Russian American Collection
Profile | Manuscripts | Monographs | Newspapers | Serials
Profile
Included are over 350 printed volumes, with strengths in general and regional history, religion, fraternal organizations, language and citizenship, and literature.
The collection includes files of 28 newspaper and 110 serial titles ranging in dates from 1868 to the present. Key titles include Novoe Russkoe Slovo (New Russian Word; 1941-present), Svit (The Light; 1908-1975), Novyi Zhurnal (The New Review; 1942, 1944-1953, 1955-198?), Russko- Amerikanskii Pravoslavnii Kalendar (Russian American Orthodox Calendar, previously titled Pravoslavnyi Russko-Amerikanskii Kalendar; 1902, 1910, 1912-1917, 1921-1923, 1925-1927, 1929- 1930, 1932-1933, 1936-1937, 1947, 1950).
Manuscript/archival material comprises approximately 5 linear feet and 13 microfilm reels of documents from Russian American organizations, individuals and the Russian Orthodox Church. Among these collections are the records of the Federated Russian Orthodox Clubs, the papers of Professor emeritus Wassilij Alexeev, writer and journalist Mikhail Eisenstadt- Jeleznov (pseudonym of M.K. Argus), writer Alex Simirenko, and the microfilmed records of the Russian Orthodox Church Archives/Alaska Diocese and the index to the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America. Complimenting these church records are the collection of the Holy Trinity Orthodox Church of St. Paul.MN (formerly the Holy Trinity Russian- Serbian Orthodox Church).
Manuscripts
Papers, n.d. Ca. 1 linear in.
Papers of Alexeev consist of a typescript of his work, "Russians in America." In English.Eisenstadt-Jeleznov, Mikhail (1900-1970).
Papers, ca. 1940-1979. 10 linear in. and 1 scrapbook.
A writer and journalist, Eisenstadt-Jeleznov was born in Minsk, Russia, and came to New York in 1924. For many years, he worked for Novoye Russkoye Slovo (The New Russian World) as a humor and political columnist. Under his pseudonym of M. K. Argus, he wrote several books, including Moscow-on-the-Hudson (1951) and A Rogue With Ease (1953). He also contributed to Saturday Review and wrote several books in Russian.
Papers include biographical information, correspondence with publishers, manuscripts and typescripts of his work, clippings of his columns and articles, and notes on Greek mythology. In English and Yiddish. Inventory available.
Records, 1943-1965. 2.5 linear ft.
Founded in Pittsburgh, PA, in 1927, the FROC is a religious, cultural, charitable, social, and athletic organization. It has 175 senior and 70 junior chapters in the United States and Canada. The organization maintains a scholarship fund, publishes the Russian Orthodox Journal, and supports St. Tikhon's Seminary (South Canaan, PA) and St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary (New York City). It has also contributed to the Russian Orthodox Pro-Cathedral (New York City), to construction of the War Memorial Shrine (Washington, DC), and to local parishes.
Records consist of reports and minutes of executive board meetings and annual conventions. Also included are convention programs, manuals for membership drives, and standing rules and resolutions. In English. Inventory available.
Papers, ca. 1955-1965. 1.5 linear in.
Papers of Kniazeff are comprised of Russian American material from the San Francisco, CA, area. Materials pertain to the Russian Community Club and to the National Organization of Russian Scouts. Includes English.Russian Orthodox Church Archives. Alaska Diocese.
Records, ca. 1825-1966. 12 microfilm reels.
Archives of the Church (also known as the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America), Alaska Diocese, contain correspondence, reports, registers, and other Church records. The bulk of the records concern the Khvikhpak (Yukon) River Mission. These cover the mission's history from its founding in 1845 until 1959. Also included are correspondence and parish record books of the Khvikhpak Mission, parish records of the various other churches in Alaska, and an index to the records of the Alaska church collection of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America, which is held at the Library of Congress. Inventory available. Originals of Diocese Archives are held by St. Herman's Pastoral School, Juneau, Alaska. Microfilm master held by the Alaska State Library, Juneau, Alaska.Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America.
Index to records, ca. 1733-1938. 1 microfilm reel.
Records consist of an index to the Alaska church collection of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America. The Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of North America Collection and the original of the index to it are held by the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.Simirenko, Alex (1931- ).
Papers, ca. 1961-1964. Ca. 1 linear ft.
