L. C. Dunn Papers
ca.1920-1974
(15.5 linear feet)

B D917

©American Philosophical Society
105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
American Philosophical Society 
 
105 South Fifth Street 
Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
Table of contents Abstract
L.C. Dunn was one of the most significant figures in the emerging field of developmental genetics in the 20th century. His T-locus work with the mouse established a number of important genetic principles, including ideas of gene interaction, the distribution of alleles in wild populations, and the factors that influence fertility. He wrote an important textbook of genetics, Principles of Genetics (1925), in collaboration with Sinnott (and later Dobzhansky); other significant books authored or co-authored by him include Heredity, Race and Society (1946), and A Short History of Genetics (1965). He worked in poultry genetics for eight years at the Agricultural Experiment Station in Storrs, CT, from 1920-1928. The remainder of his career was spent at Columbia University, where he worked with rats, mice, and fruit flies, and proved himself to be an inspiring teacher as well. His interest in international scientific collaboration led him to establish ties to Soviet scientists, and to help relocate refugee scientists during World War II. He remained active in his profession to the end of his life. This collection includes correspondence, reports, notebooks, lectures, and photographs. It is a rich collection, documenting the development of American genetics as well as Dunn's interests in humanitarian efforts and international affairs. There is significant material relating to American-U.S.S.R. contacts, particularly in the files on the American-Soviet Friendship Council and the American-Soviet Science Society. There is much, as well, on the impact of the Lysenko controversy in the U. S. Dunn's inerestt in European scientists can also be seen in the sizable amount of material on the Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars. Material relating to the Kilgore and Magnusson bills for the support of science (predecessors to the NSF) are also in the collection. Of note are data on the following: National Research Council Committee on Experimental Animals and Plants; research on the population study of the Jewish community in Rome; and Columbia University. There is much in the correspondence concerning Drosophila, poultry genetics, and other such topics; Walter Landauer is Dunn's major correspondent.
Background note
L.C. Dunn was a seminal figure in the 20th century emergence of developmental genetics. His T-locus work with the mouse established a number of important genetic principles, including ideas of gene interaction, the distribution of alleles in wild populations, and the factors that influence fertility, and his influence spread, in part, through his widely used genetics textbook, Principles of Genetics (N.Y.: McGraw Hill, 1925), written in collaboration with Edmund Ware Sinnott (and later Theodosius Dobzhansky). Other significant works authored or co-authored by Dunn include Heredity, Race and Society (1946), and A Short History of Genetics (1965).

Leslie Clarence Dunn was born in Buffalo, New York in 1893, the son of Clarence Leslie and Mary Eliza (Booth) Dunn. At Dartmouth College from 1911-1915, he applied himself to the study of zoology under John H. Gerould, with whom he maintained life-long ties. It was through Gerould that he obtained a copy of T.H. Morgan's Heredity and Sex in 1914, a book that significantly influenced the course of Dunn's professional career. Smitten with genetics, after graduating from Dartmouth, Dunn applied to study under Morgan at Columbia University, but was turned away from the already overcrowded fly lab. Instead, he took an assistantship to work with William E. Castle at Harvard, where he was assigned charge of the laboratory for breeding Drosophila. His first significant work was a study of sex-linked genes in Drosophila, but when his results were "scooped" by a student of Morgan, he turned to work on linked genes in mice and rats. He published eight papers on rodent genetics between 1916 and 1921, including his dissertation Linkage in Mice and Rats (1920).

Dunn's graduate work was interrupted by the outbreak of the First World War, during which he was commissioned as a First Lieutenant in the American Expeditionary Force in France. He married Louise Porter, a Smith College graduate, in 1918, with whom he had two sons, Robert Leslie (b.1921) and Stephen Porter (b.1928).

After his release from the Army, Dunn's first professional position was serving as poultry geneticist at the Agricultural Experiment Station in Storrs, Connecticut. His time there (1920-1928) was productive, resulting in over forty papers on poultry genetics as well as the first edition of Principles of Genetics. One of the most widely used genetics textbooks of its time, it went into five editions and was translated into numerous foreign languages.

In 1929, Dunn was tapped by Columbia to fill the post vacated by Morgan, who had departed for the California Institute of Technology. As a full professor in the Zoology Department, Dunn quickly demonstrated his abilities as a teacher as well as a researcher, mentoring Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch and Dorothea Bennett, among many others.

Because life in the heart of New York City precluded large-scale research projects on poultry, Dunn revived his research on rodents and fruit flies, although he continued to keep hand in poultry, working in concert with Walter Landauer at Storrs. Initially, Dunn's mouse work at Columbia focussed on the problem of the inheritance of pigmentation, but his interest in congenital abnormalities soon led him to branch out into a study of lethal and semi-lethal mutants in research animals and compare them to similar conditions in humans. His work on T-locus mutants occupied over forty years and established him as a leader in developmental genetics. His research also verged on population genetics: he studied colonies of mice in both the laboratory and the field, establishing the principle that gametic selection could be even more powerful than natural selection.

