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Personal Papers and Manuscripts

SAMUEL TORREY ORTON, 1879-1948, and JUNE LYDAY ORTON, 1898-1977.
Papers, 1901-1977.
12 cu. ft. (29 document boxes, 6 card file boxes, 1 record storage box)


Biographical Note
Organization
Scope and Content
Access
Preservation
Provenance
Related Collections
Subjects
Box & Folder List

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE:
The husband and wife team of Samuel Torrey Orton and June Lyday Orton were professional partners in the field of language disabilities. Together they conducted research, trained educators and therapists, and treated individuals with reading and writing difficulties. In the process, they became two of the most important individuals in the history of dyslexia.

Samuel Torrey Orton was born in Columbus, Ohio, on October 15, 1879. His father, Edward Orton, was at various times the state geologist of Ohio, the President of Antioch College, and the first President of Ohio State University. Other distinguished family members included his cousin, President William Howard Taft, and his uncle, educator Horace Taft of the Taft School in Watertown, Connecticut, where young Sam completed high school in 1897.

Orton attended Ohio State University (B.S., 1901), the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (M.D., 1905), and Harvard University (M.A., 1906). He was a member of Alpha Omega Alpha and Sigma Xi. He began his medical career by training in pathology under Frank B. Mallory at Boston City Hospital in 1905-06. He then spent a year at the Columbus (Ohio) State Hospital, and two years at St. Ann's Hospital in Anaconda, Montana.

On October 13, 1908, he married Mary Follett in Columbus, Ohio. They had three children: Samuel Torrey Orton Jr., Sarah Patterson Orton, and Mary Follett Orton.

Orton returned East to become pathologist of the Worcester State Hospital in Worcester, Massachusetts, from 1910 to 1913. During this time, he also taught at Harvard Medical School and at Clark University. In 1913, Orton traveled to Germany to study with Alois Alzheimer. Upon his return, he was appointed pathologist and clinical director of the Pennsylvania Hospital for Mental Diseases in Philadelphia, where he served from 1914 to 1919.

In 1919, he accepted the opportunity to become the founding director of the State Psychopathic Hospital in Iowa City, Iowa, and chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Iowa College of Medicine. Among his achievements in Iowa was the creation in 1925 of the "Mobile Mental Hygiene Clinic," a field unit providing psychiatric services to the people of Iowa in their own communities. The Field Organizer of the mobile clinic, who was also Chief of the Psychiatric Social Service in the Department of Psychiatry, was June Lyday, who would become Samuel Orton's second wife.

June Frances Lyday was born on August 3, 1898, in Newton, Iowa, and was raised in Michigan. In 1918, she graduated summa cum laude from Vassar College at the age of 19 and was elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She earned a master's degree in social work at the Smith College School of Psychiatric Social Work in 1919. She did field work at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital and at prisons in the Detroit area before returning to Iowa.

Through the Mobile Clinic, Samuel Orton met M. P., a 16-year-old who "seemed bright but couldn't learn to read." After this case, the study of language and learning disabilities became Orton's life's work. Orton published his study of M. P. in a 1925 article, "'Word Blindness' in School Children." He rejected earlier theories about what had been termed "congenital word-blindness" and diagnosed the problem as physiological. He coined the term "strephosymbolia" (twisted symbols) to describe the condition now known as dyslexia, although he also used the phrase "specific reading disability." With funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, he and Iowa colleagues Lee Edward Travis, Marion Monroe, and Lauretta Bender further investigated reading disabilities. Orton's last years in Iowa were difficult: his wife died in 1926, and he resigned during a complicated faculty controversy in 1927.

In 1928, Orton married June Lyday and came to New York City to open his own office in psychiatry. He also became a neuropathologist at the Neurological Institute of New York and a part-time professor in neurology and neuropathology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University. Between 1932 and his departure from Columbia in 1936, Orton directed the Language Research Project of the Neurological Institute of New York. His associates included Paul Dozier, Edwin Cole, and Anna Gillingham. Gillingham knew of Dr. Orton's work in Iowa, and collaborated with him at the Neurological Institute from 1931 to 1933. With Bessie Stillman, Gillingham organized Orton's principles into a successful remedial reading training system based on visual-auditory-kinesthetic linkages, a multisensory approach to alphabetic phonics that came to be known as "Orton-Gillingham."

