15/7/49 Guide to the George H. Douglas Papers George H. Douglas Papers

© Copyright 2024 University of Illinois Archives. All rights reserved.

19 Library 1408 W. Gregory Dr. Urbana, IL, 61820 URL: http://archives.library.illinois.edu Email: illiarch@illinois.edu Phone: (217) 333-0798 Fax: (217) 333-2868
This finding aid was encoding in EAD by Archon 3.21 from an SQL database source on March 29th, 2024. The collection description/finding aid is written in English
Guide to the George H. Douglas Papers 1965/1999 University of Illinois Archives Overview of the Collection George H. Douglas Papers 1965-1999 15/7/49 Douglas, George H., 1934- 3.00 English University of Illinois Archives
19 Library 1408 W. Gregory Dr. Urbana, IL, URL: http://archives.library.illinois.edu Email: illiarch@illinois.edu Phone: (217) 333-0798 Fax: (217) 333-2868

Other Information:

1 Pages

Additional information may be found at https://files.archon.library.illinois.edu/uasfa/1507049.pdf

Access Terms

This Collection is indexed under the following controlled access subject terms.

Genre/Form of Material: Papers Topical Term: American Literature Architecture English Department Faculty Papers Literary Criticism Radio Broadcasting Railroad History
Administrative Information Accruals:

7/29/1999

Arrangement of Materials:

By topic, and either chronological or alphabetical thereunder

Scope and Contents

Papers of George H. Douglas (1934- ), Professor of English (1961-1999), includes personal and professional correspondence, administrative correspondence relating to his position as Director of Unit One (1977-1978), unpublished essays and manuscripts on both Theodore Dreiser and The Historical Style in American Literary Criticism; reprints of published articles and reviews; correspondence, reviews, advertisements and working photos, negatives, and magazine clippings related to the publication of Skyscrapers, Women of the Twenties, All Aboard: The Railroad in American Life, Edmund Wilson's America, Early Days of Radio, Rail City USA, The Smart Magazine, and H.L Mencken: Critic of American Life.