Main content
Thomas Willing Balch Letter
Notifications
Held at: Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center. 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
Thomas W. Balch, publicist, was born in Germany to American parents of Philadelphia origin. He was educated at Harvard and five years later received his LL.B. degree from the Univ. of Pennsylvania. He began his law practice in 1895, but devoted much of his energies to writing and activism. Balch wrote many books and articles on genealogy including, the Balch genealogical (1907). He also wrote on international arbitration. His Alasko-Canadian frontier (1902) explores the acquisition of Alaska. Balch contributed numerous articles to the American Journal of International Law. He also issued a revised edition of International Courts of Arbitration (1915), originally written by his father in 1874. The work dealt with the Alabama boundary issue. A member of numerous clubs and socities in Pennsylvania, Balch served as vice-president of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
Holograph letter to Mr. Perine thanking him for his favorable review in the Evening Bulletin on Balch's book about the Alaska boundary issue. Letter was removed from Bulletin copy of Balch's, The Alasko-Canadian frontier (1902).
Donated by the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, July 1983.
- Publisher
- Temple University Libraries: Special Collections Research Center
- Finding Aid Author
- Katy Rawdon, Coordinator of Technical Services
- Finding Aid Date
- January 2024
- Access Restrictions
-
Open for research.
- Use Restrictions
-
The Thomas Willing Balch Letter is the physical property of the Special Collections Research Center, Temple University Libraries. The creator/donor has not assigned their rights to Temple University Libraries. Other creators' intellectual property rights, including copyright, belong to them or their legal heirs and assigns. Researchers are responsible for determining the identity of rights holders and obtaining their permission for publication and for other purposes where stated.