Samuel Orton was active in professional circles. He was on the editorial boards of the Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry from 1920 to 1930, and the Bulletin of the Neurological Institute of New York from 1930 to 1936. He was President of the American Psychiatric Association in 1928, and President of the American Association for Research in Nervous and Mental Diseases in 1932. He delivered the Thomas W. Salmon Lectures at the New York Academy of Medicine in 1936, and his lectures developed into his book, Reading, Writing, and Speech Problems in Children.

Throughout their years in New York, the Ortons maintained a busy private practice at their apartment in the Croydon Hotel. With June's training in social work and Sam's medical background, the Ortons evolved a rigorous approach to the diagnosis and treatment of reading disabilities. Due to Sam's frequent bouts of ill health, June shouldered much of the workload, and responded to much of his correspondence. Between 1928 and 1948, the Ortons saw over 2000 patients.

Samuel Orton also supervised a research program funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and carried out by David Wright between 1939 and 1941 at the Forman School, a boys' school in Litchfield, Connecticut. A similar project continued at the Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital from 1942 to 1944. In 1945, Orton's alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, awarded him an honorary doctorate.

On October 1, 1948, Samuel Orton announced his retirement from active practice. He intended to spend more time at "Hwimsy," the country retreat he himself had largely built in Wappingers Falls, New York, but then he broke his hip. He died of complications on November 17, 1948, at the age of 69, and was buried in Columbus, Ohio.

June Orton was determined to preserve and extend her husband's legacy. Almost a year after his death, on October 28, 1949, in her apartment at the Croydon Hotel, June Orton held a memorial dinner for invited friends and colleagues. From this small gathering grew the Orton Society, now known as the International Dyslexia Association. June Orton served as the Orton Society's President from 1950 to 1960, and advised later Orton Society officers such as Sally Childs, John Dorsey, Margaret Rawson, and Roger Saunders. She edited the first 14 issues of the Bulletin of the Orton Society as well as the Society's edition of the collected papers of her late husband.

In 1950, Lloyd J. Thompson, head of the Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, persuaded June Orton to start a language clinic at the Bowman-Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The clinic, named Graylyn, was disbanded in 1957, but June stayed in North Carolina for the rest of her life. She continued her private practice by founding the Orton Reading Center of Winston-Salem in 1957, which later integrated into Salem College in 1972. At the Center, she diagnosed and treated individuals with language disabilities, and trained remedial reading teachers. She codified her approach in her 1963 book, A Guide to Teaching Phonics. She also conducted numerous workshops for educators around the country, and lectured extensively for a wide audience of scientists, educators, and parents. For her devotion to the field of reading disabilities, she received the Orton Society's Samuel T. Orton Award in 1969. June Orton continued to treat students and train teachers until her death on March 12, 1977.

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ORGANIZATION:
Organized in eleven series:
I. Family and Personal Papers
II. Correspondence
III. Organizational Records
IV. Writings and Speeches
V. Subject Files
VI. Illustrations
VII. Pupil Records
VIII. Photographs
IX. Index Card Files
X. Films
XI. Oversize



SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE:
The Orton Papers document Samuel and June Orton's pioneering efforts to diagnose and assist individuals with language disabilities, and the spread of their ideas over fifty years through a network of parents, educators, physicians, social workers, and therapists. This collection is arranged into eleven series, and materials related to the testing, diagnosis, and treatment of dyslexia and other language disabilities are found throughout most series.

The first series, Family and Personal Papers, consists of biographical and genealogical materials, correspondence, academic records, and miscellaneous items relating to Samuel and June Orton and members of their families, and is arranged alphabetically by name. Correspondence and biographical materials document Samuel Orton's distinguished relatives, including his father, Edward Orton Sr.; his brother, Edward Orton Jr.; and his Taft relatives, including his uncle, educator Horace Taft, and his cousin, President William Howard Taft. However, most of the Orton family materials relate to practical matters such as estate settlements. This series also features useful biographical accounts of both Samuel and June Orton, as well as their academic records. Little material exists regarding Samuel Orton's children or first wife, and the collection holds only two letters between Sam and June.

