Our collections are open to the public for research. To use any of our collections please schedule a reference appointment with the Archives.
The interviews are used to identify or solicit observations and opinions regarding key events and issues in Congressman Moakley’s life and career. The first oral history interview occurred in 2001 when Professors Robert Allison and Joseph McEttrick interviewed Congressman Moakley.
The project continues to collect recordings of audio- and videotaped interviews with family, friends, staff, colleagues, political opponents, political leaders and his constituents. The master tapes, transcriptions and supporting documentation make up the Moakley Archive Oral History Project Collection.
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Boston Harbor Islands (Mass.)
Busing for school integration
El Salvador -- Politics and government -- 1979-1992
Legislators -- Massachusetts.
Massachusetts -- Politics and government--1950-2001.
Moakley, John Joseph, 1927-2001
United States -- Congress -- House.
United States--Politics and government--1973-2001.
Joe Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 to 2001 is recorded in files, videos, photographs, and citations. The Archives has constituent service and policy files; reports of the Congressman’s legislative and voting records; and documents related to his campaigns. Congressman Moakley’s interest and advocacy for international human rights, dating from a constituent service issue in the early 1980s, are demonstrated through materials that include the declassified files of the Moakley Commission, which investigated the murders in El Salvador of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper, and her daughter. Other documents reflect Moakley’s service as chairman of the powerful House Rules Committee and his role in congressional law making, as well as his promotion of the combined "Third Harbor Tunnel" and "Big Dig" project, the largest public works project in U.S. history. More info
The Jamaica Plain Committee on Central America (JPCOCA), a grassroots organization from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts lobbied Congressman Joe Moakley in the 1980s to help Salvadoran refugees gain legal status in the United States. The collection, which spans from 1982-2001, includes correspondence, news clippings and office files that document the committee’s involvement in raising awareness of the Salvadoran refugee issue, their interactions with Congressman Moakley and how they achieved their goal of helping Salvadoran refugees in America. Finding aid available (.pdf)
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Esther Cassidy, producer of Enemies of War, a documentary on the Salvadoran civil war and the investigation into the murders of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her daughter, donated her records, audio and video tapes, and transcriptions to the Moakley Archive in 2008. This collection is currently unprocessed and not available for research.
back to top^The collection contains published materials, personal notes, and research materials pertaining to Suffolk University Professor Mary P. Burke’s involvement in the U.N. International Women’s Conferences and research into women and international development. The four U.N. conferences, held between 1975 and 1995, served as both a catalyst for and a sign of a revived international movement for women’s empowerment and equality. Finding aid available. (.pdf)
Mary P. Burke Related Materials: The Center for Women’s Health and Human Rights at Suffolk University conducted two audio interviews with Professor Burke that provide context to the documents in this collection.
World Conference on Women
United Nations-- Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women
Women and development
The papers of Thomas F. Lambert Jr., torts scholar and Suffolk University Law Professor, include research materials related to the Nuremburg Trials and his law school notebooks. Finding aid available. (.pdf).
Nuremberg Trial of Major German War Criminals, Nuremberg, Germany, 1945-1946
Suffolk University Law School
The Gleason Leonard Archer Personal Papers document the personal and professional activities of Suffolk University’s founder. In addition to being an educator, Archer was also a prolific writer and popular radio broadcaster. The types of materials in the collection include manuscripts and typescripts of his books, journals, articles, speeches, and radio addresses; correspondence; biographical information; genealogy records; photographs; and personal artifacts. The collection also includes family papers, documenting the personal and business activities of members of Archer’s immediate and extended family through account books, contracts, correspondence and photographs. Finding aid available (.pdf) Bibliographies available.
Archer, Elizabeth Glenn.
Archer, Gleason Leonard, 1880-1966
Archer, Gleason Leonard, 1916-
Genealogy
Great Pond (Me.)
Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants.
Radio broadcasting History
Radio History
Suffolk University History
Suffolk University. Law School History
Harry Hom Dow is a 1929 law school graduate. His personal papers consist of immigration case files from his private law practice and subject files from his work as a community activist. This collection is closed while it is processed. For more information please read this biography or view this portrait of Harry Hom Dow.
back to top^The University Archives holdings are made up of materials of permanent value including documents, records, publications, audiovisual material, artifacts and photographs that document Suffolk’s history. More info
The Suffolk University Archives collects and curates oral history interviews that relate to the subjects and issues in the University’s archival and special collections. The Oral History Project includes interviews with University founder Gleason Leonard Archer, long-time staff and faculty members, such as Dottie "Mac" McNamara and Patricia "Pat" Brown, and faculty panel discussions. These and other interviews within the collection allow researchers a more personal look at the University and the individuals who have helped shape Suffolk into the University it is today. More info
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