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Anna B. Eckstein Collected Papers

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Held at: Swarthmore College Peace Collection [Contact Us]500 College Avenue, Swarthmore 19081-1399

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. 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

Anna B. Eckstein was born in Coburg, Germany in 1868, the daughter of a German officer. Eckstein left Germany in 1886(?) for America, where she became a naturalized American citizen and joined the Boston [Massachusetts] Peace Society. She became a school teacher and later the principal of the School of Modern Languages in Boston.

Eckstein was influenced by various religious and peace thinkers, including Baroness Bertha von Suttner, Boston pastor Carles Gordon Ames, and the American writer Martha Griffith Brown. Eckstein became an ardent champion of world peace, going on many world tours to promote this ideal. She gave numerous lectures and wrote many articles on peace problems of the United States and of Europe. Eckstein was a vice-president of the American Peace Society from 1905 to 1911 (she took an active role in the 2nd National Peace Congress, held in Chicago in May 1909). Edwin Ginn sponsored her after she left the School of Modern Languages in order to engage wholly in peace work.

Eckstein saw as her greatest work the collection of signatures for "The World Petition to Prevent War Between Nations," to be signed by heads of the 44 signatory powers of the Hague Conventions. It was to serve as a "mutual pledge of the 44 nations to respect, as inviolable, every nation's fundamental factors of life and natural liberty. . . ., to adjust all international interests by treaty, and by arbitration reduce the necessity of armaments." She presented the first version of the petition in 1907 to the second Hague Conference with some two million signatures, at which time she was received by the Queen of the Netherlands and her Ministers. Eckstein began to prepare another petition for the 3rd Hague Conference. By 1914 Eckstein had some 6 million signatures, but estimated that local peace groups had collected many more not included in that count. Eckstein's efforts in this regard were ended by the advent of World War I.

Eckstein was an honorary member of the Liberal Christian League in London and of many other social and education societies.

After her retirement, she moved back to Coburg, Germany. During the Nazi regime, she was curbed in her peace activities. In 1942 she tried to have her manuscript "The Will to Power Harmonized" published, but the Nazi authorities refused permission. Eckstein died in Coburg on October 16, 1947.

The Swarthmore College Peace Collection is the official repository for these papers of Anna B. Eckstein. In 1945, Ellen Starr Brinton, Curator of the Swarthmore College Peace Collection, corresponded with Eckstein about transferring her papers to the SCPC. No agreement was reached, but Eckstein did show interest. After her death, her papers and books were donated to the SCPC by her nephew in exchange for CARE food parcels.

Box 1 of this collection is available on microfilm (reel 120). Microfilm is available on-site by appointment and through interlibrary loan from the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.

Gift of Otto Eckstein, 1949.

Processed by SCPC staff; checklist revised by Anne M. Yoder, Archivist, January 1999

Photos removed to the SCPC Photograph Collection.

Publisher
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research without restrictions.

Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendents, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Use Restrictions

None.

Collection Inventory

Diaries, 1886-1889.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

in English, New York, available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1888.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1889.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1890.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1891.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1892.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1893.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1898.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1899-1905.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1910-1914.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1917-1919.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1920-1923.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1924-1929.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Diaries, 1933.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Account book, 1927-1944.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

Address book, undated.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

available on microfilm Reel 120

"Whittier Birthday Book", undated.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

with notations of birthdays by Anna B. Eckstein

Biographical material.
Box 2
Passport, 1923.
Box 2
Correspondence, 1866-1942, undated.
Box 2
World Petition to the 3rd Hague Conference, 1911-1913.
Box 2
Material by Eckstein.
Box 2
Booklet by Eckstein "Entwurf zu einem Allgemeinen Staatenschutzvetrag . . .", 1918.
Box 2
Booklet by Eckstein "Staatenschutzvertrag zur Sicherung des Weltfriedens", 1919.
Box 2
Material removed from diaries.
Box 2
Miscellaneous.
Box 2

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