The second series, Correspondence, consists of correspondence to and from Samuel or June Orton, and is divided into two subseries. The first subseries features notable or frequent correspondents, and is arranged alphabetically by name. The second subseries consists of general correspondence sorted first by year, then alphabetically by name.

In the first subseries, Samuel Orton's correspondence with professional colleagues Lauretta Bender, Katrina de Hirsch, Paul Dozier, Anna Gillingham, Marion Monroe, Lee Edward Travis, and David Wright illuminates the growth of his ideas about reading disabilities. Both Ortons actively corresponded with educators Peter and David Gow, Diana King, and Page and Laura Sharp, among others. June Orton frequently corresponded with Orton Society officers John Bigelow, Sally Childs, John Dorsey, Margaret Rawson, Roger Saunders, and Beth Slingerland. Her other significant correspondents include Edwin Cole, Helene Durbrow, Lucia Karnes, and Lloyd J. Thompson. Other notable correspondents include New Yorker profile writer Calvin Tompkins, and a roster of eminent neurologists, including Alois Alzheimer, H. G. Creutzfeldt, G. Stanley Hall, J. Ramsey Hunt, and Wilder Penfield. One anomaly in this subseries concerns the correspondence of Paul Lewis. In addition to letters between Lewis and Samuel Orton, Orton seems to have acquired Lewis's correspondence with others, including William Welch and Simon Flexner.

The second subseries demonstrates the typical correspondence received by the Ortons during various stages of their lives. The vast majority is professionally related. This correspondence with dyslexics, parents, teachers, reading specialists, and doctors illuminates the nature of the Ortons' practice and their ideas. In the 1930s and 1940s, many letters written to Samuel Orton were answered by June.

The third series, Organizational Records, consists of a diverse range of materials related to the institutions and organizations the Ortons were involved with in a professional capacity, and is arranged chronologically. The contents of this series are best used in combination with the Correspondence series. For example, the correspondence between Beth Slingerland and June Orton further illuminates the activities of the Orton Reading Center.

There are few early records for either Samuel or June Orton's professional careers prior to their Iowa years. Substantial administrative correspondence, committee minutes, financial records, legislative records, and various reports document the Ortons' work in Iowa. Various materials, including many newspaper accounts, explain the faculty controversy of 1927 that led Samuel Orton to resign. The Mobile Clinic records include correspondence with the Rockefeller Foundation, the project's funding agency, and with June Lyday, at that time the Clinic's coordinator. All her correspondence is patient-related, and other records of the Mobile Clinic also contain specific information about M. P., who was Samuel Orton's first case study of dyslexia, and other patients. Though various materials document Samuel Orton's work at the Neurological Institute of New York, these are not especially substantive with respect to his work on language disabilities. Samuel Orton's private practice is documented in the later series of index cards, and in the related collection of Orton Case Files. Correspondence with hospital administrators documents Samuel Orton's work at the Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital between 1942 and 1944, and the correspondence of David Wright in the second series also documents this period.

June Orton's Orton Society records document the group's founding in 1949, and programs and other materials provide information about the Society's early meetings in the 1950s. Her work in North Carolina is documented in records related to the Graylyn Language Clinic and the Orton Reading Center. In addition to providing an administrative overview of each center, these records feature various tests and diagnostic materials, and the composition books that display both the student's performance and the teacher's planning and evaluation. June Orton's efforts to train teachers and promote understanding of language disabilities are seen in the workshops she conducted, and the Penland workshops are particularly well documented.

The fourth series, Writings and Speeches, consists of bibliographies, manuscripts, typescripts, reprints, notes, and miscellaneous printed matter related to the publications and presentations of both Ortons, as well as books and reprints sent to the Ortons by others. Samuel Orton's writings are documented by bibliographies, reprints of his published papers, including the 1966 Collected Papers edited by June Orton and published by the Orton Society, and a substantial number of unpublished papers, some in fragmentary form. Samuel Orton's speeches to students, educators, neurologists, and civic groups are mostly written in an abbreviated, note-like form. June Orton wrote several articles regarding the Mobile Clinic in the 1920s, but published little in later years with the exception of her 1963 guide to teaching phonics. The books and articles written by the Ortons' colleagues are generally related to learning disabilities, and are frequently inscribed by their authors to Samuel or June Orton. Most of these individuals are also represented in the Correspondence series.