Papers of Simirenko, a writer, consist of a preliminary survey, notes, photographs, and other material used in writing his book, Pilgrims, Colonists and Frontiersmen: An Ethnic Community in Transition (1964). The book concerns the Russians of Minneapolis, MN. Includes English.Return to top.
Monographs
General studies on the history of Russians in the United States are few; of these the IHRC has a full representation. Jerome D. Davis's The Russian Immigrant (1922; reprinted in 1969) remains a basic study. Complementing this earlier work is the more current and comprehensive study of Russians in North America by Ivan K. Okuntsoff, entitled Ruskaia emigratsiia v Severnoi i Iuzhnoi Amerike (Russian Emigration in North and South America, 1967). A more recent but abbreviated attempt is the sociological survey done by Nancy Eubanks, The Russians in America (1973). Soviet studies on Russian immigration are represented by two recent works: L. A. Bagranov's Immigranty v S.Sh.A. (Immigrants in the U.S.A., 1957); and L. N. Fursova's Immigratsiia i natsional'noe razvitie Kanady, 1946-1970 gg. (Immigration and the National Development of Canada, 1975).
The earliest settlements of Russians in North America can be traced back to 1741 in Alaska. The experiences and presence of the Fort Ross settlement are best recorded in a recent work by Hector Chevigny, Russian America: The Great Alaskan Venture, 1741-1867 (1965). Regional studies of Russians in the United States concentrate mainly on Russians living in California. Such works include Emil Theodore Bunje's Russian California, 1805-1841 (1937); Clarence John Du Four's The Russian Withdrawal from California (1933); and Robert A. Thompson's The Russian Settlement in California Known as Fort Rosso, Founded 1812, Abandoned 1841: Why the Russians Came and Why They Left (1970, reprint of 1896 edition). Also available are Alex Simirenko's Pilgrims, Colonists and Frontiersmen; An Ethnic Community in Transition (1964); and American-Russians in the Bridgeport Community, by Lionel F. Orr, Jr. (1956). The early Russian settlers in Hawaii are documented in Richard A. Pierce's work, Russian Hawaiian Adventure, 1815-1817 (1965).
The Russian American monograph collection strongly documents religion. A substantial work on the Russian Orthodox Church in America is Michael George Kovach's thesis, The Russian Orthodox Church in America (1957). Among other works on the history of the church are: Russkaia pravoslavnaia tserkov' v' Sievernoi Amerike; Istoricheskaia spravka (The Russian Orthodox Church in Northern America: Historical Study, 1954) and the brief sketch by Archbishop Ioann of San Francisco and the Western United States, Pravoslavie v Amerike: Ekkleziologicheskii ocherk (Orthodoxy in America: Ecclesiological Essay, 1963). Some of the political conflicts surrounding the Church can be found in Reverend Peter G. Kohanik's The Austro-German Hypocrisy and the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church (1915). The collection also includes a substantial number of individual church histories (such as jubilee anniversary albums) which provide useful background for comparative research of the religious Russian community and its struggles to meet both spiritual and lay needs.
The Molokans, a branch of the anti-Orthodox Spiritual Christianity movement in Russia are chronicled in two works: John K. Berokoff's Molokans in America (1969); and an earlier work by Pauline V. Young, The Pilgrims of Russian Town: The Community of Spiritual Christian Jumpers in America (1932). Another work on Molokans concerns oral traditions, Willard Bergese Moore's Molokan Oral Tradition; Legends and Memorates of an Ethnic Sect (1973). The Molokans' faith prevented them from participating in wars; to assist their members in this matter they published the Handbook for Molokan Conscientious Objectors (1969). The history of the largest Canadian Doukhobor community is contained in George Woodcock's The Doukhobors (1968).
