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Franklin Book Programs Records
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Held at: Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
Franklin Publications was officially incorporated in the state of New York on June 5, 1952 as a nonprofit membership corporation for publication and translation of American books to native languages for distribution abroad. A group of American publishers, librarians and educators who were concerned with the state of education in developing countries founded the organization and named it after America's first book publisher, Benjamin Franklin. This group hoped that by facilitating and encouraging the publication and reading of American books in translation, international ties would be strengthened. Franklin's official purpose as stated in its certificate of incorporation was to:
publish and disseminate the printed word to the peoples of the world outside the United States, to stimulate interest in and promote the freedom, dignity and welfare of mankind; and to convey to them the knowledge and information relating to the people of the United States; and to stimulate interest in the history, government, culture, economy, technology, science and learning of the people of the United States.
The United States Information Agency (USIA) provided a $500,000 grant for the establishment of Franklin Publications, Inc. The organization stressed it was not a distributor of American propaganda nor was it an extension of the United States government, although it was originally conceived as a way of offering the services of the book publishing industry to the Government's overseas translation program. Contention erupted between Franklin and the USIA over the agency's desire to have final approval over the selection of titles. Franklin resented the agency's attempt to apply the same measures to Franklin's title selection as it applied to its own translation program. Franklin believed this limited their flexibility in working with foreign advisors and publishers. A series of discussions took place between the USIA and Franklin, which resulted in the USIA stating it had no desire to interfere with the normal publishing operations of Franklin. Their direct interest was in those projects financed by USIA funds. However, the USIA stipulated selected books were to have the following objectives, once Franklin had decided to focus its initial efforts on Arab-speaking countries in the Middle East:
Franklin opened its first field office in Cairo, Egypt in June 1953 and by 1959 other field offices had opened in Tehran, Iran, Tabriz, Iran, Lahore, Pakistan, Dacca, Bangladesh, Djakarta, Indonesia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Beirut, Lebanon and Baghdad, Iraq. Franklin hired locals to staff its field offices and relied upon the advice of local advisors to select the types of books desired. The local advisors made the final decision on titles selected, but Franklin did supply American specialists to provide suggestions and comments if needed. Franklin did have the technical right to veto a title selection but rarely used it. It could not impose a selection on the local office but it would propose alternatives for out of date or low quality books. Once a title was selected and approved, Franklin secured the translation rights from the American proprietor, and then contracted with a local publisher and translator. Franklin paid for the translation, special editorial work, the introduction and artwork. The local publisher paid for paper (unless it was hard to secure, in which case Franklin would supply it), printing, binding, and all other normal publishing expenses. The publisher also agreed to pay Franklin ten percent of the local selling price. After the book was published, Franklin would aid the publisher in promoting, advertising and setting up jobber arrangements.
Franklin secured its first contract with a Cairo publisher in April 1953, and Edward R. Murrow's This I Believe was the first book published in Arabic on October 5, 1953. It was also the most popular, selling an estimated 30,000 copies in six months. Other early books included Bertha Parker's Basic Science Education Series, George Soule's Ideas of The Great Economists, Majid Khadduri's The Middle East in the Writings of Americans, Louisa May Alcott's Little Women, Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome, Charles Leonard's Why Children Misbehave, Thornton Wilder's The Bridge of San Luis Rey, and Herman and Nina Schneider's Your Telephone and How it Works. By June 1954, 132 titles had been published in Persian, Urdu, Turkish and Indonesian. Franklin did not maintain an office in Turkey but assisted its Ministry of Education with the publication of titles in the field of teacher training.
Franklin initially shied away from textbook publishing because "imperialist poisoning of the minds of children" was easy fodder for anti-American propagandists. However, at the request of the Ministries of Education of Afghanistan and Iran, Franklin began a textbook program in 1957. It supplied new design and artwork, carried out physical production of textbooks, and assisted in the improvement of content. It should be noted that many of Franklin's translated books made their way into local universities and were often used as "textbooks."
