The Connecticut Society of Social Hygiene was formed in 1910 with the intent to combat venereal disease and promote healthy living through education. The group was active through the middle of 1917 when the United States entered World War I. After the war they struggled to regain their financial footing. They re-formed as the Connecticut Social Hygiene Association in 1920 in an attempt to operate as a state chapter of the American Social Hygiene Association. The group disbanded in 1921.
This collection primarily contains Bulkeley's laboratory notebooks which detail his alchemical experiments and his transcriptions of contemporary scientific works. The manuscripts are handwritten and do not necessarily follow a logical linear sequence.
This artificial collection documents Dr. George O. Jarvis's invention of a "surgical adjuster". It contains the original patent, 3 promotional pamphlets and a series of letters documenting Dr. Jarvis's trip to London to promote his invention.