Among the various Russian American fraternal organizations were the Russian Orthodox Catholic Mutual Aid Society, the Russian Brotherhood Organization, and the Russian Mutual Aid Society. The IHRC Collection has four substantial histories written about the Russian Orthodox Catholic Mutual Aid Society: The Tenth Anniversary, by Venedikt I. Turkevich, covering 1895 through 1905; Peter G. Kohanik's Russkoe Pravoslavnoe kafol. obshchestvo vzaimopomoshchi v Siev.-Amerikanskikh Soedinennykh Shtatakh: K XX-lietnemu iubileiu, 1895-1915 (The Russian Orthodox Catholic Mutual Aid Society in the North American United States: Towards the Twentieth Jubilee, 1915); Rus' i pravoslavie v' Sievernoi Amerikie (Rus' and Orthodoxy in North America, 1920); and the more recent seventieth anniversary publication Russkoe Pravoslavnoi obshchestvo vzaimo-pomoshchi (The Russian Orthodox Mutual Aid Society, 1965). The women's branch of the Society is represented in a short history covering 1907 through 1926 written by Iona Miliasevich, Kratkii istoricheskii ocherk zhizni Russakgo Pravoslavnago zhenskago obshchestva vzaimo-pomoshchi v S.Sh.A. (A Brief Historical Sketch of the Life of the Russian Orthodox Women's Mutual Aid Society in the U.S.A., 1926). The Russian Mutual Aid Society, founded in 1927 in New York by politically active working class immigrants, is depicted in I. A. Elmer's Russkie rabochie v Amerike: k piatnadtsatiletiiu Russkogo narodnogo obshchestva vzaimopomoshchi v Amerike (Russian Workers in America: Towards the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Russian National Mutual Aid Society in America, 1935).
The collection includes a number of works dealing with language and citizenship. Among these are Nina Mart'ianova's Russko-angliiskii razgovornik: A Conversation Guide for Russians in the United States (194?); Ahapius Honcharenko's Russko-anhliiskie razgovory; Russian and English Phrase Book, Specially Adapted for the Use of Traders, Travelers, and Teachers (1868); Kak pisat' angliiskie pis'ma delovyi i na raznye sluchai zhizni: rukovodstvo dlia russkikh v Amerike (How to Write English Letters for Business and Everyday Life: Handbook for Russians in America, 1958?); and Kak stat' grazhdaninom Soedinennykh Shtatov; Polnoe novoe rukovodstvo dlia zhelaiushchikh stat' grazhdanami Soedinennykh Shtatov (How to Become a Citizen of the United States; Complete New Guide for Those Who Want to Become Citizens of the United States, 1953).
Russian American literature is represented by biographies, memoirs, and novels. Included are Victor A. Yakhontoff's Over the Divide: Impersonal Record of Personal Experiences (1939); Paul Chavchavadze's Family Album (1949) and his Marie Avinov: Pilgrimage through Hell (1968); Alex Shoumatoff's Russian Blood: A Family Chronicle (1982); and Mark V. Vichniak's Gody emigratsii, 1919-1969 Paryzh-Niu-Iork (vospominannia) (Emigration Years, Paris-New York [Memories], 1970). One of the most popular authors whose writing appeared in newspapers and books was M. K. Argus, pseudonym of Mikhail Eisenstadt-Jeleznov. The Center has his works Amerikia Smeetsia (America Laughs), Antologiia Amerikanskogo Iumora (Anthology of American Humor, 1962), and Drugaia zhiz'n i bereg da'lnii (Second Life and Distant Shore, 1969); his autobiography Moscow-on-the-Hudson (1951); and his novels A Rogue with Ease (1953) and Poluser'ezno, polusutia; satira, lirika (Half Serious, Half Humorous; Satire, Lyrics, 1959). To complement these publications, the IHRC also holds his personal papers. Recent works that deal with Russian émigré literature include Temira Pachmuss's A Russian Cultural Revival; A Critical Anthology of Émigré Literature before 1939, and Ludmila A. Foster's two-volume Bibliography of Russian Émigré Literature, 1918-1968 (1970).
Newspapers
Dyiia Posliedyiia Novosty (News of Recent Events), Paris, France. Daily: 1927.
Griadushchee (The Future), Sydney, Australia. Monthly: 1956-1957.
Kazak (Cossack), Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Monthly: 1951-1953, 1955, 1957-1964, 1971-1976. Includes some French.
Light of Orthodoxy, Pittsburgh, PA. Monthly: 1962, 1964-1965, 1967-1968. English.
Lubov (Love), Mayfield, PA. Bi-monthly (monthly): 1924-1957. (Microfilm: 1924-1957).
Nashe Vremia (The Modern Time), San Francisco, CA. Weekly: 1953.
Nashi Dni (Our Days), Bryte, CA. Weekly: 1967-1969.
