Document Group: DG 006
Size: 25.75 linear feet (9.42 meters)
Microfilm: Yes
Restrictions: None
Finding aid: Checklist prepared by Martha P. Shane, 1988,
revised 1996 by Wendy E. Chmielewski
* These Series are not available on microfilm.
Emily Greene Balch (1867-1961) was one of only two American women who have won the Nobel Peace Prize. (The other was Jane Addams, whose papers are also in the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.) After graduating from Bryn Mawr College in 1889, Balch studied at the Sorbonne, helped to found the Boston settlement, Denison House, and then embarked on her academic career in the economics and sociology department at Wellesley College. Her exhaustive study of eastern and southern European immigrants, which challenged nativist opinions of the time, was published in 1910. Balch's extracurricular work with the Women's Trade Union League and opposition to World War I resulted in dismissal from Wellesley, and thereafter she helped lead the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. She tried to widen the purview of the League of Nations, visited Haiti and advocated withdrawal of occupying U.S. forces, and in l939 urged the United States to welcome refugees from Nazi Germany. Called a "Citizen of the World," Balch worked for peace throughout her life--through disarmament; internationalization of important waterways, aviation, and the polar regions; drug control; and the elimination of the causes of discontent and conflict among peoples.
The papers of Emily Greene Balch contain her diaries (l876-l955, scattered), journals (c. 1894-1948, scattered) and notebooks, all of which provide autobiographical background. There is a draft of an autobiography (c. 1952) with corrections and also transcripts from interviews (1950) with Mercedes M. Randall, her literary executor and biographer. Genealogical information is provided by early correspondence to and from members of her family (1840s-1890s), her mother's diary (1849), and publications about Balch family history. A small collection of material deals with friends and other people who were important in Balch's life, while another collection of articles, booklets, and releases describes Balch as others knew her.
There are tributes to her by her alma mater Bryn Mawr College, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Wellesley College, and John R. Randall, Jr., who wrote a pamphlet, Emily Greene Balch of New England: Citizen of the World (1946). Material is included about the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to her in 1946, with lists of the sponsors and the Nobel lecture she delivered in Oslo in 1948. The Nobel scroll she was awarded is kept at Swarthmore College, while the gold medal is housed at Bryn Mawr College.
Correspondence to and from Balch spans the years from 1875 until her death in 196l. A gap from 1907 until 1913 may have been caused by a fire at Wellesley in 1914, when many papers were destroyed. A considerable amount of important correspondence (1920-c. 1941) relates to the affairs of WILPF, an organization in which Balch was very active. Included among Balch's correspondents are Grace Abbott, Jane Addams, Gertrud(e) Baer, Francis Noyes Balch, Francis Vergnies Balch, Katharine Lee Bates, Katherine Devereux Blake, Ellen Starr Brinton, Gertrude Bussey, Helen Cheever, Hilda Clark, Katherine Coman, Kathleen D. Courtney, Dorothy Detzer, Madeleine Z. Doty, Camille Drevet, Gabrielle Duchene, Anna Melissa Graves, Lida Gustava Heymann, Hannah Clothier Hull, Aletta H. Jacobs, Eleanor Daggett Karsten, Paul Underwood Kellogg, Louis P. Lochner, Kathleen J. Lowrie, Lucia Ames Mead, Mildred Scott Olmsted, Ellen F. Pendleton, Alice Thacher Post, Edith M. Pye, Clara Ragaz, Cor Ramondt Hirschmann, Mercedes M. Randall, Vida D. Scudder, Mary Sheepshanks, Rebecca Shelley, Florence G. Taussig, Mabel Vernon, and Lillian D. Wald.
Her writings (1884-1956) include articles and speeches--some published, others in manuscript, draft, or note form--as well as letters to the editor, book reviews, poems, a song, and research notes. There are many writings pertaining to WILPF. Some books written by Balch are not microfilmed but can be found in the Swarthmore College Peace Collection library.
Three subject files also are part of the Balch papers. These are not on microfilm. The first, the Single Accession Subject File, was donated by Balch in 1957 and is in its original order. The second, the Multiple Accession File, is a composite file created from subject folders found in many different places among her own files. Correspondence and writings by Balch were removed from both of these subject files and incorporated into Series II and III, which are on the microfilm. Checklists giving the folder titles and span dates for these subject files are available in the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Additional unfilmed material includes a third subject file that was created by Kathleen Whitaker Sayre and given to Balch, and a collection of peace literature and reference material.