The fifth series, Subject Files, consists of notes, drawings, printed matter, and miscellaneous materials organized alphabetically by general subject heading. This series was created to group a diverse range of materials lacking an identifiable original order. These files cover the Ortons' major topics of interest, including dyslexia, phonics, and testing and diagnostic materials, primarily from the years of their private practice.

The sixth series, Illustrations, consists of images presumably used in publications and presentations by Samuel Orton, and is arranged alphabetically by subject heading. Many of the images appear to have been produced by Samuel Orton himself. In addition, Orton was fascinated by left-handedness (which appears more frequently in individuals with reading disabilities), and collected newspaper and magazine clippings showing left-handed people.

The seventh series, Pupil Records, consists of correspondence, charts, notes, and other materials related to students the Ortons examined, diagnosed, and taught. The Pupil Records are divided into individual and group subseries. Individual pupil records are arranged alphabetically, and in general, more substantive records about these pupils may be found in the related collection of Orton Case Files. Most of the group records date from June Orton's work in North Carolina in the 1950s and early 1960s.

The eighth series, Photographs, consists of a small number of photographs gathered from throughout the Orton papers. The only image of Samuel Orton is a printed image from a reprint. June Orton is represented by photographs from the Smith School of Social Work, and several photographs from the 1950s.

The ninth series, Index Card Files, consists of card files documenting patient visits and financial obligations, as well as note cards related to medical literature. This series was created to segregate materials in this format. The patient records, which are in alphabetical order, cover the Ortons' private practice in New York, which is more fully documented in the Orton Case Files. The notes on medical literature and bibliography appear to be from Samuel Orton's student days and early professional years in pathology.

The tenth series, Films, consists of nine films from the 1930s and 1940s. Due to preservation concerns and a lack of equipment, the films have yet to be viewed, but they appear to be home movies relating to the Orton's country retreat, Hwimsy. Descriptions were taken directly from notations on the film canisters or reels themselves. The Archives anticipates the transfer of the films to another form of media.

The eleventh and final series, Oversize, consists of items from other series too large to be stored within document boxes. Of note are some elaborate charts of pupil records.

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ACCESS:
The Orton Papers contain references to individuals with learning disabilities throughout the entire collection. Researchers must guarantee not to publish the names or personally identifying information of those individuals with learning disabilities treated by the Ortons.

PROVENANCE:
June Orton's will established the Orton Language Disability Trust Committee, which in 1980 signed an agreement to donate the Orton Papers to Columbia University. The case files were microfilmed in North Carolina in 1980-81, and arrived in the Archives and Special Collections Division of the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library in 1981. The Ortons' personal papers arrived in 1989.

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PROCESSING NOTE:
Prior to the Orton Papers' arrival at Columbia University in 1989, Dr. Dianne Mitchell examined the collection. Mitchell was June Orton's student and the compiler of June Lyday and Samuel T. Orton: Pioneers in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Dyslexia. Her annotations (such as "O.K.," "open," "closed," or "historical") are found on many documents in the collection, usually in the upper right-hand corner. In 1996, archives volunteer Betty Moore rehoused the collection, which included some shifting of content. In 1997, archivist Bob Vietrogoski began preliminary processing of the collection, particularly the correspondence series, but halted work that same year. In July 2001, Vietrogoski began to reprocess the entire collection and produce a finding aid. During processing, approximately one cubic foot of duplicate material was removed. This work was completed in May 2002.

RELATED COLLECTIONS:
The Archives and Special Collections also holds the Orton Case Files, a collection consisting of the professional files of over 3200 cases seen by Samuel and June Orton between 1925 and 1977. The Special Collections Department of Columbia University's Teachers College holds numerous resources relating to special education and reading instruction.

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SUBJECTS:

Bender, Lauretta, 1897-1987.

De Hirsch, Katrina.

Dozier, Paul.

Gillingham, Anna, 1878-1964.

Gow, David.

Gow, Peter, b.1886.

King, Diana.

Monroe, Marion, 1898-

Orton, Edward, 1863-1932.

Orton, June Lyday.
Orton, Samuel Torrey, 1879-1948.
Rawson, Margaret B.

Saunders, Roger E.