Novaia Zaria (New Dawn), San Francisco, CA. Daily: 1948, 1953, 1962.
Novoe Russkoe Slovo (New Russian Word), New York, NY. Daily: 1941-1944, 1951-1979.
Novy Mir (New World; merged with Russky Golos), New York, NY. Daily, tri-weekly, weekly: 1911. (Photocopy). (Microfilm: 1911-1919, 1926-1938).
Orthodox America, Etna, CA. Monthly: 1984. English.
The Orthodox Church, New York, NY (previously published in Philadelphia, PA). Ten issues a year: 1965-1976. English.
Posliedniia Novosti (Latest News), Paris, France. Daily: 1927.
Possev (Sowing), Frankfurt am Main, West Germany. Weekly: 1947-1949, 1954, 1964.
Pravda (The Truth), Philadelphia, PA. Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly: 1943, 1945, 1952-1954, 1960-1961, 1963-date. (Microfilm: 1917-1975). Includes English.
Pravoslavny Amerikanski Viestnik (Orthodox American Herald; title varies: Russko-Amerikanski Pravoslavny Viestnik), New York, NY. Semi-monthly. (Microfilm: 1896-1897). Includes English.
Rossiia Zagranitzei (Outside Russia), New York, NY. Quarterly (?): 1965. Includes English.
Rossiya (Russia), New York, NY. Semi-weekly: 1942-1943, 1952, 1955, 1958-1963, 1965-1973.
Russkaia Mysl'; La Pensée Russe (Russian Thought), Paris, France. Weekly: 1948, 1953, 1955-1957, 1961, 1963-1964, 1971.
Russkaia Zhizn' (Russian Life), San Francisco, CA. Daily (except Sundays, Mondays, and holidays): 1962, 1964-1975, 1977.
Ruskii Emigrant (The Russian Emigrant), New York, NY. Weekly: 1912-1914.
Russko-Amerikanski Pravoslavny Viestnik (Russian American Orthodox Messenger; title varies: Pravoslavny Amerikanski Viestnik), Jackson Heights, Long Island, NY. Semi-monthly. (Microfilm: 1896-1942). Includes English.
Russky Golos (Russian Voice), New York, NY. Weekly: 1945, 1963-date.
Svit (The Light), Wilkes-Barre, PA (previously published in Philadelphia, PA). Bi-monthly (weekly, bi-monthly): 1911-1915, 1917-1924, 1927-1928, 1931-1944, 1946-1947, 1958, 1965-date. (Microfilm: 1908, 1911-1924, 1927-1928, 1931-1944, 1946-1948, 1953-1954, 1965-1971, 1973-1975). Includes English.
Vestnik Russkago Studencheskago Khrystiankago Dvizheniia; Le Messager (Herald of the Russian Student Christian Movement), Paris, France. Monthly. (Microfilm: 1931).
Za Vozvrashcenie na Rodinu (For Return to the Motherland), Berlin, East Germany. Frequency varies: 1955-1960.
Serials
American Russian Cultural Association Annual Report, New York, NY. Annual: 1943-1947. English.
Amerikanski Pravoslavny Viestnik' (Russian Orthodox American Messenger), New York, NY. Monthly: 1918. Includes some English.
The Archangel, Philadelphia, PA. Quarterly: 1952-1959, 1969. Includes English.
Association of Russian Imperial Officers in America Biulleten' (Bulletin), New York, NY. Triennial: 1955-1956.
Belyi Lotos (White Lotus), Santa Barbara, CA. Bi-annual: 1959, 1962-1963.
Bich (The Whip; Humor Magazine), New York, NY. 1938.
D.P. Satirikon, Augsburg, West Germany. Monthly (weekly): 1949-1950.
Delo Truda--Probuzhdenie (Cause of Labor--Awakening), New York, NY. Monthly (?): 1961.
Den' Russkago Rebenka (Day of the Russian Child), San Francisco, CA. Annual (?): 1954.
Detstvo vo Khriste (Childhood in Christ), Trenton, NJ. 1953-1954.
Dietstvo i Iunost' vo Khristie (Childhood and Youth in Christ), Mahopac, NY. Bi-monthly: 1955.
Edinaia Tserkov (One Church), New York, NY. Monthly: 1951-1954.
Eparkhial'niia Viedomosti (Diocesan Journal), New York, NY. Monthly: 1953-1954.