Collections closely related to the Balch papers, also at Swarthmore, include the records of the Woman's Peace Party, the United States Section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), the American Neutral Conference Committee, the People's Council of America for Democracy and Peace, and the papers of Jane Addams, Dorothy Detzer, Hannah Clothier Hull, and Mercedes M. Randall. The collected records of the Woman's Peace Party and significant portions of the WILPF--U.S. Section records are available on microfilm from Scholarly Resources Inc.
The two main sources of the Emily Greene Balch papers were Emily Greene Balch herself and Mercedes M. Randall, Balch's biographer. The papers contributed by Balch were received between 1936 and 1957. Some material was in good order, but much was marked "unsorted" and therefore needed to be organized. In preparing the book, Improper Bostonian: Emily Greene Balch (1964), Randall arranged the Balch papers for her own use. The Peace Collection sometimes kept her groupings of material by subject or time period in the final arrangement. When Randall's original file folders added information, they were kept with the items with which they were found.
In l983 a generic arrangement was undertaken to replace lengthy item inventories that previously had been used. Five series were organized: Series I, Biographical; Series II, Correspondence; Series III, Writings by Emily Greene Balch; Series IV, Subject files; and Series V, Peace Literature/Reference Material. The first three of these are microfilmed. Series IV and V are not microfilmed, but Balch correspondence and writings found there were moved into Series II and III and thus are filmed.
Correspondence to and from Balch is found in Series II. Letters are together in chronological order by year, month, and day. If only the month is known, the letter appears at the end of that month. If only the year is known, the letter appears at the end of that year. Undated correspondence is together, following dated correspondence. When a page is missing from a dated letter, it may be found with undated correspondence.
The same chronological arrangement is used with writings as with correspondence. Some of the undated writings have identification numbers which refer a researcher to the Appendix at the end of this guide. Only a very few short books by Balch are filmed. Others can be found in the library of the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.
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Is born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. |
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Attends Miss Ireland's School in Boston. |
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Enters Bryn Mawr College. |
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Graduates from Bryn Mawr College with A.B. |
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Studies at the Sorbonne. |
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Helps to found Denison House, a Boston settlement house. |
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Studies at Harvard Annex. |
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Studies at University of Chicago. |
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Studies at University of Berlin. |
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Accepts teaching position in Economics at Wellesley College. |
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Cofounds and becomes president of Boston Women's Trade Union League. |
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Travels in Austria and Hungary. |
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Helps organize socialist conference in Boston with Vida Scudder. |
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Fire at Wellesley College destroys many Balch papers, including much Slavic research. |
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Attends International Congress of Women in The Hague. Is active in Woman's Peace Party. Joins unofficial peace-seeking delegation visiting Scandinavia and Russia. |
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Participates in Neutral Conference for Continuous Mediation in Stockholm. Visits President Woodrow Wilson to argue peace through continuous mediation. |
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Takes unpaid leave from Wellesley. |
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Helps found Emergency Peace Federation, which becomes People's Council of America |
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Reappointment as professor at Wellesley is denied by board of trustees. Joins staff of The Nation. Attends second International Congress of Women in Zurich. |
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Serves as secretary-treasurer of the International Executive Committee of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) in Geneva. |
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Joins London Society of Friends. |
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Moves from Jamaica Plain to "Domichek" in Wellesley. |
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Goes to Haiti under WILPF auspices. |
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Serves as president of WILPF, U.S. Section. |
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Serves as one of three chairmen of the WILPF International Executive Committee. |
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Serves as honorary international secretary, WILPF, in Geneva. |
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Is elected and continues to serve until her death as honorary president of WILPF International. |
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Her 75th birthday is honored at WILPF luncheon in Philadelphia. |
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Attends 10th International Congress of WILPF in Luxembourg. Receives Nobel Peace Prize. |
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Asks United Nations to internationalize great waterways of the world and uninhabited polar regions. Urges creation of UN Maritime Authority. |
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Delivers Nobel lecture in Oslo, titled "Beyond Human Unity or Beyond Nationalism." |
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Is honored by WILPF on 90th birthday. |
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Dies in Cambridge, Massachusetts nursing home. |
This file was last updated on April 24, 2007.