Slingerland, Beth H.

Taft, William Howard, Pres., U.S., 1857-1930.

Thompson, Lloyd J.

Travis, Lee Edward, b.1896.

International Dyslexia Association.

Neurological Institute of New York.

Orton Society.

Orton Dyslexia Society.

University of Iowa. College of Medicine.
Dyslexia.
Dyslexia-- Case Studies.
Dyslexia-- Diagnosis.
Dyslexia-- Treatment.
Dyslexia-- United States.

Dyslexic children -- United States.

Learning disabilities -- Treatment.

Reading disability.

Reading -- Phonic method
Case files.

Motion pictures.

Photographs.

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SERIES I: FAMILY AND PERSONAL PAPERS

Box Folder Contents
1 1 Caldwell, Louise, 1927, 1934, 1950
  2 Lyday, J. H., 1937
  3-5 Orton, Althea, 1929-39, 1950, 1954
    Orton, Edward Jr.
  6   Correspondence, 1925-31
  7   Estate, 1932
  8   Obituaries, 1932
  9 Orton, Edward Sr., biography and memorials, 1934-39, 1956, 1969
    Orton, June Lyday
  10   Academic Records, 1917, 1920-28, 1949-50, 1959-62
  11   Address lists, 1951
  12   Biographical materials, 1950, n.d.
  13   Clippings, ca. 1923
  14 Orton, Molly, 1927
    Orton, Samuel T.
           Academic records
  15           Ohio State University, thesis, ca. 1901
  16           University of Pennsylvania Medical School, 1902, 1915,
                   1945, n.d.
  17   Address lists, n.d.
  18 - 19   Biographical materials, 1927, 1930, 1945, 1948, 1969,
           1974, n.d.
  OV   Certificates, 1942, n.d.
  20   Clippings, 1929, n.d.
  21   Correspondence with June Lyday Orton, 1937
  22   Diary, trip to England, 1925
  23   Genealogical notes, n.d.
  24   Marriage license, 1908
  25   Medical records, 1916, 1937
  26   Miscellaneous, 1913-14, 1919, n.d.
  27   Morphine use, 1927, 1938
 
2 1 Orton, Samuel T. Jr., 1927
  2 Orton, Sarah, 1927
  3 Orton relatives, miscellaneous, 1922-34, 1971
  4 Taft, Charles F., 1933-34, 1940, 1942
  5 Taft, Henry W., 1943
  6 Taft, Horace D., 1923-39, n.d.
  7 Taft, Robert A., 1946, 1948
  8 Taft, William Howard, 1919-25
  9 Torrey, Delia C., estate, 1919-26
  10 Watts, Mary, 1934, 1938

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SERIES II: CORRESPONDENCE
Box Folder Contents
    Individuals
2 11   Alzheimer, Alois, 1913
  12   American Association of Psychiatric Social Workers, 1929, n.d.
  13   Ariens Kappers, C. U., 1925-28
  14-16   Bender, Lauretta, 1923-37, 1953-68
  17   Berens, Conrad, 1937-46
  18-19   Bigelow, John, 1952, 1959-68, 1974-76
  20   Brill, A. A., 1929
  21   Brown, Jane, 1966-75, n.d.
  22   Cannon, Walter B., 1941
  23-25   Childs, Sally, 1954-75, n.d.
  26   Cobb, Stanley, 1927-32, 1942
  27   Coe, Beatrice, 1973-74
  28   Cole, Edwin, 1937, 1944-71
 
3 1   Columbus School for Girls (see also Grace McClure), 1949-50
  2   Committee on Graduate Course in Psychiatry, 1920-21
  3   Commonwealth Fund, 1927
  4   Copp, Owen, 1913, 1920-22
  5   Cox, Aylette, 1964, 1972, 1974
  6   Craig, Lillian, 1951, 1959-67
  7   Creutzfeldt, H.G., 1923
  8   Dandy, Walter, 1936
  9   Danenhower, Harold, 1969
  10-12   De Hirsch, Katrina, 1943, 1950-64, n.d.
  13   Donohue, Ellen, 1932, 1949-60, n.d.
  14-15   Dorsey, John, 1927, 1950-52, 1959-66, 1975-77
  16-18   Dozier, Paul, 1931-42, 1952-53
  19   Durbrow, Helene, 1954-69
  20   Eli Lilly & Co., 1923-24
  21   Fisher, Dorothy Canfield, 1942
  22   Flexner, Simon, 1925-28
  23   Fowler, Edmund, 1942-43
  24   Fulton, John F., 1933-34
  25   Gallagher, J. Roswell, 1944, 1950-67
  26   Gettys, Briggs, 1936-39, 1966-71
  27   Gillingham, Anna, 1952-60, n.d.
  28   Gow School / Gow, Peter and David, 1929-51, 1958-76
 
