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Papers of Horace Gundry Alexander, 1916 - 1983
Collection: DG 140
Contact Information
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
500 College Avenue
Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399
U.S.A.
Telephone: 610-328-8557 (curator)
Fax: 610-690-5728
Email: wchmiel@swarthmore.edu (curator)
URL: http://www.swarthmore.edu/Library/peace/
Descriptive Summary
Repository
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Creator
Alexander, Horace G. (1889-1989)
Title
Horace Gundry Alexander Papers
Inclusive Dates
1916-1989
Call Number
DG 140
Language of Materials
Materials in English
Extent
2 linear feet & 11 linear inches [papers only]
Abstract
Horace Alexander was born in England in 1889. Alexander was educated at Bootham School in York and at King's College, Cambridge University, where he graduated with honors in history. Alexander was a life-long member of the Religious Society of Friends. He was active with the League of Nations Union's Opium Traffic Committee (1926-1931), and his concern about Great Britain's profit in the opium trade led to his first visit to India in 1928, where he met Gandhi and stayed with him for a week. Alexander's life-long interest in India involved activities with the India Conciliation Group, which worked for Indian independence from Great Britain; being an advisor(?) to Gandhi at the Round Table Conference in London (England) in 1931; serving with the Friends Ambulance Unit in India in 1942-1943; being an advisor to Gandhi during Cabinet Mission sessions in India in 1946; doing relief work in India with the Friends Ambulance Unit and the Friends Service Council in India and Pakistan in 1948; corresponding with Indians and others around the world to lobby for Indian rights; and, writing and publishing extensively about Gandhi and about India. Gandhi described Alexander in 1942 as "one of the best English friends India has."
Administrative Information
Restrictions to Access
None
Usage Restrictions
None
Alternate Form of Material
None
Acquisitions Information
Gift of Horace Alexander and Cecilia Sibinga (stepdaughter),
1978, 1984-1986, 1992, 1994, 2007, 2008 (Acc. 78A-085 - 78A-090, 80A-050, 92A-010, 94A-042, 94A-099, 07A-043, 08A-021)
Processing Information
Processed by Peace Collection staff, updated by Wendy Chmielewski October 2008.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the Horace Alexander Papers (DG 140), Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Copyright Notice
Copyright for Horace Alexander has been assigned to the Religious Society of Friends in Britain in 2006. Otherwise copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendents, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Online Catalog Headings
These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online library/archival catalogs.
See tripod record
Related Collections
Horace Alexander Book Collection
Historical Background
Horace Alexander was born in Croyden (England) in 1889, the son of Joseph Gundry Alexander and Josephine Crosfield. He was the youngest of four brothers; Gilbert was seven years older, Wilfred (W.B.) was four years older, and Christopher (killed in Flanders in 1917) was two years older. Horace Alexander was educated at Bootham School in York and at King's College, Cambridge University, where he graduated with honors in history. He taught at a Cranbrook grammar school (15 miles east of Turnbridge Wells) during the winters of 1917-1918 and 1918-1919. From ca. 1919-1941 he was a lecturer in international relations at Woodbrooke College in Birmingham; he served as the school's director in 1941-1945.
Alexander was a life-long member of the Religious Society of Friends. His father had been involved in working for peace and justice in many areas of the world, and Alexander followed in his footsteps in his wide knowledge and influence. He was active with the League of Nations Union's Opium Traffic Committee (1926-1931), and his concern about Great Britain's profit in the opium trade led to his first visit to India in 1928, where he met Gandhi and stayed with him for a week. Alexander's life-long interest in India involved activities with the India Conciliation Group, which worked for Indian independence from Great Britain; being an advisor(?) to Gandhi at the Round Table Conference in London (England) in 1931; serving with the Friends Ambulance Unit in India in 1942-1943; being an advisor to Gandhi during Cabinet Mission sessions in India in 1946; doing relief work in India with the Friends Service Committee in India and Pakistan in 1948; corresponding with Indians and others around the world to lobby for Indian rights; and, writing and publishing extensively about Gandhi and about India. He estimated that "between 1927 and 1955 he spent twelve years in India in various bits and pieces." Rabindranath Tagore wrote in July 1930: "I have great regard for Professor Horace Alexander who is a personal friend of mine and I am glad to take this opportunity of his visit to India to recommend him warmly to my countrymen. He represents a spiritual community in the West with whom we have deep bonds of affinity and in his tour in India he wll be able to bring to our people the touch of that larger humanity which inspires him and his colleagues in Woodbrooke." Gandhi described Alexander in 1942 as "one of the best English friends India has."