Evanhel'skii Vestnyk (Russian Gospel Messenger), Chicago, IL. Monthly: 1960.
Golos Truda (The Voice of Labor), New York, NY. Monthly: 1911. Microfilm print copy.
Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, NY. Frequency varies: one undated issue, 1956, 1963, 1965. Includes some English.
Iezhegodnik Pravoslovno Tserkvy v Amerike (Annual of the Orthodox Church of America), Syosset, NY. Annual: 1975-1979.
Informatsiny Biulleten' Russkogo Emigrantskogo Lageria v Shlesgeme (Information Bulletin of the Russian Emigrant Camp in Schleissheim), Schleissheim, Germany. Weekly: 1947-1948.
Informatsionny Biulleten' (Information Bulletin), Utica, NY. Annual: 1958, 1961-1963.
Kanadsky Pravoslavny Kalendar (Canadian Greek Orthodox Calendar; title change 1973: Pravoslavny Tserkovny Kalendar), Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Annual: 1954-1964, 1966, 1968-1972.
Klich K' Molodo Rossii (Call to Young Russia), San Francisco, CA. Frequency varies: 1933-1934.
Koster Razvedchika (Camp Fire Lighter), Oak Park, IL. Quarterly: 1964-1965, 1981.
Light of Orthodoxy, New York, NY. Monthly: 1953. English.
Luch (Ray), Iselin, NJ. Bi-monthly: 1960.
Medved' (The Bear), Cleveland, OH. Monthly: 1958-1959.
Metropolia News (Official Acts of the Russian Orthodox Church of America), New York, NY. Bi-monthly: 1964. English.
Miloserdni Samarianin; Russki Zhurnal v Kanade (Good Samartian; Russian Journal in Canada), Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. Monthly: 1954. Includes English.
Molokanskoe Obozrenie (The Molokan Review; A Russian Molokan Annual Review), Los Angeles, CA. Annual: 1945, 1947, 1949. Includes English.
Morskiia Zapiski (The Naval Records; The Association of Russian Imperial Naval Officers in America, Inc.), New York, NY. Quarterly: 1955-1956, 1958.
Moskva (Moscow), Chicago, IL. Monthly: 1930-1931.
Nash Put' (Our Way), Chicago, IL. Monthly: 1950, 1952-1954.
Nashi Vesti (Our News), New York, NY. Monthly: 1957-1965, 1967-1972.
Niva (Cornfield), New York, NY. Bi-monthly: 1954-1955.
Novaia Rossiia (New Russia), Pittsburgh, PA. Bi-monthly: 1918.
Novy Golos (New Herald), Chicago, IL. Monthly: 1951. Includes some English.
Novy Put' (The New Road), New York, NY (previously published in Paris, France). 1947.
Novy Zhurnal (The New Review), New York, NY. Quarterly: 1942, 1944-1953, 1955-date. (Index: 1942-1970).
Obzor (Digest; previously titled Obzor Inostranno Pechati), Munich-Feldmoching, Germany. Weekly: 1948.
Obzor Russko Pechati (The Russian Press Digest), New York, NY. Monthly: 1953, 1956.
One Church; Edinaia Tserkov, Youngstown, OH (previously published in New York, NY). Bi-monthly: 1952-1964, 1968-1980. English.
Opyt (Experience), London, Ontario, Canada. Annual (?): 1984.
Opyty (Experiences), New York, NY. Bi-annual: 1953-1958.
Orthodox Alaska, Kodiak, AK. Quarterly: 1979. English.
Orthodox Church in America Yearbook and Church Directory (previously titled Yearbook of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church in America), Syosset, NY. Annual: 1968-1973, 1975-1981. English.
Orthodox Education Day, Crestwood, NY. Annual: 1970-1972, 1977-1980. English.
The Orthodox Herald, Vestal, NY. Monthly: 1952-1985. English.
Orthodox Life, Jordanville, NY. Bi-monthly: 1950-date. English.
The Orthodox Word, Platina, CA (previously published in San Francisco, CA). Bi-monthly: 1965-date. English.
Pereklichka (Roll Call), New York, NY. Monthly: 1952-1954.
Po Stopam Khrista (Following the Steps of Christ; Orthodox Quarterly), Berkeley, CA. Quarterly (monthly): 1950-1979.