4 1   Grosvenor, Gilbert, 1919
  2   Hagin, Rosa, 1960-64
  3   Hall, G. Stanley, 1912-13
  4   Hall, John and Robert, 1964-75
  5-6   Harris, Ruth, 1968-75, n.d.
  7   Heldt, Thomas, 1935
  8   Hoch, August, 1916
  9   Hooker, D. R., 1918-22
  10   Humphreys, Edward, 1933-35
  11   Hunt, J. Ramsey, 1928-31
  12   Hurley, Mildred, 1931-34
  13   Huston, Paul, 1970-74
  14   Ingham, Samuel, 1936-43
  15   Ingvar, Sven, 1919-23, 1936
  16   Ivey, Sara, 1952-60
  17   Kaiser, John B., 1929-32
  18   Kaliski, Lotte, 1960-74
  19   Karnes, Lucia, 1952, 1960-76, n.d.
  20   Keller, Helen, 1931-33
  21   Ketchum, E. Gillet, 1942-45, 1958
  22   King, Diana, 1955-72, n.d.
  23   Kinoy, Alex, 1955-60
  24   Kraepelin, Emil, 1916
  25   Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, 1925
  26   Leeson, Lorraine, 1929-30
      Lewis, Paul, correspondence
  27        Orton, 1921-27, n.d.
  28        Others, 1919-23
  29        Death of, 1929-30
  30   Litchfield, H.R., 1940
  31   Mallory, F.B., 1919-25
  32   Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, 1971
  33   Masland, Molly, 1959-64, 1973
 
5 1-2   McClure, Grace, 1928-36, 1944, 1955
  3   McGraw, Myrtle B., 1935
  4   McGraw, Robert B., 1929-34, 1953
  5   Merriman, M. Heminway, 1929-41, 1960-61
  6   Meyer, Adolf, 1919-20, 1927-31
  7   Mills, Alice, 1932-33
  8   Mills, Charles K., 1916
  9   Mirick, Edith, 1936-39
  10   Mock, Esther, 1974-75
  11   Money, John, 1964-66
  12-13   Monroe, Marion, 1927-29, 1958
  14   Moore, Fred, 1927-31
  15   Newcomer, H.S., 1920-21
  16   Nutting, C. C., 1924-25
  17   Ordway, Thomas, 1929-30, 1936-37
  18   Osler, William, 1913
  19   Penfield, Wilder, 1925-35, 1941-42
  20   Rademacher, Everett S., 1927-34, 1949
  21-24   Rawson, Margaret, 1954-75, n.d.
  25   Riley, Henry Alsop, 1928-38
  26   Robinson, Mary Helen, 1941-42, 1954, 1965-67
  27   Rogers, Herbert W., 1928-30, n.d.
 
6 1   Rome, Paula Dozier, 1960-70
  2   Rowan County Mental Health Clinic, 1964-67
  3   Roth, Margie, 1971-76, n.d.
  4   Salmon Committee on Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene, 1935-45
  5   Salmon, Thomas, 1920-21
  6-8   Saunders, Roger E., 1953-76
  9   Schenk, David, 1955-64, 1971
  10   Seth, George, 1934-35
  11   Sexton, Harlin and Ora, 1937, 1949-66
  12   Sharp, Page and Laura, 1944-52, 1960, 1973-76
  13-14   Slingerland, Beth, 1960-68, 1976, n.d.
  15   Smith, Alan P., 1929-31
  16   Smith, G. Elliott, 1933
  17   Soroptimist Club, 1955-57
  18   Southerd, E. E., 1909-19
  19   Spencer Lens Company, 1937-42
  20   Stanley, Reginald, 1939-41
  21   Strecker, Edward, 1920, 1942-43, 1950
 
