Here, we've highlighted archival collections and holdings at the Kennedy Library—starting with the most popular—that support research on immigration policy during the Kennedy presidency.
Documents Schwartz's tenure as administrator of the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, Department of State (1962-1965), and materials on immigration and refugees. Also contains a small amount on the rehabilitation of the wounded in Vietnam and on Vietnam in general.
Consists of personal and professional correspondence, subject files, appointment calendars, campaign files, and audiovisual material created and maintained during Feldman's service as Deputy Special Counsel to the President (1961-1964).
Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (1961-1966). Consists of correspondence with the Department of State concerning visas and immigration cases.
Memoranda to the President from the Assistant Director of the Bureau of the Budget for legislative reference, recommendations from agency heads to the bureau, copies of bills, acts, committee reports.
Covers 1945-1979, with the core spanning 1946-1963 and documenting Powers's role as a friend, campaign worker, and staff member of John F. Kennedy, and later the Curator of the JFK Library Museum.
Part of the Presidential Papers of John F. Kennedy, consisting of the working files of McGeorge Bundy, Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs. It is the primary foreign policy file of the Kennedy White House (1961-1963). Digitized in part.
The main correspondence file for the Kennedy administration; contains letters from the general public, as well as internal staff memoranda. Digitized in part.
General subject file and civil rights file for Assistant Special Counsel to the President Lee C. White, containing correspondence, memorandums, reports, news clippings, drafts, and printed material.
Digitized in full.