Alexander's other involvements include the Friends Service Committee, 1915-1920; the War and Social Order Committee, 1916-1919; the Meeting for Sufferings (for Sussex, Surrey and Hants Quarterly Meetings), 1920; the Council for International Service, 1921-1927; the Peace Committee, 1915-1930, 1936-1946, 1955-1965; the Anglo-American Collaboration Committee, 1944-1948; and, the Peace and International Relations Committee, 1965-1969.
Alexander became engaged to Olive Graham, a teacher in a girls' school, in Sept. 1917; they married July 30(?), 1918. She died in 1942. Alexander married Rebecca Biddle Bradbeer in 1958. They moved to Swarthmore (Pennsylvania, USA) in 1969. Alexander lived to be 100 years old; he died in October 1989. He had a life-long interest in ornithology and published 70 Years of Birdwatching in 1974. His other books include Consider India: An Essay in Values, Gandhi Through Western Eyes, The India Ferment, Joseph Gundry Alexander, and New Citizens of India.
There are additional collections of Horace Alexander papers and materials at Library, Friends House, London and at the Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornitholog, Oxford University.
Collection Overview
This collection consists mostly of correspondence, both personal and relating to Alexander's intense interest in India, as well as his published and unpublished writings [not a complete set]. Some of the material is original, but much of it consists of photocopies, the originals of which were sent to the Friends House Library in London (England) [note: the SCPC does not have the literary rights to the photocopied material]. The Friends House Library in London also holds 79 family letters (1830-1860), the bulk of which are between Samuel Alexander (1809-1884) and Sarah Gundry Alexander (1809-1860).
Alexander donated approximately 250 books, primarily by and about Gandhi, to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection; he also donated important Indian publications: Arunodayam, Gandhi Marg, Visvabharati Quarterly, Young India and Harijan [check tripod for these materials, as well as that owned by the Friends Historical Library, Swarthmore College ].
Items removed:
Horace Alexander Book Collection
Arrangement of Collection
The original accession of this collection is first organized into Alexander biographical material; activities with international Friends' groups; speeches and writings; correspondence; personal correspondence; and reference files on subjects of interest to Horace Alexander. Later accessions are organized by succession, in a similar manner.
Detailed Description of the Collection
Box 1
Biographical information
Service with Friends Ambulance Unit in India, 1942-1943
Service in Friends relief efforts in India, ca. 1945, 1948
Involvement with Peacemakers (England), 1937-1939
Involvement with The Guardian Committee (England), 1942
Involvement with Fellowship of Friends of Truth (India), 1948-1949
Involvement with Fellowship of Friends of Truth (India), 1950-1955
Involvement with Fellowship of Friends of Truth (India), ca, 1948-1955
Involvement with AFSC diplomat conference (Ceylon), 1957
Involvement with World Peace Brigade for Nonviolent Action / Everyman III (England), 1962-1963
Speeches / Addresses
Writings: articles, etc. (published & unpublished)
Writings: book reviews
Writings: letters to the editor
Writings: tributes / biographical articles (published & unpublished)
Writings re: birds, 1980-1981, 1983
General correspondence, 1932-1939
General correspondence, 1940-1945
Box 2
General correspondence, 1946-1949
General correspondence, 1950-1959
General correspondence, 1963-1983
General correspondence, n.d.
