IUPUI (Campus)
Organization
Found in 10 Collections and/or Records:
Center for Teaching and Learning Records
Unprocessed — Box: 1
Identifier: UA110 A2019/20-038
Found in:
University Archives
Department of Sociology Records, 1973-1998
Collection
Identifier: UA014
Goals and Objective Committee Records
Collection
Identifier: UA088
Scope and Contents
Records include minutes, correspondence, reports, publications, and other materials.
Herron School of Art and Design Records
Unprocessed — Box: 1
Identifier: A2021/22-010-UA026
Found in:
University Archives
Jessie Groves Photographs and Oral History
Collection
Identifier: MSS058
Scope and Contents
From the beginning of her career in Indianapolis Jessie Groves took candid photographs of nurses, doctors, and the campus, compiling these in a photo album (or perhaps albums). These photographs arrived in the IUPUI University Archives sometime in the 1970s. In 1977 University Archivist Jeannette Matthew interviewed Jessie, and that tape is also a part of the Archives collections. At some point the album was dismantled and the photographs were integrated into the rest of the university photo...
Office of Information Management and Institutional Research Records
Collection
Identifier: UA086
Scope and Contents
Records include reports and other materials.
Office of the Chancellor Records
Unprocessed
Identifier: A2017/18-018 UA041
Found in:
University Archives
Ralph D. Gray History of IUPUI Papers
Collection
Identifier: UA091
School of Education Records
Collection
Identifier: UA034
Scope and Contents
The records include correspondence, minutes, reports, accreditation files, program records, publications, merger documents, Teacher Corps records, Policy Council records, and other records of the school.
Found in:
University Archives
/
School of Education Records
School of Medicine Records
Collection
Identifier: UA073
Overview
The Indiana University School of Medicine emerged from a number of private, proprietary medical schools that existed in Indianapolis in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. The most important of these private medical schools were the Medical College of Indiana and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, both of which operated in Indianapolis. In the first decade of the twentieth century efforts began to try to merge these private schools under the state universities then in Indiana,...
Found in:
University Archives
/
School of Medicine Records