Pravoslavnaia Rus'; Tserkovno-Obshchestvenny Organ (Orthodox Russia), Jordanville, NY. Bi-weekly: 1947-1948, 1951-date.
Pravoslavnaia Zhizn'; Ezhemiesiachnoe Prilozhenie k Zhurnalu (Orthodox Life), Jordanville, NY. Monthly: 1950-date.
Pravoslavnoe Obozrienie; Periodicheski Zhurnal Russko Pravoslavno M'isli (Orthodox Observer) Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Frequency varies: 1968.
Pravoslavny Khristianski Viestnik' (Orthodox Christian Herald), Cleveland, OH. Monthly: 1925.
Pravoslavny Prikhodski Listok' (Orthodox Parish Leaflet), New York, NY. Monthly: 1919.
Pravoslavny Put' (The Orthodox Pathway; supplement to Pravoslavnaia Rus'), Jordanville, NY. Annual: 1950-1953, 1955-1976, 1978-1984.
Pravoslavny Tserkovny Kalendar' (Orthodox Church Calendar; previously titled Kanadskyi Pravoslavny Kalendar), Montreal, Quebec-Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Annual: 1973, 1975-1977.
Pravoslavny Tserkovny Kalendar (Orthodox Church Calendar), USSR. Annual: 1961, 1964.
Prizyv (The Call), New York, NY. Monthly: 1950-1954.
Put'-ko-Khristu (The Way to Christ), Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Monthly: 1923.
Put' Pravdy (The Way of Truth), Los Angeles, CA. 1954.
Revnitel' Pravoslaviia (Zealot of the Christian Orthodoxy), New York, NY. Semi-monthly: 1914-1915.
Rossiskaia Nezavisimost' (Russian Independence), Brooklyn, NY. Bi-weekly: 1963, 1964.
The Russian American, New York, NY. Frequency varies: 1976-1977, 1979-1985. English.
Russian Immigrants' Representative Association in America Information Bulletin, New York, NY. Monthly: 1958.
Russian National Society Bulletin, Columbus, NY. Weekly: 1921. English.
Russian Orthodox American Messenger (supplement to Amerikanski Pravoslavny Viestnik'), New York, NY. Monthly: 1902. English.
Russian Orthodox Catholic Church Yearbook, New York, NY. Annual: 1953-1954. Includes English.
Russian Orthodox Catholic Mutual Aid Society of U.S.A. Convention Reports, Wilkes-Barre, PA. Frequency varies: 1934, 1938, 1942, 1946, 1950, 1954, 1958. Includes English.
Russian Orthodox Church of Christ the Savior Parish Bulletin, New York, NY. Monthly: 1949.
Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of America Yearbook and Church Directory, New York, NY. Annual: 1951-1954, 1956, 1958, 1960, 1962-1965, 1967. English.
Russian Orthodox Journal, Donora, PA (place of publication varies). Monthly (bi-monthly January-February and July-August): 1930-1984. English.
Russki Amerikanets (The Russian American), Long Island City, NY. Frequency varies: 1975-1976. Includes English.
Russki Kalendar (Russian Calendar), New York, NY. Annual: 1965.
Russki Nastol'ni Kalendar--Spravochnik (Russian Desk Calendar--Reference Book), New York, NY. Annual: 1952, 1955, 1960, 1964, 1966.
Russki Pravoslavny Kalendar i Bogosluzhebnyia Ukazaniia (Russian Orthodox Calendar and Divine Service Instructions), New York, NY. Annual: 1959.
Russki Vestnik (Russian Herald), New York, NY. Monthly: 1938-1942, 1947-1948, 1955, 1959-1961. Includes English.
Russko-Amerikanski Pravoslavni Kalendar (Russian American Orthodox Calendar; previously titled Pravoslavny Russko-Amerikanski Kalendar), Wilkes-Barre, PA. Annual: 1902, 1910, 1912-1917, 1921-1923, 1925-1927, 1929-1930, 1932-1933, 1936-1937, 1947, 1950. Includes English.
Russko-Amerikanski Pravoslavni'i Viestnik (The Russian American Orthodox Messenger), Sea Cliff, Long Island, NY. Monthly: 1938-1954, 1963-1964, 1966.
Russkoe Delo (Russian Cause), New York, NY. Monthly: 1959-1962, 1965-1967, 1970, 1972.
