North Bennet Street School ephemera collection

Collection Type

  • Ephemera

Date

1907-1951, undated

Location Note

85M-01-314-Z-F-0207

GUSN

GUSN-369565

Description

The North Bennet Street School ephemera collection consists of 86 pieces of ephemera, including but not limited to advertisements, booklets, design drawings, pamphlets, price lists, and trade catalogues. The materials were compiled by the North Bennet Street Industrial School in Boston, Mass., and span the first half of the 20th century. The majority of the ephemera centers on trades and arts that were part of the North Bennet Street School curriculum over the decades. These materials were removed from a larger collection of North Bennet Street School records that were donated to the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University in the 1960s and 1970s. During processing, many items were removed from the collection and donated to other repositories; EP011 contains materials received by the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England) from the Schlesinger Library in 1980. The reason for the removal and donation of these specific items is unknown.

Details

Descriptive Terms

trade catalogs
price lists
pamphlets
booklets
advertisements
pottery (object genre)
ceramics (objects)
jewelry making
advertising
printing (process)
concrete
decorative arts
fine arts
metalwork
furnishings (artifacts)
appliances
finance
design drawings
textiles
outdoor sculpture
vocational schools (institutions)
ephemera
printed ephemera

Physical Descrption

86 items; 13 folders (1 legal-size document case)

Finding Aid Info

An electronic finding aid is available through Historic New England’s Collections Access Portal. A paper finding aid is available in the Library & Archives.

Custodial History

The records of the North Bennet Street Industrial School were given to the Schlesinger Library by the School in 1968 and 1976. Following the processing of the collection, many items were separated, deaccessioned, and donated to other repositories. In 1980, the Schlesinger donated a selection of "Pamphlets, etc. re: interior decoration" to the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England); these materials now make up EP011.

Collection Code

EP011

Collection Name

North Bennet Street School ephemera collection

Date of Acquisition

1980

Reference Code

EP011

Abstract

Collection of ephemera including advertisements, booklets, design drawings, pamphlets, price lists, and trade catalogues compiled by the North Bennet Street Industrial School in Boston, Mass. spanning the first half of the 20th century.

Acqusition Type

Gift

Credit Line

Gift of Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, 1980.

Places

Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts)

Record Details

Originator

North Bennet Street Industrial School (Boston, Mass.) (Compiler)

Material Type

ephemera
printed ephemera

Other Organizations

North Bennet Street Industrial School (Boston, Mass.)

Restrictions

This collection is available for research.

Conservation Note

The collection was put in folders and rehoused. Several delicate items were put in protective sleeves.

Description Level

Collection

Location Note

85M-01-314-Z-F-0207

Accruals Note

Accruals are not expected.

Language Note

Materials are entirely in English.

Preferred Citation

Item identification. Folder #. North Bennet Street School ephemera collection (EP011). Historic New England, Library & Archives.

Processing Information

Sophia Cos, Assistant Archivist, April 2025.

Rules and Conventions

2nd-edition DACS compliant

Related Items

Ephemera collection

Historical/Biographical Note

Historical/Biographical Note

The North Bennet Street Industrial School (NBSIS) was founded in Boston, Mass., in 1881 in efforts by various local charities seeking to provide employment training and social services for the growing immigrant population in Boston’s North End neighborhood. Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, the School continued to grow and expand its services; courses were offered to adults and children alike, including job skills and vocational training, home economics, and language classes. The School also provided a library and gymnasium, organized social outings, and childcare services. Adapting to the changing needs of the community throughout the 20th century, the North Bennet Street Industrial School ran programs to retrain soldiers returning from both World Wars, strengthened its courses in traditional trades and crafts, and partnered with many local Boston businesses to provide opportunities to its students. By the 1980s, the bulk of the School’s social services programs were phased out or transferred to similar public entities as well as the North End Union. It was at this time that the School removed the word "Industrial" from its name, emphasizing the School’s evolving focus on training in traditional fine crafts. The North Bennet Street School received accreditation from the National Association of Trade and Technical Schools in 1983 and continues to be a leader in community-based educational and vocational services.

Sources


North Bennet Street School (n.d.). Our History. https://nbss.edu/about/history/\n
Records of the North Bennet Street Industrial School, 1880-1973: A Finding Aid. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University. https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch00829/catalog. Accessed April 21, 2025.

Material in Other Collections

Material in Other Collections

North Bennet Street Industrial School Records, 1880-1973; MC 269. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.
Saturday Evening Girls Records, 1915-1991; MC 1081. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.

Arrangement

Arrangement

The collection is arranged in folders alphabetically by topic.

Reparative Language in Collections Records

Historic New England is committed to implementing reparative language description for existing collections and creating respectful and inclusive language description for new collections. If you encounter language in Historic England's Collections Access Portal that is harmful or offensive, or you find materials that would benefit from a content warning, please contact info@historicnewengland.org.

Loading Loading...