7 1-4   Thompson, Lloyd J., 1928, 1937, 1950, 1956, 1963-72
  5   Tilney, Frederick, 1927-36
  6   Tomkins, Calvin, 1962, 1964
  7-8   Travis, Lee Edward, 1927-31, 1937-38
  9   W. W. Norton, 1945
  10   Walborn, Rebecca, 1940
  11   Warner, Emma, 1929
  12   Watson, Goodwin, 1930, 1933
  13   Wells, F. L. 1929, 1935
  14   Williams, Frankwood, 1922-27
  15   Williams, Guy H., 1930-32
  16   Williams, Harold, 1930-33
  17   Wolbach, S. Burt, 1927-38
  18-20   Wright, David G., 1940-43, 1966, n.d.
    General
  21-24   1907-20
 
8 1-18   1921-34
 
9 1-20   1935-48
 
10 1-19   1949-62
 
11 1-17   1963-74
 
12 1-4   1975-77
  5   Undated

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SERIES III: ORGANIZATIONAL RECORDS
Box Folder Contents
    Orton, Samuel Torrey
12 6   Anaconda, Montana, county health officer, 1909-11
  7   Harvard College, 1912-13
  8   Worcester State Hospital, 1912-13
  9   Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital, pathology report, 1917
      National Research Council
  10-11        Correspondence, 1918
  12-13        Statistical reports, 1918
      State University of Iowa College of Medicine / Psychopathic Hospital
           Committees
  14             Building, 1920-25, n.d.
  15             Scholarship, 1924, n.d.
           Correspondence
  16-18             Dean, L. W., 1919-26, n.d.
 
13 1-2             Jessup, W. A., 1919-28
  3             Seashore, C. E., 1922-27
  4-6             General, 1920-27
  7-8             Job seeking, 1927
           Faculty controversy
  9             Clippings, 1927 (see also Oversize)
  10             General, 1927
  11             Notes, 1927
           Financial records
  12             Budgets, 1922-27
  13             General, 1922-27, n.d.
  14        Legislative records, 1919, 1921, 1927, n.d.
  15        Miscellaneous materials, ca. 1920-27
           Mobile Clinic
                Correspondence
  16                  Lyday, June F., 1923-26
  17-19                  Rockefeller Foundation, 1925-27
 
14 1                  General, 1925-27
  2             Diagnostic and Testing Materials, 1925-27
  3             Financial records, 1925-27
  4             Notes, ca. 1925-27
  5             Printed matter, 1926
                Pupil records
  6                  M. P., 1925
  7-9                  General, 1925-27
  10-13             Reports, 1925-28
  14-15        Reports, ca. 1921-27
  16        Semicentennial, 1970
  17   Association for Research in Nervous and Mental Disease, 1929-32
  18-22   Neurological Institute of New York, 1929-36, n.d.
 
      Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital
15 1        Administrative records, 1943-44, n.d.
           Correspondence
  2             Bond, Earl, 1942-43
  3             Gregg, Alan, 1942-43
  4             Smith, Lauren, 1943, n.d.
    Orton, June Lyday
  5-10   Orton Society, 1949-75, n.d.
      Graylyn Language Clinic / Bowman-Gray
School of Medicine
  11-15        Administrative records, 1950-57, n.d.
  16        Clippings, 1950-62, n.d.
  17        Diagnostic and instructional materials, ca. 1950-57
  18        Notes, miscellaneous, ca. 1950-57
           Pupil records
                Composition books
  19                  L. C., 1952-53
  20                  J. G., 1956-57
  21                  L. M., 1956
 
16 1-4             Individuals, 1950-57, n.d.
      Orton Reading Center of Winston-Salem
  5-8        Administrative records, 1957-72, n.d.
  9        Cash book, 1957-62
  10-11             Clippings, 1958-69, n.d.
  12-14             Day books, 1957-70
  15             Diagnostic and instructional materials, ca. 1957-72
  16             Gift of Center to Salem College, 1971-72
                Pupil records
                     Composition books
 
