4 Finding Aids.
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Virginia Heritage in publisher [X]
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Philosophy[X]
Slavery (2)
Accident insurance (1)
Administration (1)
Advertising (1)
Agricultural colleges (1)
Agriculture (1)
American loyalists (1)
American newspapers (1)
Architecture (1)
Architecture, Gothic (1)
Armed Forces (1)
Artificial intelligence (1)
Autographs (1)
Battle of Aldie (Virginia : 1863) (1)
Biography (1)
Black Hawk (Horse) (1833-1856) (1)
Book donations (1)
Brass rubbing (1)
Brasses (1)
Brasses, Victorian (1)
Bronze sculpture, Renaissance (1)
Bull Run, 2nd Battle of, Va., 1862 (1)
Busts (1)
Canals (1)
Carte de visite photographs (1)
Cavalry (1)
Chancellorsville, Battle of (Virginia : 1863) (1)
Chromolithography (1)
Chromolithography, Victorian (1)
Church architecture (1)
Civil engineering (1)
Civilization, Western--Philosophy. (1)
Clippings (Books, newspapers, etc.) (1)
Coal (1)
Coal slurry pipelines (1)
Coal-fired power plants (1)
Computers (1)
Conservation of natural resources (1)
Correspondence (1)
Cotton (1)
Courtship (1)
Cryptography (1)
Dams (1)
Debts, Public (1)
Diseases (1)
ENIAC (Computer) (1)
Economics (1)
Education (1)
Elocution -- Study and teaching (1)
Endowments (1)
Engineering (1)
Engraving--Printing (1)
Erosion (1)
Espionage (1)
Ethics (1)
Eugenics (1)
Fertilizer industry -- Waste disposal (1)
Fire insurance (1)
French Americans (1)
Gas-fitting (1)
General Problem Solver (1)
Geography (1)
Geology (1)
Glacial epoch (1)
Good Friday (1)
Gothic revival (Art) (1)
Government (1)
Guano industry (1)
Health boards (1)
Huguenots (1)
Huguenots -- Genealogy (1)
Human Experimentation (1)
Hunter's Raid (Lexington, Virginia : 1864) (1)
Hydroelectric generators (1)
Hydroelectric power plants (1)
Insurance (1)
Interpersonal relations (1)
Investments, Foreign (1)
Iron founding (1)
Iron ores (1)
Jet stream (1)
Journalism (1)
Kanrin Maru (Ship) (1)
Lee Chapel (Washington and Lee University) (1)
Libraries and colleges (1)
Life insurance (1)
Literature -- Societies, etc. (1)
Literature--Societies, etc. (1)
Lithography (1)
Makonde (African people) (1)
Malthusianism (1)
Map publishing (1)
Mapiko (Dance drama) (1)
Marine insurance (1)
Maryland Campaign (1862) (1)
Mental illness (1)
Metallurgy (1)
Military Medicine (1)
Military ethics (1)
Military history (1)
Military orders (1)
Mineralogy (1)
Mining engineering (1)
Mining schools and education (1)
Monograms (1)
Morgan horse (1)
Mosquitoes (1)
Newspapers (1)
Nutrient pollution of water (1)
Painting (1)
Painting, Netherlandish (1)
Painting, Renaissance (1)
Pamphlets (1)
Patrick Henry (Horse) (1)
Performance art (1)
Pesticides (1)
Philosophy--History (1)
Photography (1)
Photography -- Printing processes -- Albumen (1)
Physicians (1)
Plumbing (1)
Popular culture (1)
Portrait prints (1)
Portraits (1)
Postwar reconstruction (1)
Printed ephemera (1)
Psychology. (1)
Psychometrics (1)
Public health (1)
Publishers and publishing (1)
Publishers and publishing--International cooperation (1)
Publishing (1)
Qing Dynasty (China) (1)
Railroads (1)
Religion (1)
Rollin's Belles Lettres (1)
Romanies (1)
Scots (1)
Scottish Americans (1)
Sculpture (1)
Sculpture, Gothic (1)
Sculpture, Makonde (1)
Silt (1)
Slavery -- Emancipation (1)
Social history (1)
Sociology (1)
Statistics (1)
Statues (1)
Taiping Rebellion (1)
The Letters of Cicero (1)
Theology (1)
Transatlantic slave trade (1)
Tropical medicine (1)
Turing test (1)
USS Fenimore Cooper (1)
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 (1)
Univac computer (1)
University autonomy (1)
University purchasing (1)
University towns (1)
University towns -- Economic aspects (1)
Venona project (1)
Virginia -- James River and Kanawha Canal (1)
War crimes (1)
War photography (1)
Water mills (1)
Weddings (1)
Wine and wine making (1)
Wine industry (1)
World War (1939-1945) (1)
Wrought-iron (1)
biographies (documents) (1)
lists (document genres) (1)
magazines (periodicals) (1)
Content Warning

ARVAS is an aggregator of archival resources. ARVAS does not have control of the descriptive language used in our members’ finding aids. Finding aids may contain historical terms and phrases, reflecting the shared attitudes and values of the community from which they were collected, but are offensive to modern readers. These include demeaning and dehumanizing references to race, ethnicity, and nationality; enslaved or free status; physical or mental ability; religion; sex; and sexual orientation and gender identity. Many institutions and organizations are in the process of reviewing and revising their descriptive language, with the intent to describe materials in more humanizing, inclusive, and harm-reductive ways. As members revise their descriptive language, their changes will eventually be reflected in their ARVAS finding aids

Repository:
George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections & Archives
Published:
2013    
Page: 1