RIAMCO

Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online

For Participating Institutions

John Hay papers microfilm (Ms.Hay microfilm)

Brown University Library

Box A
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Tel: 401-863-2146


Scope & content

The John Hay papers microfilms consists of more than 9,100 items covering the period 1829 to 1916 containing correspondence with his family and with literary, diplomatic, and political contemporaries; diaries kept by Hay as Secretary of the Legations in Paris, Vienna, and Madrid, 1866-1870; manuscript poems; corrected galley proofs for Abraham Lincoln, a history (1860) by John G. Nicolay and John Hay; and the compositor's copy of the autograph manuscript believed to be in Hay's writing disguised of chapters 1-17 (chapters 18-20 lacking) of The breadwinners. There are Hay's personal letterpress copy books reflecting his diplomatic service in Paris and Vienna (1865-1867), Madrid (1869-1870), and London (1897-1898). The latter were not available to the editor of Letters of John Hay and extracts from diary (Washington, 1908, 3 vols.). There is an album of 120 letters received by Hay after his eulogy of McKinley before the House of Representatives, 27 February 1902; and three albums containing 830 mounted letters and telegrams to the Hay family following the accidental death of Hay's elder son, Adelbert S. Hay, in 1901.

Subjects include the Civil War, Lincoln and his administration, Reconstruction, court life in Paris, Hay's choice of careers, the bi-metal monetary standard, the Canadian boundary settlement, the fur seal question, Japanese naval activity, British politics, Cuba, the Spanish-American War, European attitudes toward the United States, the Queen's 1897 Jubilee, the copyright bill, literacy and family matters, and political affairs under Presidents Hayes, McKinley, and Theodore Roosevelt.

There is a separate finding aid for physical items in the John Hay papers, which includes all items belonging to the collection. Please note: not all items in the John Hay papers are represented on microfilm. For more information, see the finding aid for the John Hay papers.