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The Janet Indick Papers document Indick's career as a New Jersey painter and sculptor. They contain records relating to awards, fellowships, exhibitions, donation and sale of artworks, publicity and press materials, and artistic organizations. Types of materials include correspondence, exhibition catalogs, applications, donation agreements, fliers, pamphlets, postcards, newsletters, and magazines. The collection highlights Indick's identity as a Jewish artist and as a woman artist.
Founded in 1857 by a group of interested students, the Natural History Society of Rutgers College enjoyed a short but active life under the direction of Professor George Cook. The records include founding documents such as the society's constitution, minutes, catalogs of donations to the society, bulletins , correspondence from honorary and corresponding members, financial records, and newspaper and other accounts of the society's activities.
Records of the Philoclean Society of Rutgers College, founded on December 8, 1825, the second of two college literary societies established in the nineteenth century.