Box 1
•Alexander Dalrymple (Dissertation submitted for the degree of Ph.D. in the University of Cambridge)
•Alexander Dalrymple and Captain Cook : the Creative Interplay of Two Careers, pp. 41-57, 236-240.
•Alexander Dalrymple and New Guinea. The Journal of Pacific History, pp. 83-104
•American Colonial Views on the Philippines’ Place in the World : A Selection of Documents. Kabar Seberang : Sulating Maphilindo. 1978, no.3 (January), pp. 1-9.
•The Bacon Bill of 1926 : New Light on an Exercise in Divide-and Rule. Philippine Studies, vol. 26, 1978, pp. 257-273.
•The Breakdown of the American Democratic Experiment in the Philippines : An Historical Analysis of a Crisis in Modernization. Australian Journal of Politics and History, vol.23, no.3, Dec. 1977, pp. 383-402.
•The Commercial Ambitions Behind Captain Cook’s Last Voyage. The New Zealand Journal of History, vol. 7, no.2, October 1973, pp. 186-191.
•The Eastern Passage and its Impact on Spanish Policy in the Philippines, 1758-1790. Philippine Studies, vol. 33 (1985), pp. 3-21.
•The United States’ Acquisition of its Insular Possessions: an Emerging Colonial Policy as Seen Through the Correspondence of Henry Cabot Lodge (1898-1900): Selection and Introductory Notes. Kabar Seberang, no. 12, 1983, pp. 15-29.
Box 2
•China & Japan
•Commonwealth Gov’t
•Congressional Hearings, 1924, 1928
•Correspondence, 1909-1914
•Correspondence 1912-16
•Correspondence 1925-1928
•David P. Barrows
•Dean C. Worcester
•Defence of P.I.
Box 3
•Economic Readjustments 1935-1937
•Economic Readjustments, 1938-41
•Fairfield Bill, 1923
•Correspondence 1906-1913 Forbes
•Forbes Correspondence 1913-1920
•Forbes Mss. 1921
Box 4
•Forbes Mss. 1922-1927 (Aug.)
•Forbes Mss. 1927 (Sept)-1933 (March)
•Forbes Mss. 1933 (April)-1946
•Forbes Philippine Islands—Value in U.S., Status of, & Indep Mov’t
•Franklin D. Roosevelt
•Harrison
•Harrison Mss. Correspondence 1917-1920
•Harrison Mss. Correspondence 1921-1930
•Hoover-Background
•Hoover 2(Label supplied)
•Hoover Mss. 1 (Label Supplied)
•Hoover Mss. 2 (Label Supplied)
•Japan
•Japan
•Japan, USA, and the Philippines
•Jones Bill
•Katherine Mayo (Label Supplied)
•Manila Merchants Assn 1911 Banquet Speeches
Box 5
•Mindanao & Sulu
•Mindanao, the Moros and the N.C.T.s
•Miscellaneous Notes
•Moros and other N.C.T.s
•Philippine Constitution of 1935 and Subsequent Amendments
•Philippine Independence
•Philippine Independence Wood Mss.
Box 6
•Philippine Independence 1930-1933 II
•Philippine Independence-Economic Factors
•Philippine Islands General Conditions, 1928-1932
•Philippine Islands—Status & Independence Campaign
Box 7
1. Quezon
•Quezon General Correspondence March 1912-11 July 1913
•Quezon General Correspondence 21 July 1913-27 June 1914
•Quezon General Correspondence 10 July 1914-21 Dec. 1914
•Quezon General Correspondence 27 Dec. 1914-9 June 1916
•Quezon General Correspondence 12 June 1916-20 (June?) 1918
•Quezon Correspondence, 1921-25
•Quezon Notes
•Rubber Crisis in U.S., 1923-31 Possibilities in Mindanao
Box 8
•Status or Independence of Philippine Islands
•U.S. Economic and Strategic Interests in the P.I., Far East and Pacific
•U.S. High Commissioners 1935
•The Wartime Years, and the Gov’t in Exile: the Return
•Wood
•Wood-Forbes Mission
•Wood’s Administration 1923-1924
•Wood’s Administration 1925-1927 Wood Mss.
•Woodrow Wilson
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