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Richard Cullen White Papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: PP-White

Scope and Contents

Richard Cullen White was a playwright active in San Francisco towards the end of the nineteenth century. In 1966 his grandson, Robert Lilly, an alumnus of Santa Clara University, donated his papers to the university library. This collection consists of 5 document boxes containing manuscripts of White's works, photographs, newspaper clippings, and a number of nineteenth-century printed playscripts, some by other authors. Most notable is the script for White's play Evans and Sontag, which played in the National Theatre in San Francisco in 1893-1894. It dramatizes the events upon which the film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was based.

Dates

  • Creation: approximately 1877 to 1912

Creator

Publication Rights

Materials in Archives & Special Collections may be subject to copyright. All requests for permission to publish from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the specialcollections@scu.edu. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Archives & Special Collections as the owner of the physical materials, and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained. Copyright restrictions also apply to digital reproductions of the original materials.

Organizational History

Santa Clara University was founded in 1851 by the Society of Jesus as Santa Clara College and is California’s oldest operating institution of higher learning. It was established on the grounds of Mission Santa Clara de Asìs, the eighth of the original 21 California missions. The college originally operated as a preparatory school and did not offer courses of collegiate rank until 1853. The institution became known as the University of Santa Clara in 1912, when the schools of engineering and law were added. For 110 years, Santa Clara University was an all-male school. In 1961, women were accepted as undergraduates and Santa Clara University became the first coeducational Catholic university in California. The number of students and faculty tripled over the next decade and the university began the largest building program in school history with eight residence halls, a student union, and an athletic stadium. In the early 1970s, the Board of Trustees voted to limit the size of the undergraduate population, an action that was intended to preserve the character and ensure the quality of the university for generations to come. In 1985, the university adopted Santa Clara University as its official name. Bibliography: Santa Clara University. “About SCU – History.” www.scu.edu/about/history.cfm (Accessed Nov. 23, 2010) McKevitt, Gerald, S.J. The University of Santa Clara: A History, 1851-1977. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1979.

Extent

1.7 Linear Feet (1.7 Linear Feet (in 5 containers))

Language of Materials

English

Processing Information

Collection processed prior to 2024. Legacy collection data migrated from existing MARC records by Nadia Nasr in 2024. Please consult Archives & Special Collections staff regarding the existence of container lists or other finding aids for this collection.

Title
Richard Cullen White Papers
Status
In Progress
Subtitle
A guide to the papers at Santa Clara University
Author
Legacy collection data migrated from existing MARC records by Nadia Nasr in 2024. Reviewed by Nadia Nasr.
Date
© 2024 Santa Clara University. All rights reserved.
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Archives & Special Collections, Santa Clara University Library Repository

Contact:
Santa Clara University Library
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara California 95053-0500 USA US
408-554-5530