As the 1950s drew to a close, Franklin had gained the respect of the countries it served and thus survived a total of twenty-one changes of government in those countries. It prided itself in having no national or international political involvement, although it did receive funds and support from government officials in various countries. Its program had not only fostered intellectual development but also gave a boost to the developing country's local economy. By eschewing a "giveaway" policy, Franklin helped the local book industry instead of subsidizing the circulation of particular books.
The 1960s were a tumultuous time for Franklin. It continued to grow, expanding its programs to Africa and South America, but soon found itself in serious financial jeopardy. It began to redirect its activities from direct operational projects toward educational development. Specifically, it began to focus more on developing libraries and literacy campaigns, producing encyclopedias and dictionaries, developing textbooks, conducting training seminars in book publishing and writers' workshops, and technical assistance in printing, publishing and book selling. This redefinition also extended to a name change. Franklin Publications became Franklin Book Programs in 1964. The board felt the name Franklin Publications sounded too commercial and gave the impression it was a competitor to publishers. The organization's original name also failed to show its emphasis on books and that it was an international program.
This functional shift was also the result of dwindling financial support. The United States government as well as foreign governments were no longer interested in subsidizing traditional translation programs. Franklin did receive some financial support from a sister organization in September 1965. The members of the Council on Books in War Time, Inc. voted to dissolve the corporation and distribute its remaining funds to Franklin. However, by November 1967 Franklin was in a precarious financial situation. It reduced staff levels in all of its offices, eliminated marginal but relatively costly programs, confined the translation program to donor-supported titles, and established stricter budgetary controls. The president of Franklin stated in a November 1968 memorandum to the board of directors that although the translated book program had assisted local publishers, it had not had a major influence on the development of indigenous publishing, and was not a significant factor in educational and economical development. It was a relatively low-volume high-cost program that required a burdensome subsidy.
Franklin continued to redefine its mission to attract financial support, and in 1971-1972 established two task forces: one to consider a merger for Franklin while the other reviewed its programs, fundraising activities, and viability. The first task force recommended that Franklin remain independent if it could possibly do so while the other task force made several significant recommendations. It urged that "Franklin's role be expanded worldwide, it become an aggressive seeker of funds, and become a representative of a broad section of the American business and professional community in developing education, which is the key to the improvement of the quality of life in developing countries." Franklin continued to remain solvent and functioning until June 1978 when its board and members voted to dissolve the corporation after recognizing that for the most part Franklin's original mission had been achieved.
The Franklin Book Programs Records contain the administrative records of this non-profit, educational organization. The collection contains minutes, correspondence, memoranda, reports, contracts, photographs and other audiovisual material documenting Franklin's twenty-six year existence. The material highlights the complexities of developing, managing and dissolving an organization that hoped to neutralize and overcome the effects of anti-American sentiment in the book publishing and distribution field.
The material within the folders is arranged in reverse chronological order unless otherwise noted. Researchers should be aware that Franklin was very inconsistent in regard to the placement of items. Although a particular subject, person, organization, etc. may have its own folder, it is highly recommended researchers check the general correspondence folders as well. Researchers will note in some instances there are A-Z correspondence folders as well as general correspondence folders. General correspondence usually contains internal correspondence, memoranda, etc. between the New York and field offices, while the A-Z folders contain external correspondence. However, at times the internal and external correspondence are combined and the folder is labeled general correspondence. There is also correspondence in Arabic, French, Persian, Spanish and Urdu.
Researchers should be aware that Franklin had two distinct sets of records. Duplicate copies of correspondence and cables to and from Franklin's field offices were made. Each was assigned a unique number and filed chronologically, while the duplicate was filed alphabetically by subject. The "chrono files" as Franklin referred to them, included all of the correspondence with the overseas offices during their service. Former executive director, Jack Kyle, admitted to many misfilings by the staff and having to use the chrono files to locate items. These chrono files are located at the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin. However, we do have an incomplete index of chronological cable summaries, which are located in Series 2, Subseries 1.