Possessed of a strong social conscience honed by association with his fellow Columbians Theodosius Dobzhansky and Franz Boas, Dunn took an active interest in human genetics and its social implications. During the 1920s and 1930s, he spoke out against the misapplication of genetics to justify mistreatment of oppressed groups of people, including blacks and Jews. He established an Institute for the Study of Human Variation at Columbia in the 1950s. Although the Institute was short-lived, several key research projects resulted from it, including Dunn's "The Jewish Community in Rome." The Institute also spawned a number of students who have made important contributions to human genetics, including R. H. Osborne and W. S. Pollitzer.

In 1946, Dunn and Theodosius Dobzhansky collaborated on Heredity, Race, and Society, an immensely important book that cast a genetist's eye on the race problem in America. Taking cues from the work of Ashley Montagu, Franz Boas, and others, the work was an important study of racial variation, but also a major statement on the vexing question coopted by eugenicists of the relationship between nature and nurture. "We come into the world," they wrote, "as a bundle of possibilities bequeathed to us by our parents and other ancestors. Our nurture comes from the world about us. What happens to the nurture that comes in depends, however, on the nature that receives it." Dunn and Dobzhansky concluded that nature and nurture were inseparably intertwined and integral to the shaping of human capacities, rendering the dichotomy between them not only misleading, but fundamentally wrong. In 1951 Dunn was selected to write the UNESCO report Race and Biology, which carried this point further.

Dunn's personal friendships with scientists and their families from around the world often served as a springboard into other activities. During a tour of Europe in 1927, for example, Dunn visited Russia as the guest of A.S. Serebrovsky. As a result of the experience, Dunn became a founder and active member of the American-Soviet Friendship Council and, during World War II, was the president of the American-Soviet Science Society. Deeply disturbed by the rise of Nazism, Dunn became an active member of the Emergency Committee for German Scholars (later called the Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced Scholars) in 1933, helping refugee scholars to relocate in American. Not surprisingly, Dunn's interest in international collaboration brought him under severe criticism. The organizations in which he took part were deemed subversive in the reactionary environment of the late 1940s and 1950s, and Dunn himself was accused of being a Communist.

Dunn's internationalism and interest in Russian science drew him into the Lysenko controversy of the 1950s. The "dictator" of Soviet biology during the Stalinist era and beyond, Lysenko espoused eccentric ideas about agriculture and genetics, and led a wholesale assault on modern genetics theories. The Russian language edition of Dunn's Principles of Genetics had sold more copies in Russian in the 1930s than the English original, however Lysenko banned the book.

Dunn pursued his interest in genetics to the end of his life. When he retired from Columbia in 1962, he was granted emeritus status and set up a "mouse lab" to continue work in collaboration with his former student, Dorothea Bennett. Toward the end of his life he developed an interest in the history of science, writing A Short History of Genetics in 1965. The donation of his papers to the American Philosophical Society helped to establish the APS archives as a premier facility for the study of the history of genetics.

Dunn was a member of the American Philosophical Society (1943), the National Academy of Sciences (1943), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Norwegian Academy of Sciences, and the Italian Academia Pataviana. He was a founder of the Genetics Society of America, its President in 1932, and managing editor of its journal, Genetics, from 1935 to 1940. He was also a member of the American Society of Naturalists, its President in 1960, and editor of its journal The American Naturalist, from 1951 to 1960. He was a member of the American Society of Human Genetics, and its President in 1961. He also was a visiting professor at the Genetics Institute of the University of Oslo, Norway in 1934-35, at the Instituto Superiore de Sanita, Rome, in 1953-54, and at University College, London in 1960-61.


Scope and content
The Dunn Papers are a major resource for the study of the history of genetics during the critical quarter century between 1930 and 1955. From his perch at Columbia, Dunn was well situated to take part in the sweeping changes in the field, and was deeply involved in the debates over the social implications of genetic thought. The collection includes a full suite of correspondence, reports, notebooks, lectures, and photographs documenting the development of American genetics as well as Dunn's interests in humanitarian efforts and international affairs.

The Dunn Papers is rich in material relating to American-Soviet scientific contacts, particularly in the files on the American-Soviet Friendship Council and the American-Soviet Science Society. There is much, as well, on the impact of the Lysenko controversy in the United States, and Dunn's interest in European scientists can also be seen in the sizable quantity of material on the Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars. Material relating to the Kilgore and Magnusson bills for the support of science (predecessors to the National Science Foundation) are also in the collection.