Russkoe Natsional'noe Obshchestvo. Biuleten' (The Russian National Society. Bulletin), New York, NY. Weekly: 1921.
Russkoe Obozrenie (Russian Review), Chicago, IL. Monthly: 1929. Includes some English.
Russkoe Studencheskoe Khristianskoe Dvizhenie (The Russian Student Christian Movement; previously titled Viestnik Russkago Studencheskago Khrystyianskago Dvizheniia), Paris, France. Quarterly (monthly). (Microfilm: 1926-1936).
Russkoe Studencheskoe Khristianskoe Dvizhenie. Vestnik (The Russian Student Christian Movement. Messenger), New York, NY-Paris, France. Quarterly: 1962-1963.
St. Herman Orthodox Calendar, Platina, CA. Annual: 1978. English
St. John's Russian Orthodox Church Yearbook, Passaic, NJ. Annual: 1938-1939. Includes English.
St. Mary's Russian Orthodox Church Bulletin, Minneapolis, MN. Monthly: 1952-1960, 1962-1963. English.
St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary Newsletter, Crestwood, NY. Semi-annual: 1963-1964. English.
St. Vladimir's Theological Quarterly, Tuckahoe, NY. Quarterly: 1952-1954, 1957-1964, 1969-date. English.
Seiatel' Istin'i (The Sower of Truth; A Russian Christian Monthly), Ashford, CT (previously published in Hartford, CT). Monthly (except July): 1955, 1967-1968.
Skautënik; Zhurnal Ptenchikov i Volchat San Frantsiissko Druzhiny NORS-R (The Scout; Magazine of the San Francisco Troop Birds and Wolves of NORS-R), San Francisco, CA. Frequency varies: 1963-1965.
Soglasie (Agreement), Los Angeles, CA. Monthly: 1954, 1956-1960, 1973, 1976.
Staroe Vremia; Literaturno-Istoricheskie Tetradi (Old Times; Literary-Historical Notebook), New York, NY. Quarterly: 1954.
Strannik; Ofitsial'ni Organ Russkoho Otdela Sobrani Bozhiikh (Pilgrim; Official Organ of the Russian Division of the Assemblies of God), Garfield, NJ. Quarterly: 1956.
Svobodnaia Rossiia (Free Russia), Los Angeles, CA. Bi-monthly: 1955.
Svobodnye Slovo (The Free Word), New York, NY. Monthly: 1915-1916.
The Tikhonaire, South Canaan, PA. Annual: 1957, 1960, 1963-1965, 1968, 1970, 1974, 1976-1979. English.
Tovarishch' Russkago Immigranta v' Amerikie (Friend of the Russian Immigrant in America), New York, NY. Annual: 1913.
Troitski Pravoslavni Russki Kalendar (Trinity Orthodox Russian Calendar), Jordanville, NY. Annual: 1951-1966.
Vechnaia Rossiia (Eternal Russia), New York, NY. Frequency varies: 1962.
Vera i Znanie (Faith and Knowledge), Kingston, NY. 1951.
Vestnik Pervopokhodnika (Society of First Campaign Combatants), Los Angeles, CA. Monthly: 1963, 1967-1970, 1975-1976.
Viestnik' Obshchestva Russkikh' Veteranov' Veliko Vony (Messenger of the Russian Veterans of World War I), San Francisco, CA. Frequency varies: 1926-1965.
Vpered (Forward), San Francisco, CA. Monthly: 1959-1960.
Za Svobodu (For Freedom), New York, NY. Frequency varies (monthly through 1943): 1941-1943, 1945-1947.
Za Vashu i Nashu Svobodu. Biuleten' (For Your and Our Freedom. Bulletin), U.S.A.-Canada. Frequency varies: 1965.
Zhar-Ptitsa; Ezhemiesiachnyi Literaturno-Khudozhest-Venny Zhurnal (Firebird; Monthly Literary and Arts Magazine), San Francisco, CA. Monthly: 1952-1959.
Zlatotsviet; Ezhemiesiachny Literaturno-Khudo-Zhestvenny Zhurnal (Asphodel; Monthly Literary and Arts Magazine), Burlingame, CA. Monthly: 1962.
Znamia Rossii (The Banner of Russia), New York, NY. Monthly: 1953-1954, 1959-1970, 1972-1973.
