PAPERS OF D. ELTON TRUEBLOOD

MsC 710

Collection Dates: Undated
2 linear
inches

Collection Guide

This document describes a Manuscript Collection held by the

Special Collections Department
University of Iowa Libraries
e-mail: lib-spec@uiowa.edu

Guide Contents

Administrative Information

Biographical and Historical Information

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Acquisition and Processing Information

Box Contents List


Administrative Information

Access and Restrictions: This collection is open for research.

Digital Surrogates: Except where indicated, this document describes but does not reproduce the actual text, images and objects which make up this collection. Materials are available only in the Special Collections Department.

Copyright:  Please read The University of Iowa Libraries' statement on "Property Rights, Copyright Law, and Permissions to Use Unpublished Materials"

Use of Collections:  The University of Iowa Libraries supports access to the materials, published and unpublished, in its collections. Nonetheless, access to some items may be restricted by their fragile condition or by contractual agreement with donors, and it may not be possible at all times to provide appropriate machinery for reading, viewing or accessing non-paper-based materials. Please read our Use of Manuscripts Statement.


Biographical Note

Dr. D. Elton Trueblood was a Quaker scholar, teacher and author born in Pleasantville, Iowa, in 1900. He graduated from William Penn College in Oskaloosa, Iowa, in 1922. He did graduate study at Harvard University and received his doctoral degree from Johns Hopkins University. He taught at Guilford College, Harverford College and Stanford University, where he also served as chaplain. He surprised many people by giving up his professorship at Stanford to accept a job as professor of philosophy and religion at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, in 1946. He believed students could do better at a small college where they were in smaller classes and had closer relationships with their teachers, a point he made nationally with his Reader's Digest essay, "Why I Choose a Small College." He was a friend of Herbert and Lou Hoover, who often stayed with him, and a friend of Billy Graham.

He wrote more than thirty-three books, including The Predicament of Modern Man, Alternative to Futility, and his autobiography, While It is Day.

Elton Trueblood died in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, in 1994.

C. Pummer and J. Roethler, August 2004


Scope and Contents

Manuscript material of two of Trueblood's books, The Common Ventures of Life and Declaration of Freedom


Acquisition and Processing Information

These papers were given to the University of Iowa Libraries by Elton Trueblood in 1949 (Common Ventures of Life) and in 1956 (Declaration of Freedom).

Guide posted to Internet: August 2004


Box Contents List

The Common Ventures of Life

Front matter, hand-printed, printed dummy, and printer's proof

Printer's typescript with revisions

Declaration of Freedom

Printer's typescript with corrections

Newspaper clippings and obituaries, 1953 -- 1994

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