Of note are data on the following: National Research Council Committee on Experimental Animals and Plants; research on the population study of the Jewish community in Rome; and files of material concerning Columbia University, where he spent most of his academic career. There is much in the correspondence concerning Drosophila, poultry genetics, and other such topics. Volumetrically and, to a degree, scientifically, Dunn's major correspondent was Walter Landauer (ca. 1.5 linear feet); other correspondents include A. F. Blakeslee, Franz Boas, Kristine Bonnevie, Calvin B. Bridges, Alexis Carrel, Ernst Caspari, William E. Castle, Alfred E. Cohn, George W. Corner, Gunnar Dahlberg, Charles H. Danforth, Paul R. David, Milislav Demerec, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Boris Ephrussi, Ronald A. Fisher, Irene Geyer-Duszynska, Richard Goldschmidt, Emil J. Gumbel, Sir Julian Huxley, Hugo Iltis, Pavol Ivanyi, Herbert S. Jennings, Victor Jollas, Karl Landsteiner, Richard C. Lewontin, Otto L. Mohr, Tove Mohr, Thomas H. Morgan, Herman J. Muller, Curt Stern, and Edwin B. Wilson.

Series I Correspondence, ca.1920-1974 (26 boxes; 13 linear feet)
Series II Oral history transcripts, 1958-1960 (2 boxes;1.5 linear feet)
Series III Genetics editorial correspondence, 1935-1949 (2 boxes;1.0 linear feet)
Series IV Photographs, 1911-1974 (1 box;0.5 linear feet)

Administrative information
Restrictions
None.

Provenance
Acquired 1967-1974; gift of Dr. L.C. Dunn.

Preferred citation
Cite as: Leslie Clarence Dunn Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Other finding aids
The Dunn Papers are also described in Bentley Glass' A Guide to the Genetics Collections of the American Philosophical Society, which includes a partial classified listing of the contents.

Additional information
Related material
The American Philosophical Society Library's printed materials collection holds copies of most of Dunn's major titles, in addition to many of his minor titles, articles, and pamphlets. For further information about Dunn's published writings held by the APS, please consult the printed materials card catalog.

References
Allen, Garland E., "Leslie Clarence Dunn (November 2, 1893-March 19, 1974)," Folia Mendeliana 10 (Brno: Mendelianum Musei Moraviae, 1975).

Dobzhansky, Theodosius, "Leslie Clarence Dunn: November 2, 1893-March 19, 1974," Biographical Memoirs 49 (Washington: National Academy of Sciences, 1978).

Added entries
Subjects
  • Developmental genetics
  • Drosophila--Genetics
  • Eugenics
  • Evolution (Biology)
  • Geneticists
  • Genetics
  • Heredity
  • Jews--Population studies
  • Jews--Rome
  • Lysenko, Trofim Denisovich, 1898-1976
  • Mice--Genetics
  • Political refugees--United States
  • Popuation biology
  • Poultry--Genetics
  • Science and politics
  • Contributors
  • American-Soviet Friendship Council
  • American-Soviet Science Society
  • Bjerknes, Kristine Bonnevie, 1901-
  • Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954
  • Boas, Franz, 1858-1942
  • Bonnevie, Kristine
  • Bridges, Calvin B., 1889-1938
  • Carrel, Alexis
  • Caspari, Ernst Wolfgang, 1909-
  • Castle, William Ernest, 1867-1962
  • Cohn, Alfred E.
  • Columbia University
  • Corner, George Washington, III, 1889-1981
  • Dahlberg, Gunnar
  • Danforth, Charles H.
  • David, Paul R.
  • Demerec, Milislav, 1895-1966
  • Dobzhansky, Theodosius, 1900-1975
  • Dunn, L. C. (Leslie Clarence), 1893-1974
  • Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars
  • Ephrussi, Boris
  • Fisher, Ronald A.
  • Geyer-Duszynska, Irene
  • Goldschmidt, Richard
  • Gumbel, Emil J.
  • Huxley, Julian, Sir, 1887-1975
  • Iltis, Hugo
  • Ivanyi, Pavol
  • Jennings, Herbert Spencer, 1868-1947
  • Jollas, Victor
  • Landauer, Walter, 1896-
  • Landsteiner, Karl, 1868-1943
  • Lewontin, Richard Charles, 1929-
  • Mohr, Otto, 1886-1967
  • Mohr, Tove,
  • Morgan, Thomas Hunt, 1866-1945
  • Muller, H. J. (Hermann Joseph), 1890-1967
  • National Research Council. Committee on Experimental Animals and Plants
  • Stern, Curt, 1902-1981
  • Wilson, Edwin Bidwell, 1879-1964
  • Genre terms
  • Lectures
  • Notebooks
  • Photoprints
  • Contact information
    American Philosophical Society
    105 South Fifth Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
    [http://www.amphilsoc.org/]

    ©9/2000

      Sponsor:Encoding made possible by a grant by the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation to the Philadelphia Consortium of Special Collections Libraries
    Collection overview

    Series I. Correspondence ca.1920-1974 26 boxes; 13 linear feet

    The scientific and professional correspondence of L.C Dunn provides a remarkable overview of the developments in genetic theory and research from the days of Morgan's fly lab into the molecular revolution of the 1950s and 1960s. Possessed of a sharp historical consciousness, Dunn appears to have been unusually good about retaining correspondence with his colleagues, and the resultant collection

    The Dunn Papers is further valuable as a point of entry into the debates over the social implications of genetic thought in an international context. An activist, Dunn was heavily involved in the American Committee for Displaced German Scholars during the 1930s, the America-Soviet Science Society, and the American-Soviet Friendship Council, among other organizations. His surviving essays and lectures (filed under Dunn) frequently address the social aspects of genetics, whether discussing eugenics, the "race problem," Lysenkoism ("Science Under Socialism," "Soviet Genetics") or broader issues of heredity and environment.

