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United States Department of the Interior-Bureau of Indian Affairs, Harvard Summer School, International Congress on Psychotechnology, Journal Articles, 1925-1939

 Series — Box: 15
Identifier: XV.

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Bingham Papers consist of correspondence, memoranda, administrative documents, reports, manuscripts, test forms, photographs, books and scholarly journals and small artifacts dating from 1852 to 1965. Family papers and posthumous documents included in the collection. Series designation is unclear and pending-folders are not marked with Series names, and the chronological arrangement of the papers makes categorization difficult.

Bingham's roles in various academic fields and his contributions to numerous individuals and organizations are evident in the range of notable correspondents. These include James Angell and Robert Yerkes of the American Psychological Association, Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor, Alexander Graham Bell, E.L. Thorndike, Charles S. Myers, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Herbert Hoover. Respected by psychologists and academics, Bingham encouraged research and discussion regarding the relation between intelligence, vocation, and personality.

The majority of this collection has been microfilmed and is available for research.

Dates

  • 1925-1939

Restrictions

Some classified documents have been removed and will be replaced within the collection once their restrictions expire.

Extent

From the Collection: 85 Linear feet (88 boxes, including one oversized box. )

Language

From the Collection: English

General

The title of this series was changed from "Indian Service, Harvard Summer School, International Congress on Psychotechnology, Journal Articles, 1925-1939" to "United States Department of the Interior-Bureau of Indian Affairs, Harvard Summer School, International Congress on Psychotechnology, Journal Articles, 1925-1939" in Spring 2024 during a description review. See collection scope and content note for more information.

Repository Details

Part of the Carnegie Mellon University Archives Repository

Contact:
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