17 1                       N. C., 1958
  2                       T. D., 1960
  3                       E. G., 1959-60
  4                       M. G., 1957-58
  5                       D. H., 1958
  6                       A. J., 1960
  7                       P. L., 1959
  8                       S. M., 1959
  9                       D. M., 1958
  10                       M. P., 1960
  11                       D. P., 1957-58
  12-14                       V. W., 1960-62
 
18 1                       D. W., 1958
  2-5             Individuals, 1958-72
  6-7             Record books, North Carolina schools, 1958-72
 
19 1-10   Penland, administrative records and correspondence, 1966-69
      Workshops
           Dwight School, Englewood, N.J.
  11             Administrative records, 1943
  12             Correspondence, 1943-44
  13             Lectures, 1943
  14        Columbus School for Girls, Columbus, OH., 1950
  15        Salem College, Winston-Salem, N.C., 1961
  16        Cocoa Beach Women's Club, Central Brevard, FL.,
      1967
  17        Greensboro College, Greensboro, N.C., 1967-69
           Seattle Public Schools, Seattle, WA.
  18             Administrative records, 1970
  19             Correspondence, 1970-71
  20             Notes, 1970

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SERIES IV: WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
Box Folder Contents
    Orton, Samuel Torrey
      Writings
20 1        Bibliographies, 1936, 1942, 1955, n.d.
  2-5        Manuscripts, 1915, 1929, 1932, 1943, 1946
           Reprints
  6-15             1907-31
 
21 1-4             1932-46, 1966
  5-9        Unpublished papers, ca. 1910-45, n.d.
 
22 1-10        Speeches, 1921-46, n.d.
 
    Orton, June Lyday
23 1-4   Writings, 1924-28, 1945, 1964, n.d.
  5-6   Speeches, 1956-58, 1966-75, n.d.
    Others
      Books
  7        Durbrow, Helene, Learning to Write, 1968
  8-9        Gillingham, Anna, Remedial Training, 1946, 1955
 
24 1        Ives, M.I., Illustrated Phonics, 1922
  2        Money, John, ed., Reading Disability, 1962
  3        Rawson, Margaret, Developmental Language
                Disability, 1968
  4        Thompson, Lloyd J., Reading Disability, 1966
      Reprints
  5        A-D, 1911, 1928-40, n.d.
  6        J-S, 1933, 1937, n.d.
  7        T-V, 1925-29

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SERIES V: SUBJECT FILES
Box Folder Contents
25 1   Color, 1912-13, n.d.
  2-4   Dyslexia (Strephosymbolia), ca. 1920s
  5-6   Medical literature notes, abstracts, and bibliographies, n.d.
  7   Mental hygiene, undated
  8-10   Miscellaneous unidentified materials, undated
  11   Neurology, notes and lectures, ca. 1920s
  12   Notebook of June Lyday Orton, ca. 1960s
 
26 1-7   Notebook of Samuel Torrey Orton, 1937-39
      Pathology, notes, ca. 1910-30
  8-12        Folders 1-5
 
27 1-2        Folders 6-7
  3-4   Phonics materials, 1938-45, n.d.
  5   Printed matter, miscellaneous, ca. 1912-60
  6   Schools, miscellaneous, 1936-40, 1948, 1952
  7   Testing and diagnostic materials, 1934-38, n.d.
  8-9   Testing notebook, n.d.

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SERIES VI: ILLUSTRATIONS
Box Folder Contents
28 1-2   Brain, n.d. (see also Oversize)
      Dyslexia
  3        Examples, 1929-36, n.d.
  4        General, 1930-32, n.d.
  5        Test Scores, 1930-36
  6   Hearing, 1933, 1936, n.d.
  7   Lefthandedness, undated (see also Oversize)
      Pathology
  8-9        1920s
  10-11        Undated

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SERIES VII: PUPIL RECORDS
Box Folder Contents
      Individuals
29 1        D. B., 1939-41
  2        K. B., 1930-36
  3        W. B., 1932
  4        W. C., 1931
  5        J. C., 1929-30
  6        F. F., 1938
  7        H. G., 1938-39
  8        J. G., 1937-40
  9        P. G., 1943
  10        E. L., 1936
  11        W. S., 1934
  12        C. W., 1936-42
  13        J. W., 1934-46
  14        J. W., 1929-32
           General
  15             1920s-40s
  16             1973-77
  17             Undated
      Groups