    In 1972 (1972-622ms) and 1974 (1974-454ms) and previously, Walter Landauer donated an extensive body of his correspondence with Dunn, which has been integrated into the collection. This correspondence was restricted during Dunn's lifetime, but is now open to researchers.




    Series II. Oral history interview transcripts 1958-1960 2 boxes; 1.0 linear foot

    Between 1958 and 1960, Dunn was interviewed by Saul Benison as part of the oral history project conducted by Columbia University. The series contains eight bound volumes of unedited typed transcripts with manuscript annotations (by Dunn). The originals are housed at Columbia University.




    Series II. Genetics editorial correspondence 1935-1949 2 boxes; 1 linear foot

    Correspondence regarding the acceptance and publication of manuscripts accrued while Dunn was acting as editor of Genetics. While most of the correspondence is perfunctory and concerned primarily with the editorial details, there is occasional commentary on the work of other geneticists and the value of particular lines of research. Among many other correspondents are A.H. Sturtevant and Barbara McClintock.




    Series IV. Photographs 1911-1974 1 box; 0.5 linear feet

    Miscellaneous photographs, primarily personal, of Dunn, his family and colleagues. Along with a small number of personal photos of Dunn from his childhood through old age, there are two outstanding photo albums. The first of these was kept by Dunn during his days as a student at Dartmouth (1911-1915), and is a fine example of the undergraduate genre, replete with images of cavorting students, football games, the winter carnival, the campus and his friends. There are several images of Dunn dressed as a woman (presumably as a stunt) and other of Dunn's friends in blackface.

    The album from the Symposium of Quantitative Biology held at Cold Spring Harbor during the Summer, 1941, includes candid snapshots of a number of important geneticists and evolutionary biologists spanning the generations from T.S. Painter and Charles Davenport (only one year before his death) to Salvador Luria and Max Delbruck.



    Detailed inventory

    Correspondence ca.1920-1974
    Box 1

    Adelman, Adrien

    Box 1

    Alfert, Max

    Box 1

    Altenbert, Edgar

    Box 1

    American Anthropologist - Notes

    Box 1

    American Association of Scientific Workers

    Box 1

    Melba Phillips in re: arrest of Ralph Spitzer


    American Cancer Society

    Box 1

    American Civil Liberties Union

    Box 1

    American Committee for Democracy and Intellectual Freedom

    Box 1

    American Committee for Displaced German Scholars

    Box 1

    Bagster-Collins, E.W.
    Bluhm, Agnes
    Burns, Arthur R.
    Blakeslee, A.F.
    Braun, Werner
    Crouch, Mary
    Clarke, Hans T.
    Danforth, C.H.
    Dowd, Agnes M.
    Duggan, Stephen P.
    Emerson, R.A.
    Farrand, Livingston
    Fuchs
    Goldschmidt, Richard
    Gregg, Allan
    Griswold, Lura
    Grueneberg, Hans
    Gruger, Franz
    Gudernatsch, F.
    Harrison, Ross G.
    Hayden, Philip M.
    Heichelheim, Fritz
    Hirsch
    Jacobson, Werner
    Kallius
    Kühn, A.
    Landauer, Walter
    Lydenberg, Harry M.
    McClintoch, Barbara
    Macmillan, Kerr D.
    Mitchell, Wesley C.
    MC6llendorff, Prof. von
    Moore, Carl R.
    Murrow, Edward R.
    Perlsee, Hanne
    Potter, Russell
    Schneebeli, Max H.
    Shull, A. Franklin
    Snyder, Laurence H.
    Spemann, H.
    Stern, Curt
    StC6hr,
    Stout, A.B.
    Timofeeff-Ressovsky, N.W.
    Ubisch, Gerda von
    Weaver, Warren
    Westermann, William
    Whiting, P.W.
    Wilbur, Ray Lyman
    Willier, B.H.
    Wright, Sewall



    American Council of Learned Societies

    Box 1

    Grove, Mortimer


    American Genetic Association

    Box 1

    American Naturalist

    Box 1

    American Philosophical Society Library

    Box 1

    Avery, Roy C.
    Bell, Whitfield Jenks, Jr.
    Bodine, J.H.
    Bridenbaugh, Carl
    Caspari, Ernst
    Cleland, Ralph E.
    Cole, Leon J.
    Coleman, William
    Corner, George W.
    Demerec, Milislav
    Duane, Morris
    Fuller, William A.
    Glass, H. Bentley
    Heyn, Anton N.J.
    Hutt, F.B.
    Irwin, M.R.
    Landauer, Walter
    Lederberg, Joshua
    Lerner, I. Michael
    Marvanova, Ludmila
    Metzdorf, Robert
    Neel, James V.
    Shryock, Richard Harrison
    Sonnenborn, T.M.
    Sturtevant, A.H.
    Wagner, R.P.
    Wright, Sewall


    American Philosophical Society Seminar

    Box 1

    American Review of Soviet Medicine

    Box 1

    Heiman, Jacob


    American Review on the Society

    Box 1

    Union (Yearbook)


    American Russian Institute

    Box 1

    Collins, Henry H. Jr.


