
The manuscript collection of John Ronald Reuel Tolkien contains the author’s working papers for his three well-known novels.
This collection includes:
The original copy of his children’s book, Mr. Bliss, (published in facsimile form in 1982) done in Tolkien’s best calligraphy with color illustrations on each page, also is included, as is a host of published and unpublished materials relating to Tolkien’s life and fantasy writings.
Dedicated to the memory of Jean Cujé, a librarian who served the Marquette community from 1979 to 1992, this unique compilation includes music in all formats recorded by artists in the Milwaukee area. It has been gathered through donations or purchases to serve the local community.
This collection includes:
The Catholic Worker movement, founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in 1933, calls upon Christians to take personal responsibility and direct action to create a new society.
Catholic Workers perform works of mercy in “houses of hospitality,” feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless and embracing the ideal of voluntary poverty.
The Catholic Worker movement has been at the forefront of the struggle against war, discrimination and social injustice.
This collection includes:
Marquette’s earliest printed works within the Department of Special Collections and University Archives form a small collection of incunabula (from the “cradle period” of Western printing).
This collection includes:
Through the efforts of the Society of Jesus and other religious orders, the Catholic Church evangelized America’s native peoples on an extraordinary scale resulting in extensive documentation of their languages, histories and cultures.
Mindful of its mission as a Catholic university and recognizing the value and preservation needs of these unique church resources, Marquette has made a special commitment to preserve these materials.
This collection includes: