Finding Aid for the LeRoy Graf Research Material, 1854-1953 (bulk 1866-1881)


MS-2657

University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN


Collection processed by: Elizabeth Dunham, November 3, 2005
Finding Aid written by: Elizabeth Dunham, November 3, 2005
Encoded by: Elizabeth Dunham, November 3, 2005

Summary Information
Title: LeRoy Graf Research Material

Date/Date Range :   1854-1953 (bulk 1866-1881)
Graf, LeRoy Phillip, 1915-1993.
Extent: 0.5 linear feet

Abstract:
This collection contains material pertaining to the Civil War research of University of Tennessee professor LeRoy P. Graf.

Call number: MS-2657

Repository: University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN

Access and Use
Aquisition Information:
This collection is property of the University of Tennessee Special Collections Library.
Access Restrictions:
Collection is open for research.
Copyright:
The copyright interests in this collection remain with the creator. For more information, contact the Special Collections Library.
Preferred Citation:
[Identification of Item], LeRoy Graf Research Material, MS-2657. The Special Collections Library of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Arrangement

Collection consists of one box. Material is divided into two series: John Eaton and Other Individuals and Families. Original folder titles have been retained in most cases (exceptions are noted).


Biography / History

LeRoy Philip Graf was born in Fremont, Ohio, to John Charles and Rose Hammel Graf on March 17, 1915. He completed his B.A. degree at Oberlin College in 1936 and continuted on to earn both his M.A. (1937) and Ph.D (1942) in history at Harvard College.

After teaching briefly at Tufts and Ohio State University, Graf joined the faculty of the University of Tennessee's history department in 1945. He quickly proved to be a talented and dedicated teacher. He became a full professor in 1950 and was named department head in 1965, a position he held until 1980. Even after his official retirement in 1985, Graf continued to mentor students on a volunteer basis. Graf also wrote prolifically and edited seven volumes of The Papers of Andrew Johnson with his friend and colleague Ralph Haskins.

Graf was also active in the Knoxville community throught his life. Dedicated to the causes of civil rights and interracial and religious cooperation, he was active in the efforts to desegregate Knoxville's restaraunts in the 1950s and 1960s, the Knoxville chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the Beck Cultural Center. Graf was also a patron of the arts, and indeed performed in a number of plays, dances, and musical events.

LeRoy Graf died on May 25, 1993. He was survived by his wife, Ruth Adena Peal Graf, and his three children: Christina Graf, Melissa Graf-Evans, and Jeremy Graf.


Collection Scope and Content Note

This collection contains material pertaining to the Civil War research of University of Tennessee professor LeRoy P. Graf. The bulk of these items are housed in Series I: John Eaton, 1867-1881. Sub-Series A: Eaton Correspondence, 1867-1953, houses Xerox copies of correspondence either addressed to or written by General John Eaton. Sub-Series B: Graf's Eaton Working File, 1868-1881, houses Graf's own working files on his Eaton research. It is important to note that most of the copies of Eaton's correspondence are stamped as having come from the University of Tennessee libraries, and so the originals are most probably located in MS-18. Series II: Other Individuals and Families, 1854-1866, houses correspondence and documents relating to other Civil War era persons and families.

Subject Terms

  • Graf, LeRoy Phillip, 1915-1993.
  • Eaton, John.
  • United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865.
Contents List
   

Series I: John Eaton,

   

Sub-Series A: Eaton Correspondence, 1867-1953

Box   1     Folder   1    
From the U.S. Bureau of Education, including reports from traveling staff, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   2    
Regarding Carpetbag Disillusionment, 1869-1879

Box   1     Folder   3    
From Sarah Cooper, 1870-1879

Box   1     Folder   4    
Fom Charles Eaton [Originally labeled "Nasby-Charles-Toledo" ], 1870-1878

Box   1     Folder   5    
Fom John Eaton at West Point, 1867-1869

Box   1     Folder   6    
From L.B. and Charles Eaton, 1868-1878

Box   1     Folder   7    
From Nathan Eaton, 1876

Box   1     Folder   8    
Regarding Education - i.e. Colleges and College Presidents, 1871-1881

Box   1     Folder   9    
From Alexander Hogg, 1878-1881

Box   1     Folder   10    
From Sheldon Jackson regarding Alaska, 1878

Box   1     Folder   11    
Regarding the Ku Klux Klan, 1869-1876

Box   1     Folder   12    
From Barbour Lewis, 1868-1878

Box   1     Folder   13    
Loose Correspondence, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   14    
Loose Correspondence, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   15    
Loose Correspondence, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   16    
From Elisabeth Peabody [Originally labeled "Peabody and Mann" ], 1881

Box   1     Folder   17    
Regarding Reforms, 1878-1879

Box   1     Folder   18    
From Sears and the U.S. Bureau of Education, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   19    
Regarding Tennessee Politics, 1867-1870

Box   1     Folder   20    
Regarding Women and Education/Children and Education, 1876-1879

Box   1     Folder   21    
Regarding Wyoming, 1878-1953

   

Sub-Series B: Graf's Eaton Working File,

Box   1     Folder   22    
Eaton, 1870

Box   1     Folder   23    
Eaton Letters to be Proofed, 1870-1881

Box   1     Folder   24    
For Seminar: Eaton Papers, 1868-1881

   

Series II: Other Individuals and Families,

Box   1     Folder   25    
Chapman Letters, 1854-1864

Box   1     Folder   26    
Indenture seizing Mack Ramsey's land, 1866