    American Society of Human Genetics

    Box 1

    American Society of Naturalists

    Box 1

    Bodine, J.H.
    Cattell, Jaques
    Cole, Leon J.


    American-Soviet Friendship Council

    Box 1

    Executive Board Minutes
    Science Committee Minutes


    American-Soviet Science Society

    Box 2

    Bara, Walter A.
    Chertak, Dorothy
    Dresden, Arnold
    Goussev, Anatole
    Harmer, Walter J.
    Harris, Helen
    Hubbard, C.J.
    Jacobs, Jane
    Juhn, Mary
    Kaempffert, Waldemar
    Lamont, Corliss
    Langmuir, Irving
    Lefschetz, A.
    Leslie, Robert L.
    Lessells, John M.
    MacInnes, D.A.
    Moore, Marston
    Morford, Richard
    Munsell, Alex
    Muller, H.J.
    Niederhauser, John S.
    Novick, S.
    Oakes, Mervin E.
    Pincus, J.W.
    Snyder, L.H.
    Stanley, W.M.
    Thompson, James S.
    Thomson, Charles A.
    Vavilov, Sergei
    Waksman, Selman A.
    Zavadovsky, M.M.
    Zlotowski, Ignance


    Amos, D. Bernard

    Box 2

    Gruneberg, H.


    Apgar, Virginia

    Box 2

    Atomic Energy Commission

    Box 2

    Bauer, Robert H.
    Bender, Michael A.
    Burlingame, Anson
    Claus, Walter D.
    Columbia University
    Dinitz, Ira
    Edington, Charles W.
    Goodell, Warren F.
    Goodell, Warren F. Jr.
    Halford, R.S.
    Helmbrecht, Arthur
    Judd, Burke H.
    Laughnan, John R.
    Lewis, James
    MacPherson, George S.
    Martin, C. Paul
    Meyer, Calvin B.
    Meyers, Sheldon
    Miller, Harold N.
    Nelson, Henry K.
    Nevis Biological Station
    Parker, Dean R.
    Potter, Harmon S.
    Schultz, Vincent
    Touchberry, Robert W.
    Underhill, Helen F.
    Walsh, Harry R.
    Yerzley, T.W.


    Autobiographical notes

    Box 2

    Avery, Oswald T.

    Box 2

    Ballard, W.W.

    Box 3

    Baregozzi

    Box 3

    Battghia

    Box 3

    Beadle, George W.

    Box 3

    Behre, Charles H.

    Box 3

    Bell, Whitfield J. Jr.

    Box 3

    Berge, S.

    Box 3

    Bermies, Gert

    Box 3

    Bernstein, Felix

    Box 3

    Emergengy Comm. in Aid of Displaced Foreign Scholars Report
    Pegram, George B.


    Bertalanffy, L. von

    Box 3

    Biographical Memoirs (reprints)

    Box 3

    Bissonnette, T. Hume

    Box 3

    Blakeslee, Albert F.

    Box 3

    Blanco, Ramon

    Box 3

    Bleibtrev, Hermann K. "The Impact of Urbanization on Human Evolution" (with Dunn, L.C.) Rome (Jewish Community)

    Box 3

    Block, Robert

    Box 3

    Blood Groups - Jews

    Box 3

    Curri, A.N.


    Blood Study (see also: Dunn. Rome)

    Box 3

    Ceppellini, Ruggerio
    Levine, Philip
    Loghem, J.J. Van


    Bluhm, Agnes

    Box 3

    Blyson, Doris

    Box 3

    Boas, Franz

    Box 3

    Bohn, W.E.

    Box 3

    Bonnevie, Kristine

    Box 3

    Harrison, R.G.
    Hayden, P.M.
    McGregor, J.H.
    Nicholas, J.S.
    Rinid, Güdrün


    Book Reviews: Future of Man, Error and Deception in Science

    Box 3

    Booth, Kate H.

    Box 3

    Booth, Mary E.

    Box 3

    Bowditch, M.

    Box 3

    Bowen, Wilbor A.

    Box 3

    Braun, Werner

    Box 3

    Braverman, Irwin

    Box 3

    Brecher, Leonore

    Box 3

    Bridges, Calvin B. 1939
    Box 3

    Cook, R.C.
    Demerec, Milislav
    Dobszhansky
    Emerson, R.E.
    Gilbert, W.M.
    McCastline, William H.
    Morgan, T.H.
    Potter, Russell


    Briggs, L. Cabot

    Box 3

    British Scientists 1940
    Box 3

    Berle, A.A.
    Blakeslee, A.F.
    Cohn, Alfred
    Forbes, William H.
    Huxley, Julian
    Johnson, Alvin
    Laundauer, Walter
    Lothian, Lord
    Miller, Perrie
    Mitchell, Wesley C.
    Morgan, Thomas H.
    Pappenheimer, Alwin M.
    Pilley, John
    Shapley, Harlow
    Woodruff, L.L.


