Providence College

Table of Contents

Title Page

Collection Overview

Biographical Information

Biographical Timeline

Scope and Content Note

Arrangement

Index Terms

Administrative
Information

Inventory

Clippings, 1925-1969

Publications, 1956-1969

Journals, 1950-1978

Personal Files, 1861- 1969




To Search This Page
Press Ctrl F (Command F on a Mac) to open a search box in your browser window.


Bookmark and Share
© 2009 Providence College


Providence College
Phillips Memorial Library
Special and Archival Collections

Guide to the William Henry Chamberlin papers


Aime J. Forand
Creator(s):
Chamberlin, (William H.), 1897-1969
Title:
William Henry Chamberlin papers
Dates:
1861-1978
Quantity:
18 box(es) (8 linear feet)
Abstract:
The William H. Chamberlin papers (1861-1978), author, journalist, and foreign correspondent, consists of his personal correspondence, news clippings, publications, private journals, photographs and microfilm. The bulk of the collection is made up of news paper clippings (1925-1969) of articles that Chamberlin wrote during his career as a journalist, which reflect his conservative political view points.
Identification:
rppc_mswilliamhenrychamberlin
The records are in English and German.
Repository:
Phillips Memorial Library, Special and Archival Collections
1 Cunningham Square Providence, RI 02918-0001
www.providence.edu/archives

Biographical Information

William Henry Chamberlin was a prolific American historian and journalist. Influenced by his experiences abroad during the 1930s, Chamberlin became a staunch conservative and strong proponent of individual liberty. Despite these political leanings, Chamberlin’s works are described as impartial and keenly insightful. Chamberlin’s scholarly approach and passionate style has led him to be considered a legitimate authority on critical issues from the mid twentieth century.

William H. Chamberlin was born in Brooklyn, New York, on February 17, 1897. He attended the William Penn Charter School before entering Haverford College for undergraduate studies. A recipient of several awards in recognition of his academic achievements, classmates attest to his intelligence and passion for Latin, Greek, Russian, history, and literature. In addition, Chamberlin was an active contributor to the college newspaper, the Haverfordian.

Upon graduation, Chamberlin secured a position on the staff of The Philadelphia Press. At age twenty-five, Chamberlin moved to Greenwich Village, New York, where he worked for Heywood Broun, a book editor of the New York Tribune. In Greenwich Village, Chamberlin was surrounded by pro-Bolsheviks and likewise adopted these sentiments. Writing under the pseudonym A.C Freeman, his pieces support socialism and the Communist regime in the USSR. It was at this time that he married his wife, Sonya Trotsen, a Russian-born immigrant. They would have one daughter, Elizabeth Chamberlin.

In 1922, Chamberlin took a position with the Christian Science Monitor as their Moscow correspondent, a position he would hold for twelve years in addition to working for the Manchester Guardian. Chamberlin’s first book, Soviet Russia (1930), maintains his initial support of Bolshevism but also provides the first glimpse of disillusionment with this ideology. He increasingly became disenchanted with Soviet censorship, suppression, and terrorism. When Chamberlin and Sonya witnessed the devastation of the 1932-1933 famine in the Ukraine and Northern Caucuses, he completely denounced communism.

As a foreign correspondent in Germany, Japan and France, Chamberlin’s opposition towards any form of absolutism and collectivism solidified. Upon returning to the United States in 1939, Chamberlin worked as a free-lance journalist, contributing to The New Leader, The Wall Street Journal, and the Russian Review. His pieces espouse a deep commitment to personal liberty, faith in human reason and freedom, and political conservatism. Chamberlin also continued his career as an author, eventually writing eighteen books, which focus mainly on Soviet history.

Chamberlin additionally served as The Wall Street Journal political and economic commentator. He disagreed with American involvement in World War II and continued to contest U. S. policies of intervention and appeasement after the war, especially in regards to communist countries.

Aside from writing, Chamberlin was a great enthusiast of classical music, baseball and football. He was also a member of the John Birch Society, an organization which shared many of his more conservative stands. Furthermore, Chamberlin was especially devoted to his wife Sonya, who often assisted him in research and supported his literary career. Devastated by Sonya’s death in 1969, he only survived her by nine months. Suffering from a stroke during a trip to St. Moritz, Switzerland, William Henry Chamberlin died on September 12, 1969.

Biographical Timeline
1897 Feb 17 William Henry Chamberlin is born in Brooklyn, New York Mother - May McClintock Chamberlin; Father - Ernest Champberlin
1913-1917 Attends Haverford College
1918 Employed by The Philadelphia Press
1922 Moves to Greenwich Village, New York and works for New York Tribune book editor, Heywood Broun
1922 Marries Sonya Trotsen (Russian Born); One daughter - Elizabeth
1922-1934 Employed as the Moscow news correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor and Manchester Guardian
1930 Writes first book, Soviet Russia
1932-1933 Travels to Ukraine and Northern Caucuses and witnesses famine, causes final break in support for communism
1935 Writes The History of the Russian Revolution: 1917-1921
1934-1939 Works as a foreign correspondent in Germany, Japan and France
1939 Flees France after Nazis takeover, returns to the United States and begins a careers as a freelance journalist for The Wall Street Journal, The New Leader, and the Russian Review
1946 Begins extensive study of post-WWII Europe as a foreign correspondent
1953 Assumes position as the political and economic commentator for The Wall Street Journal
1963 Publishes last work, The German Phoenix
1969 Sonya (Trotsen) Chamberlin passes away
1969 Sep 12 William Henry Chamberlin dies from a stroke near St. Moritz, Switzerland

[top]


Scope and Content Note

The correspondence, news clippings, books, journals, publications and microfilms, which encompass this collection, represent the private interests, as well as the prolific literary career, of William H. Chamberlin in his capacity as an author, foreign correspondent, and political-economic commentator.

[top]


Arrangement

This collection is arranged into four series.

Series list

Clippings
Publications
Journals
Personal Files

[top]


Index Terms

Researchers wishing to find materials related to this collection should search the HELIN catalog with these index terms -- View the catalog record for this collection.

Names
Chamberlin, William Henry, 1897-1969
Christian Science Monitor
Epstein, Klaus
Manchester Guardian
Russian Review
The New Leader
Wall Street Journal (Firm)
Subjects
Communism -- Soviet Union
Conservatism
Eastern question (Far East)
Japan -- Foreign relations
Japan -- Politics and government
Journalists|xBiography
Soviet Union -- Economic conditions -- 1917-1945
Soviet Union -- Economic policy
Soviet Union -- Politics and government
World politics
World War, 1939-1945 -- Soviet Union
Occupations
Journalist

[top]


Administrative Information

Custodial History

Prior to the College's acquisition of the collection, it was under the private ownership of Elizabeth Krumpe, daughter of William Henry Chamberlin.

Preferred Citation

The William Henry Chamberlin papers, Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library, Special and Archival Collections

Acquistions Information

This collection was donated to Providence College by William H. Chamberlin's daughter, Elizabeth Krumpe.

Processing Information

The collection was originally processed in 1970.

Finding aid prepared by Shannon McNamara

Finding aid encoded by Shannon McNamara, 2008 Nov 18

Restrictions

Open for research.

Terms governing use and reproduction: Photocopying and scanning of materials is a fee based service available in the repository and is allowed at the discretion of the Librarian of Special and Archival Collections when in compliance to the College's policy on copyright and publication.

Separated Materials

No materials were separated from the collection.

In addition to the original materials donated, two doctoral dissertations, given by Robert Hobbs Meyers (1973) and Eduard Maximilian Mark (1978), were later incorporated into the collection. These dissertations, recorded on microfilm, provide further analysis and insight into William H. Chamberlin's views on the Soviet Union and its policies.


[top]