Wade Hall Collection on Business and Finance
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No requestable containers
Scope and Contents
The Wade Hall Collection on Business and Finance contains correspondence, receipts, account books, order forms, promissory notes, advertising materials, legal and real estate records, and other items gathered by author and professor Wade Hall (1934-2015) that document commercial activities in the United States during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The collection includes correspondence from companies and individuals discussing business transactions, such as letters to the Singer sewing machine company while it was operating in New Orleans under Union occupation in 1864; as well as orders from people and stores regarding cloth, cotton, hunting dogs, tobacco, and various other types of merchandise. There are two receipts for materials shipped on river steamboats in the US South in the 1830s. One file of correspondence related to a professor W. L. Gilbert in Jonesboro, Georgia, regards teachers available for hire in the US South, and includes a letter in which the writer asks for "white male" teachers. The collection also contains a number of files about taxes, property, court cases, and estate settlements. There are also promotional materials from several businesses, such as a nineteenth-century catalog from the Wrampelmeier Furniture Manufacturing Company in Louisville, Kentucky.
Dates
- Creation: 1779 - 1951
Language of Materials
Materials are in English.
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research. Researchers must register and agree to copyright and privacy laws before using this collection. Manuscript collections and archival records may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations. Due to the nature of certain archival formats, including digital and audio-visual materials, access to certain materials may require additional advance notice.
Conditions Governing Use
Researchers are responsible for using the materials in conformance with United States copyright law as well as any donor restrictions accompanying the materials. The user assumes all responsibility for identifying and satisfying any copyright claimants in collection materials. Copyright for official University records is held by The University of Alabama. The library claims only physical ownership of many manuscript collections. Anyone wishing to broadcast or publish this material must assume all responsibility for identifying and satisfying any claimants of literary property rights or copyrights. Please contact Special Collections (archives@ua.edu) with questions regarding specific manuscript collections.
For more information about copyright policy, please visit: https://www.ua.edu/copyright/. Any materials used for academic research or otherwise should be fully credited with the source.
Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals without the consent of those individuals may have legal implications, for which the University of Alabama assumes no responsibility.
Biographical / Historical
A Union Springs, Alabama, native, Wade Henry Hall was the first in his family to graduate from high school. He continued his education by earning a BS from Troy University, an MA from the University of Alabama, and a PhD from the University of Illinois. He wrote numerous works relating to Kentucky, Alabama, and Southern history, including The Kentucky Anthology: 200 Years of Writing in the Bluegrass State, One Man’s Lincoln, and Conecuh People: Words of Life from the Alabama Black Belt. Hall taught English and served as chair of the English and Humanities programs at Kentucky Southern College (1962-1969) and Bellarmine University (1969-1996) in Louisville, Kentucky, for almost forty years. He retired in 1996 and returned to Union Springs, Alabama, in 2006. Hall was an avid collector, focusing primarily on items related to Southern history and culture. His interests included books, music, manuscripts, photographs, and quilts. He donated significant portions of his collections to the universities of Alabama, Troy, and Kentucky as well as to art museums in Birmingham and Mobile, Alabama, and Columbus, Georgia. The manuscripts collection at The University of Alabama gathers together letters, journals, and other papers from the middle of the nineteenth through the whole of the twentieth century and allows researchers to see the world through the lives of everyday Americans, demonstrating the value of ordinary people’s perspectives to researchers interested in American history, literature, and culture. Hall died on September 26, 2015, aged 81, after a long illness.
Extent
3.0 Linear Feet
Abstract
The Wade Hall Collection on Business and Finance contains correspondence, receipts, advertising materials, real estate transaction records, and other items documenting commercial and legal activities in the United States during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Arrangement
This collection is made up of ninety-nine individual collections previously donated by Wade Hall that have been combined to create the Wade Hall Collection on Business and Finance. These smaller collections were originally processed by Special Collections staff between 2005-2014. Files are arranged in chronological order, with undated materials at the end of the folder list.
Physical Location
These materials are stored at our off-site Archival Facility (AF) and may require up to two business days for retrieval and delivery for use in our Hoole Library reading room. Please email archives@ua.eduor call 205-348-0500 for more information.
Custodial History
Donor Wade Hall acquired the materials in this collection from a variety of sources, including estate sales and private individuals.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift of Wade Hall, 2004-2010.
Processing Information
Processed by Erin Ryan, May 2020.
Source
- Hall, Wade (Donor, Person)
- Title
- Guide to Wade Hall Collection on Business and Finance
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Finding aid created by Erin Ryan, May 2020.
- Date
- May 2020
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the The University of Alabama Libraries Special Collections Repository