    Bronk, Detlev W.

    Box 3

    Buck,

    Box 3

    Buffalo Museum of Science

    Box 3

    Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

    Box 3

    Hollaender, Alexander
    Lapp, Ralph E.
    Muller, H.J.


    Bush, Vannevar

    Box 3

    Butler, Nicholas Murray

    Box 3

    Byers, Vincent G.

    Box 3

    Calkins, Gary N.

    Box 3

    Calkins, Helen R.

    Box 3

    Care

    Box 3

    Mayers, Francis X.


    Carlson, Elof Axel

    Box 3

    Carnegie Committee 1929-39
    Box 3

    Davenport, Charles B.
    Kidder, A.V.
    Laughlin, H.H.
    Merriam, John C.


    Carnochan, Fred C.

    Box 3

    Carrel, Alexis

    Box 3

    Carter, T.C.

    Box 3

    Caspari, Ernst

    Box 4

    AAAS Grants Comm.
    Hamburger, Victor
    Kühn, A.
    Kunkel, B.W.
    Pearl, Raymond


    Castle, E.H.

    Box 4

    Castle, Edward S.

    Box 4

    Castle, William E.

    Box 4

    Cleland, R.E.
    Cuenot, Lucien
    Curtis, Marjorie R.


    Cattell, J. McK.

    Box 4

    Chalkley, Lyman

    Box 4

    Chambers, Robert

    Box 4

    Charles, Donald Randolph

    Box 4

    Cooper, Kenneth


    Charleston, SC - Clinic Population.

    Box 4

    Blood Typing Record and Physical Data on Males Only
    Pollitzer, William


    Charleston, SC - Families

    Box 4

    Charleston, SC - Genetics Materials

    Box 4

    Smythe, C.M.


    Charleston, SC - Misc.

    Box 4

    Charleston, SC - Protocols

    Box 4

    Charleston, SC - Thalassemia-Sickle Cell, Records

    Box 4

    Cheng, Dorothy Wei

    Box 4

    Chesley, Paul RESTRICTED (Permission of L.C.D. or A.P.S. librarian necessary)

    Box 4

    Churchman, C. West

    Box 4

    Clarke, H.T.

    Box 4

    Cleland, Ralph E.

    Box 4

    Clifford, Richard C.

    Box 4

    Coalbin Press

    Box 4

    Codington, John F.

    Box 4

    Coe, W.R.

    Box 4

    Cohn, Alfred E.

    Box 4

    Cole, L.J.

    Box 4

    Columbia University

    Box 4

    Columbia University - Columbia Defense Committee. 1940-41
    Box 5

    Barker, J.W.
    Fackenthal, Frank D.
    Grant, E.J.
    Rautenstrauch, Walter


    Columbia University - Convocations 1943
    Box 5

    Ayres, Harry Morgan
    Butler, Nicholas M.
    Chamberlain, Joseph P.
    Davis, Malcolm W.
    Fackenthal, Frank D.
    Gilroy, Katherine M.
    Gromyko, Andrei A.
    Kandel, Isaac L.
    Sayre, E.B.
    Shotwell, James T.
    Smith, Mariana


    Columbia University - Council for Research in Social Sciences

    Box 5

    Columbia University - Dean of Science Faculty

    Box 5

    Detwiller, S.R.
    Dodge, M. Haretey
    Hayden, Philip M.
    McBain, Howard Lee
    Neare, Louise
    Pegram, George B.
    Woodbridge, F.D.
    Woodbridge, F.J.E.


    Columbia University - Department of Zoology

    Box 5

    Columbia University - Fackenthal, F.D. 1942
    Box 5

    Butler, Nicholas Murray
    Fermi, Enrico
    Hogness, T.R.
    Jessup, P.C.
    Lehmann-Haupt, Helmut
    Pegram, George B.
    Tomarkin, L.W.
    Vrey, Harold C.
    Woodbridge, F.J.E.


    Columbia University - Faculty Fellowship Fund

    Box 5

    Baekeland, L.H.
    Baron, Salo
    Boas, Franz
    Burns, Arthur R.
    Burns, E.M.
    Chamberlain, Joseph P.
    Clark, Jane P.
    Clarke, H.P.
    Coffin, Henry S.
    Collins, Baxter
    Coss, John C.
    Dewey, John
    Dodge, M. Hantey
    Evans, Austin P.
    Fackenthal, Frank D.
    Fite, E.B.
    Frisch, Karl von
    Gildersleeve, Virginia C.
    Greeg, Alan
    Hagemeister, Paula
    Kandel, I.L.
    Kiewe, Paul
    LaMer, Victor K.
    Meek, Lois Hayden
    Miller, C.P.
    Mitchell, Wesley C.
    Montague, W.P.
    Murphy, Gardner
    Murrow, E.R.
    Neumann, Gerhardt
    Pegram, George B.
    Potter, Russell
    Reed, Mary M.
    Reichard, Gladys A.
    Ritt, J.F.
    Segrè, Angelo
    Simba, Robert
    Smith, Young B.
    Stevens, David H.
    Stewart, Gertrude D.
    Sulzberger, Marion B.
    Weaver, Warren
    Wechsler, Albert L.
    Westermann, W.L.


