Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/008712546/catalog> ?p ?o. }
- catalog abstract "The Tozzer Papers are organized in two major records groups: The Alfred Marston Tozzer Papers (AMT) and the Margaret Castle Tozzer (MCT) Papers. The material reveals the close connections between AMT's personal and professional lives and documents his extensive contacts in the academic community and the Boston society in which he lived. Margaret's papers document both her husband's professional work and her family's contributions to Boston's art and anthropology communities.".
- catalog alternative "Alexandria gazette (Alexandria, Va. : 1834)".
- catalog alternative "American anthropologist.".
- catalog alternative "Boston herald (Boston, Mass. : 1919)".
- catalog alternative "Gardner news (Gardner, Mass.)".
- catalog alternative "Harvard University gazette.".
- catalog contributor b12207143.
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- catalog contributor b12207206.
- catalog coverage "California.".
- catalog coverage "Central America.".
- catalog coverage "Chichén Itzá Site (Mexico)".
- catalog coverage "Guatemala.".
- catalog coverage "Honolulu (Hawaii)".
- catalog coverage "Lynn (Mass.)".
- catalog coverage "Mexico.".
- catalog coverage "New Mexico.".
- catalog coverage "Tikal Site (Guatemala)".
- catalog date "1900".
- catalog description "After World War II Tozzer returned to Harvard where he spend the rest of his professional life. He remained professionally active after his retirement, and lectured frequently. He was also a member of the Academic Board and became Secretary and Trustee of Radcliffe College in 1932. Tozzer's many devoted students went on to become pioneers in anthropology and his colleagues held him in high esteem. When the Peabody Museum's library was moved to a new facility in 1974, it was dedicated Tozzer Library in honor of his devotion to its collections and his enormous contribution to both Harvard and the field of anthropology in general.".
- catalog description "Alfred Marston Tozzer was born in Lynn, MA on July 4, 1877 to Samuel Clarence Tozzer, and Caroline Blanchard (Marston) Tozzer. He grew up in Lynn and after graduating from high school attended Harvard College where he received the A.B. in 1900, the A.M. in 1901 and the Ph.D. in 1904, all three degrees in anthropology. On April 10, 1913 he married Margaret Tenney Castle of Honolulu, Hawaii in New York. They had two daughters. The elder, Joanne, died young. The other, now Joan Tozzer Cave grew up to stay in Cambridge.".
- catalog description "Alfred Tozzer died beloved in his personal and professional communities on October 5, 1954.".
- catalog description "Cite as: Tozzer, Alfred Marston (1877-1954), Papers 1900-1980, 997-5 Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.".
- catalog description "Electronic finding aid available http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FMUS.PEAB:pea00015".
- catalog description "From 1909-1910, Tozzer lead a Peabody Museum expedition to Guatemala. During this expedition, he studied the ruins of Tikal and Nakum. He published material on these sites in 1911 and 1913. Tozzer's cross-disciplinary training under F.W. Putnam allowed Tozzer to move easily between archaeology and social anthropology. He served as the Director of the International School of Archeology in Mexico City in 1914 and as a result, was in Vera Cruz during the U.S. naval bombardment and its 6-month occupation by the United States Marine Corps.".
- catalog description "The Tozzer Papers are organized in two major records groups: The Alfred Marston Tozzer Papers (AMT) and the Margaret Castle Tozzer (MCT) Papers. The material reveals the close connections between AMT's personal and professional lives and documents his extensive contacts in the academic community and the Boston society in which he lived. Margaret's papers document both her husband's professional work and her family's contributions to Boston's art and anthropology communities.".
- catalog description "Tozzer conducted his initial anthropological fieldwork in California and New Mexico among the Wintun and Navajo nations during his undergraduate summer in 1900 and 1901, focusing on linguistics. From 1902 to 1905 he held American Fellowship of the Archaeological Institute of America. This enabled Tozzer to spend four winters living with and studying the Lacandones of Mexico and Central America. He won their confidence and was admitted to their religious ceremonies. He published the results of his field work in A Comparative Study of the Mayas and Lacandones (1907).".
- catalog description "Unpublished FA available in repository and in electronic form.".
- catalog extent "2.5 linear feet (5 boxes)".
- catalog issued "1900".
- catalog language "Other languages.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog spatial "California.".
- catalog spatial "Central America.".
- catalog spatial "Chichén Itzá Site (Mexico)".
- catalog spatial "Guatemala.".
- catalog spatial "Honolulu (Hawaii)".
- catalog spatial "Lynn (Mass.)".
- catalog spatial "Mexico.".