Letters from Mahadev Desai, 1932-1939
Letters to/from Mararji Desai [Prime Minister of India], 1974-1979
Letters from Verrier Elwin, 1932-1939
Letters to/from Indira Gandhi, 1965-1983
Letters from Mahatma Gandhi [or his associates on his behalf], 1927-1948
Letters from Dorothy Hogg, 1956-1983
Letters to/from J.P. Narayan, 1950-1977
Letters to/from Jawaharlal and Motizal Nehru, 1930-1957
Letters to/from Philip Noel-Baker, 1923, 1954-1982
Letters to/from Pyarelal, 1932-1965
Letters from C. Rajagopalachari, 1957-1966
Letters from Robert Steele, 1957-1977
Letters from Marjorie Sykes, ca. 1948, 1951-1983, n.d.
Letters from Richard Symonds, 1956-1983
Letters from Geoffrey and Judy Wilson, ca. 1955-1960
Letters to/from Krishna Menon, 1941
Correspondence re: Gandhi’s alleged interview in Rome, 1934
Correspondence re: Friends Ambulance Unit (India), 1943-1944
Correspondence re: movie on Gandhi, 1963-1968
Miscellaneous material removed from books donated to the SCPC by H.A.
Box 3
Letters to Olive Graham, 1916
Letters to Olive Graham, May-Aug. 1917
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], Sept. 1917
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], Oct. 1917
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], Nov. 1917
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], Dec. 1917
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], Jan.-Feb. 1918
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], March-April 1918
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], May 1918
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], June 1918
Letters to Olive Graham [fiancée], July 1918
Letters to Olive Graham [wife], April 1919; July 1919
Letters to Olive Graham [wife], Sept. 1919
Box 4
Letters to Olive Graham [wife], Oct. 1919
Letters to Olive Graham [wife], Nov.-Dec. 1919
Letters to Olive Graham [wife], Jan. 1920
Letters from Olive Graham, 1915-1916 [4 letters]
Letters from Olive Graham, Jan.-Oct. 1917 [became engaged in Sept. 1917]
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], Nov.-Dec. 1917
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], 1917?
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], Jan.-March 1918
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], April-May 1918
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], June-July 1918
Letters from Olive Graham [fiancée], 1918?
Letters to Olive Graham from family and friends, 1917, 1919
Reference material: map of railroad system in India, 1898
Box 5 (1/2 box)
Reference material: AFSC relief work in India, ca. 1943-1944
Reference material: Fellowship of Friends of Truth (India)
Reference material: India
Reference material: Jawaharlal Nehru
Reference material: Philip Noel-Baker
Reference material: World Peace Brigade for Nonviolent Action (England), 1962
Reference material: World Peace Brigade for Nonviolent Action (England), 1962-1963
Reference material: miscellaneous
Later Accession [08A-021]
Box 6
Biographical information
Writings: unpublished
Writings: transcripts made of Gandhi’s speeches and interviews, etc, with notes (11 items)
Miscellaneous correspondence, 1953-1954
Miscellaneous correspondence, 1960, 1965-1969, 1971
C. F. Andrews Centennial (1971): correspondence, papers given, C. F. Andrews Fund, etc., 1932, 1940, 1954, 1970-1971
Correspondence with staff at Visva-Bharati ( Bengal, India), 1946-1950 [R. Tagore, S. K. George, etc.], and with Marjorie Sykes
Correspondence etc. re: publishing of books, 1960-1969
Efforts re: Gandhi Centenary (1969): correspondence, 1968-1969
Efforts re: Gandhi Centenary (1969): writings, newsclippings, etc.
Efforts re: Gandhi Centenary (1969): involvement in Gandhi Centenary Working Group, 1968-1969
Box 7
Reference material: miscellaneous
Reference material re: Gandhi
Reference material re: Gandhi: transcripts of speeches given at Round Table Conference, London ( England), 1931
Reference material: Gandhi Centenary (1969) events, etc., 1968-1969
Reference material re: India
Reference material re: Kashmir, 1950s
Box 8 (1/2 box)
Reference material: Kashmir, 1950s (cont.)
Reference material: “Mahatma Gandhi: Screenplay by Gerald Hanley,” 1963 (Nov.) [property of Indo-British Films, Ltd.]
File last updated on May 26, 2008.