    Columbia University - Genetics Lab

    Box 5

    Butler, Nicholas Murray
    Fackenthal, Frank D.
    Weaver, Warren


    Columbia University - Library Planning Committee

    Box 5

    Columbia University - Queries

    Box 5

    Columbia University - Suggested recommendations of the committee on program

    Box 5

    Columbia University - Teachers College - George S. Counts

    Box 5

    Community Service Society of New York

    Box 5

    Conant, J.B.

    Box 5

    Condon, Edward U

    Box 5

    Condon Case Material

    Box 5

    Conklin, Edwin G

    Box 5

    Connecticut, University of

    Box 5

    Connecticut Agricultural College Convocation, Jan. 20, 1925 -
    Box 5

    Connecticut Agricultural Exp. Station and W.L. Slate

    Box 5

    Wallace, Henry A.


    Connell, Frank H.

    Box 5

    Conversation [Radio Program]

    Box 5

    Cook, Robert C.

    Box 5

    Journal of Heredity


    Corner, George Washington

    Box 5

    Dobzhansky, T.


    Cowley, Malcolm.
    to L. C. Dunn
    September 17, 1937
    Box 5

    Coyne, Marshall A.

    Box 5

    Crew, F.A.E.

    Box 5

    Cumming, C.N. Wentworth

    Box 5

    Curry, Viola A.

    Box 5

    Dahlberg, Gunnar.
    Correspondence
    1945-1955 14 items Box 5

    Dahlberg, Gandhi.
    1 letter to L. C. Dunn
    1949


    Dahlberg, Gunnar.
    16 letters to and from L. C. Dunn




    Dahlberg, Ragna.
    to L. C. Dunn
    n.d


    Dahlberg, Stina.
    32 letters to L. C. Dunn




    Photographs



    Dalton, H. Clark

    Box 5

    D'Ancona, Umberto

    Box 5

    Danforth, Charles Haskell.
    1 letter to L. C. Dunn
    September 20, 1937
    Box 5

    Daniel, J.F.

    Box 5

    Daniel, Janet

    Box 5

    David, Edward E., Jr.

    Box 5

    David, Paul R. .
    8 letters to and from L. C. Dunn
    1935-1936
    Box 5

    Davidson, Jo

    Box 5

    Davis, Brodley M.

    Box 5

    Davis, Donald E.

    Box 5

    Davis, Herbert

    Box 5

    Deacon, Warren

    Box 6

    Dean, Geoffrey

    Box 6

    Dellinger, S.C.

    Box 6

    Demerec, Milislav

    Box 6

    Dempster, Everett R.

    Box 6

    Deschin, Mrs. Jacob

    Box 6

    Detlefsen, John A.

    Box 6

    Detwiler, J.D.

    Box 6

    Detwiler, Samuel R.

    Box 6

    DiCapua, Guiuseppina

    Box 6

    Dobrovolskaia-Zavadskaia, N.

    Box 6

    Dobzhansky, Theodosius

    Box 6

    Albareda, Jose M.
    Amerika
    Angel, J. Lawrence
    Atlantic Monthly
    Babcock, F.B.
    Baitsell, George A.
    Barigozzi, C.
    Beltran, Enrique
    Birdsell, Joseph B.
    Bodenstein, D.
    Boutell, Clip
    Brink, R.A.
    Briquet, Raul Jr.
    Buchenau, Tyler
    Buchholz, J.T.
    Bureau of American Ethnology
    Burkhardt, Elizabeth Z.
    Cardiff, Ira D.
    Cattell, Jaques
    Cheveskin, Howard
    Churchman, C. West
    Cleland, Ralph E.
    Collazo, Ana M. Diaz
    College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York
    Columbia University Press
    Cooney, Tim
    Dartmouth Medical School
    David, Lore R.
    Davis, Kingsley
    Deevey, G.S.
    Dempster, Everett R.
    Dickinson, Berton C.
    Duggan, Stephen
    Dunn, L.C.
    Emerson, A.E.
    Fejos, Paul
    Feldman, M.
    Fisher, Agnes C.
    Flanagan, Dennis
    Forbes, James
    Frankley, Alexander
    Glass, Bentley
    Goldschmidt, Elizabeth
    Goodale, H.D.
    Haas, Otto H.
    Hamburger, Viktor
    Happ, George B.
    Harrar, J.G.
    Henry, Harold
    Herzenberg, Leonard A.
    Howe, Lt. Branch Jr.
    Johnson, Albert G.
    Journal of Heredity
    Journal of the History of Medicine
    Kaempffert, Waldemar
    Keener, Mrs. John D.
    Kerr, Warwick E.
    Krout, John A.
    Landgraf, John L.
    Leonard, Warren H.
    Levitan, Max
    Mendes, Luiz T.
    Moody, Paul A.
    Moriwaki, Daigoro
    Muntzing, Arne
    Negus, Sidney S.
    New American Library
    Novaes, Fernando C.
    Park, Thomas
    Parkinson, N.A.
    Patrick, Ruth
    Pegram, George B.
    Persons, Stow
    Plough, H.H.
    Poulson, D.F.
    Proffitt, Charles G.
    Rath, Stephen
    Reheis, George C.
    Ronald Press Company
    Scheinfeld, Amram
    Scientific Monthly
    Serra, J.A.
    Shipman, Margaret
    Simpson, Mrs. Alan
    Singleton, W.R.
    Slatis, Herman M.
    Stebbins, G. Ledyard Jr.
    Stetten, DeWitt
    Stolper, Toni
    Stone, Wilson
    Titterington, E.J.G.
    Uffner, Melville W.
    University of North Carolina
    Wald, George
    Wanscher, J.H.
    Wastock, Irene
    Weeks, Marion E.
    Weinstock, Herbert
    Weiss, Joan M.
    Wilson, E.B.
    Zelle, Max R.
    Zuleta, Julian De


