Jan. 3
BOX 168 Vol. 122, 1926, Oct. 25-1929, June 6
BOX 169 Vol. 123, 1926, Dec. 9-1929, May 31
BOX 170 Vol. 124, 1928, Jan. 25-Feb. 28
BOX 171 Vol. 125, 1927, Mar. 11-1928, Sept. 21
BOX 172 Vol. 126, 1927, Apr. 23-Aug. 12
BOX 173 Vol. 127, 1927, June 10-Nov. 21
BOX 174 Vol. 128, 1927, July 27-1929, Nov. 19
BOX 175 Vol. 129, 1927, Jan. 3-1928, Mar. 10
BOX 176 Vol. 130, 1927, Oct. 28-1929, Jan. 15
BOX 177 Vol. 131, 1927, Dec. 12-1930, May 3
BOX 178 Vol. 132, 1928, Jan. 20-1929, May 10
BOX 179 Vol. 133, 1929, Mar. 5-Nov. 6
BOX 180 Vol. 134, 1928, May 4-1936, Aug. 24
BOX 181 Vol. 135, 1928, Dec. 4-1931, July 8
BOX 182 Vol. 136, 1929, June 14-1930, May 28
BOX 183 Vol. 137, 1929, Oct. 25-1931, Feb. 2
BOX 184 Vol. 138, 1930, Feb. 13-1936, Nov. 30
BOX 185 Vol. 139, 1930, May 10-1932, Aug. 24
BOX 186 Vol. 140, 1930, Dec. 26-1932, Aug. 10
BOX 187 Vol. 141, 1931, Oct. 10-1933, Mar. 23
BOX 188 Vol. 142, 1932, Apr. 26-1935, May 9
BOX 189 Vol. 143, 1933, Mar. 18-1939, Sept. 1
BOX 190 Vol. 144, 1933, Nov. 24-1943, Feb. 26
BOX 191 Vol. 145, 1934, July 19-1939, Jan. 17
BOX 192 Vol. 146, 1934, June 15-1937, Mar. 1
BOX 193 Vol. 147, 1935, July 19-1939, Apr. 14
BOX 194 Vol. 148, 1935, Nov. 15-1936, Oct. 9
[Vol. 149, not received]
BOX 195 Vol. 150, 1936, June 26-1938, Dec. 16
BOX 196 Vol. 151, 1936, Sept. 18-1943, Mar. 25
BOX 197 Vol. 152, 1937, Feb. 3-1939, Mar. 31
BOX 198 Vol. 153, 1937, Apr. 7-1938, Feb. 1
BOX 199 Vol. 154, 1937, June 22-1938, Jan. 11
BOX 200 Vol. 155, 1937, Aug. 31-1940, Mar. 31
BOX 201 Vol. 156, 1938, Feb. 8-1940, Jan. 25
BOX 202 Vol. 157, 1938, May 6-1940, July 16
BOX 203 Vol. 158, 1938, Sept. 28-1940, Sept. 23
BOX 204 Vol. 159, 1938, Apr. 23-1945, Aug. 24
BOX 205 Vol. 160, 1939, Feb. 23-1940, Oct. 23
BOX 206 Vol. 161, 1939, June 8-1945, May 3
BOX 207 Vol. 162, 1939, Aug. 8-1943, Feb. 2
BOX 208 Vol. 163, 1939, Aug. 22-1947, July 11
BOX 209 Vol. 164, 1940, Jan. 15-1944, Sept. 21
BOX 210 Vol. 165, 1940, Jan. 31-1942, Apr. 15
BOX 211 Vol. 166, 1940, Aug. 9-1941, Sept. 26
BOX 212 Vol. 167, 1941, Feb. 21-1943, Feb. 24
[Vols. 168-76, 1941-1947, not received]