Business & Industry
Business & Industry Collections represent the diverse nature of the state’s industries, ranging from textile mills to complex technology. Many of... Show moreBusiness & Industry Collections represent the diverse nature of the state’s industries, ranging from textile mills to complex technology. Many of the companies had their start as family-owned and operated small businesses and evolved into nationally known producers of such products as brass, hardware, machine tools, cutlery, clocks and watches, silk and other textiles, and and the networks that made them driving forces in the national economy. The collections are composed of a wide variety of materials including administrative and financial records, photographs, maps and drawings, and artwork and realia. Included in these materials are the historical records of southern New England railroads in general and the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad in particular. Show less
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Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11134/20002:BusInd
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- Brass industry and trade
- Clocks and watches
- Floods
- Railroad accidents
- Street-railroads
- Trolley cars
- World War (1939-1945)
- Arbitration, Industrial
- Banks and banking
- Biography
- Clock and watch industry
- Clothing trade
- Commerce
- Communication and traffic
- Connecticut--Rockville
- Copper industry and trade
- Copper mines and mining
- Corporate libraries
- Corporations
- Cutlery trade
- Electric wire and cable industry
- Employees
- Executives
- Factories
- Flood damage
- Hardware industry
- History
- Hurricanes
- Hygiene products
- Industrial Accidents
- Industrial Mobilization
- Industrial relations
- Industries
- Labor Unions
- Labor laws and legislation--U.S. states
- Land companies
- Locks and keys
- Machinery
- Manufactures
- Men's toiletries
- Photographers
- Railfans
- Railroad cars
- Railroad power-plants
- Railroads -- Electrification
- Railroads--Electrification
- Real estate business
- Real property
- Silk industry
- Silk industry--Employees
- Small business
- Smelting
- Soap trade
- Steam locomotives
- Subsidiary corporations
- Suffrage
- Taxation
- Telephone
- Telephone companies
- Textile fabrics
- Thermos bottles
- Toilet preparations industry
- Tools
- Transportation
- Warehouses
- Wharves
- Women chief executive officers
- Women's rights
- Wool industry
- World War (1914-1918)
- Cos Cob (inhabited place)
- Greenwich (inhabited place)
- Manchester (inhabited place)
- Mansfield (Mass. : Town)
- Massachusetts (state)
- New Britain (inhabited place)
- New York (State)
- Norwich (inhabited place)
- Rhode Island (state)
- Salisbury (inhabited place)
- Somers (inhabited place)
- Stamford (inhabited place)
- Stonington (inhabited place)
- Gunn, Charles B.
- Heald, Bruce K.
- Holcombe, Seth P.
- Klar, James S.
- LaMay, Robert A.
- Makowsky, Fred Otto
- Swanberg, J. W. (Jack W.), 1939-
- Wall, James W.
- Hartford Electric Light Company
- Hartford National Corporation
- New Britain Machine Company
- New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company
- New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad
- Quinebaug Company
- Sargent and Company (New Haven, Conn.)
- Southern New England Telephone Company
- Thermos Company Employees
- University of Connecticut
- Wauregan Company
- Wauregan Mills, Inc.
- Wauregan-Quinebaug Company