    Dodge, B.O.

    Box 6

    Dollard, Charles

    Box 6

    Dougherty, Ellsworth C.

    Box 6

    Dryden, Hugh L.

    Box 6

    Castle, W.E.


    Dunbar, Carl O.

    Box 6

    Dunn, A.M.

    Box 6

    Dunn, Harriet A.

    Box 6

    photos


    Dunn, L. C..
    Abnormal Hemoglobins,...


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    The American Naturalist in American Biology


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Autobiographical Data


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Birthday Greetings


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Book of Wednesdays


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Developmental Genetics


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Eugenics Notebook


    Box 6

    Dunn, L. C..
    Genes


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Genetic Lecture Notes


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Genetics in Historical Perspective


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Genetics in the 20th C.


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Genetics of the Domestic Fowl


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Growth of Genetics


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Hecht, Selig


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Heredity


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Heredity and Environment


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Heredity and the Community


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Heredity and the Study of Small Communities


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Human variation, a biologist's view


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Aims of Genetics


    Box 7

    Aub, Joseph C.
    Levine, Philip R.


    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Alcuni Problemi Moderni Intorno All'Eredita


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Developmental and Population Genetics of a Complex Locus


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Evolutionary Forces Acting on Populations of Wild House Mice


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Heredity and Development


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Heredity and Politics


    Box 7

    Hirsch, Felix E.
    Myers, Rowland M.


    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Human Variation, A Biologist's View


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: In Honor of Albert F. Blakeslee


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Lethal Genes and Factors Affecting their Distribution in Populations


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: Maintenance of Polymorphism


    Box 7

    Pollitzer, William
    Robinson, H.F.
    Whittinghill, Maurice


    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: The Origins of Biological Variety as Seen in the Laboratory Mouse


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: University of Rochester Meeting,
    March 4, 1959
    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Lecture: [Used to teach Gen. Biology]


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Mendel, Gregor Johann


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notebook for Genetics


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notebook for Lectures


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notebook "Hist. 1"


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notebook (Rome)


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notes


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Notes: Cytology and Embryology


    Box 7

    Dunn, L. C..
    Passport Correspondence


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Permissions to Publish


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Physiological Genetics


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Poetry and Translations


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Race and Biology


    Box 8

    Metraux, Alfred


    Dunn, L. C..
    Report to the President of the University of Conn.


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community)


    Box 8

    Anti, Carlo
    Canaperia, Giovanni A.
    Citone, Angelo
    D'Ancona, Umberto
    Fajrajzen, Stefano
    Figa-Talamanca, Mario
    Ford Foundation
    Gini, Corrado
    Goldschmidt, Elizabeth
    Gurevitch, J.
    Levi, Giuseppe
    Levine, Philip
    Livi, Livio
    Luria, S.E.
    Montalenti, G.
    Mourant, Arthur E.
    Orr, Boyd
    Ravenna, Signora
    Roth, Cecil
    Sachs, Leo
    Sanghvi, L.D.
    Seta, Angiolino B. della
    Sheldon, William
    Talamanca


    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community) - Blood Groups (see also: Blood Study)


    Box 8

    Dreyfuss, F.
    Gurevitch, J.


    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community) - Gene Frequencies in Families


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community)- A Genetical Study...


    Box 8

    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community) - Manuscript


    Box 9

    Dunn, L. C..
    Rome (Jewish Community) - Notes


    Box 9

    Dunn, L. C..
    Science and the Future of Society


    Box 9

    Dunn, L. C..
    Science Under Socialism


    Box 9

    Dunn, L. C..
    Sheets from Army Notebook


    Box 9

    Dunn, L. C..
    Soviet Genetics