The collection is divided into five series that reflect the organization's arrangement of its files:
Franklin Book Programs donated these records to the Princeton University Library in 1978. Certain series deemed non-archival by the Princeton University Library were later acquired by the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
This collection was processed by Kristine Marconi in 1999-2001 with the assistance of Christine Kitto, Rosemary Switzer, Anneké Allen, Nicole Basta, Amy Bergbreiter, Everitt Clark, Priscilla Delgado, Patrick Gallagher, Antoine Grady, Hilary Matson, Nate Holland, Chris Hoyte, Rachel Koblic, Shantanu Mukherjee, Brooke Meserole, Stan Ruda, Noelia Sanz, Brian Schulz, Sid Smith, Laura Vanderkam, and Brian Weiss. Finding aid written by Kristine Marconi in 1999-2001.
No appraisal information is available.
People
- Benjamin, Curtis G. (1901-1983)
- Booher, Edward E. (1911-1990)
- Brett, George P. (George Plat) (1893-1984)
- Cameron, Donald S.
- Crowell, Robert L.
- Dandison, Basil Gray (1900)
- de Graff, Robert F. (Robert Fair) (1895-1981)
- Ginsberg, Allen (1926-1997)
- Goldschmidt, Arthur (1938)
- Harwood, Raymond C. (Raymond Charles) (1906-1987)
- Johnson, Malcolm (1902)
- Kyle, John H. (John Hamilton) (1925-1998)
- Lacy, Dan
- Smith, Datus C. (Datus Clifford) (1907-1999)
- Spaulding, William E. (William Ellsworth) (1898-1979)
- Waller, Theodore
- Wilson, Thomas James (1902-1969)
Subject
- Authors and publishers. -- 20th century
- Book industries and trade -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Book industries and trade -- United States -- 20th century
- Books -- Developing countries -- Format. -- 20th century
- Books and reading -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Book selection -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Booksellers and bookselling -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Educational publishing -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Library surveys -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Publishers and Publishing -- United States. -- 20th century
- Nonprofit corporations -- United States. -- Records and correspondence -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Afghanistan. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Africa. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Bangladesh. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Egypt. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Indonesia. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Iran. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Iraq. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Lebanon. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Malaysia. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- Pakistan. -- 20th century
- Publishers and publishing -- South America. -- 20th century
- Publishers and Publishing -- United States. -- Records and correspondence -- 20th century
- Textbooks -- Publishing -- Developing countries. -- 20th century
Place
- Publisher
- Public Policy Papers
- Finding Aid Author
- Kristine Marconi
- Finding Aid Date
- 2001
- Sponsor
- These papers were processed with the generous support of The National Historical Publication and Records Commission and The John Foster and Janet Avery Dulles Fund.
- Access Restrictions
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Collection is open for research use.
- Use Restrictions
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Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
Collection Inventory
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Series 1, Board of Directors, 1952-1978, contains four subseries: Minutes, Committees, Correspondence and Annual Reports. The board controlled the affairs and property of the corporation. Initially, the board membership was comprised of "sixty percent of individuals who had technical knowledge in the publishing field and its problems, and forty percent of individuals who had experience in the fields of education, literature or public affairs, and shall represent the public interest." Membership in the Corporation, on the other hand, simply required a "desire to share in the effectuation of the informational, educational, cultural and other purposes of the corporation."
Physical Description16 boxes
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Subseries 1, Minutes, 1952-1978, houses three distinct sets of minutes: the board of directors meetings, members of the corporation meetings and committee meetings. In accordance with the by-laws the board and members were required to meet annually. The annual board meeting was usually held immediately following the annual meeting of the members, but the board did convene for special meetings throughout the year. The annual members' meeting was held to elect the board members and officers, while the board formulated policy.
Physical Description2 boxes
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Subseries 2, Committees, 1952-1977, contains correspondence, memoranda and reports developed by various board committees. The executive committee was the only committee to meet somewhat regularly and was established to be in active control of the conduct of the business of the corporation when the board was not in session. The only other committee with extensive documentation is the nominating committee. Also included within this subseries are materials relating to the task force established in 1971 to study the purpose of Franklin's program and its finances.
Physical Description3 boxes
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Subseries 3, Correspondence, 1952-1978, contains general memoranda sent to the board and members of the corporation, followed by correspondence arranged alphabetically by individual board member. Topics of the memoranda range from surveys as to who will attend the next board meeting to reports highlighting Franklin's activities. Correspondence with individual board members can be quite revealing depending upon the board member's involvement. More active members included Curtis Benjamin, Edward E. Booher, Arthur Goldschmidt, Raymond C. Harwood, Malcolm Johnson, Dan Lacy, William E. Spaulding, Theodore Waller, and Thomas J. Wilson.
Physical Description12 boxes
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No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Subseries 4, Annual Reports, 1954-1977, contains annual reports that were originally written by the president and intended solely for the board. They became published reports in 1961. The earlier reports are very detailed in their description of Franklin's projects and programs, while later reports give a general overview. It should be noted that the collection lacks a report for 1975.
Physical Description2 boxes
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No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Series 2, Administration Records, 1952-1978, is divided into four subseries: New York Office Records, AID/USIA, Country Files and Trip Reports. This series provides the most information on Franklin's operations but at the same time is quite frustrating due to numerous gaps and an inconsistent filing system. Ironically, an overzealous cross-reference system resulted in redundant files with copies of items filed in various places. Files were consolidated and duplicate items removed as part of this processing project.
Physical Description146 boxes
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Subseries 1, New York Office Records, 1952-1978, includes incoming and outgoing correspondence, clippings, pamphlets, speeches, grant applications and memoranda of Franklin's executive directors (Datus C. Smith, Michael Harris, Carroll Bowen and Jack Kyle) and headquarters staff. Also to be found is the founding members' correspondence, including that of George P. Brett, Jr., Donald S. Cameron, Robert L. Crowell, Basil Dandison, Robert F. DeGraff, Charles E. Griffith, Malcolm Johnson, Dan Lacy, Datus C. Smith and Theodore Waller. This early material is arranged in reverse chronological order (the bulk of the records began to be arranged alphabetically in 1958), and includes information ranging from the naming of the organization to which countries would benefit most from its programs. The New York office was responsible for all of Franklin's international operations, and the administrative aspects of managing these offices are included here. Specific correspondence with its field offices is included in Subseries 3. This subseries highlights the New York Office's function of recruiting consultants for overseas projects, translation rights procurement, research and information gathering, program development including collaborative efforts with other organizations and businesses, fundraising and contract negotiation.
Physical Description42 boxes
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No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Subseries 2, AID/USIA, 1952-1978, includes alphabetically arranged correspondence, memoranda, contracts, financial records, book exhibit plans, lists of books for purchase and distribution, records describing office plans and operations in various countries, task orders, and reports regarding Franklin's relationship with these two governmental agencies. The two agencies helped to support Franklin financially through various contracts and grants. While the relationship between Franklin and the USIA focused more on title selections, AID supported training programs in publishing, library development, purchasing and distributing books, and acquiring translation rights.
Physical Description16 boxes
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No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Subseries 3, Country Files, 1952-1978, is arranged alphabetically by country and documents the activities of Franklin's foreign offices as well as various regions Franklin considered for the expansion of its programs. It contains correspondence, memoranda, reports, clippings, telegrams and proposals that provides an in-depth look at the relationship Franklin had with its field offices, the selection of titles, the nature of projects, as well as the success and failure of certain projects. Its "regular program" was the cornerstone of Franklin's operation and influenced special projects. The regular program was defined as the straight translation projects as opposed to special projects, which included encyclopedias, textbook projects, library development, workshops, etc. By the time Franklin ceased operating in 1978, its field offices had translated over 3,000 titles, produced several encyclopedias, conducted numerous surveys, and trained hundreds of people.
Physical Description81 boxes
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