Fred B. Millett papers
Scope and Contents
This inventory was taken from the box labels and is in the order that Professor Millett's letter-boxes were shelved in the Special Collections & Archives stacks. The list covers these letter boxes only and does not include some supplementary materials or the already catalogued materials. [Note from EAS 1/87]
Dates
- Creation: 1898-1973
Creator
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is mostly open for research. Portions may be restricted. Contact sca@wesleyan.edu for more information.
Conditions Governing Use
University records - Copyright held by Wesleyan University; all other copyright is retained by the creator - In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Some materials is in public domain - No Copyright - United States
Biographical / Historical
Fred B. Millett (1890-1976) taught at Wesleyan from 1937 until his retirement in 1958. He was director of the Honors College from 1943 until 1958. In 1952 he was named Olin Professor of English.
Professor Millett was a brilliant and gifted teacher. He cared deeply about educational reform, especially in the humanities. From 1942-1943 he was consultant to the humanities division at the Rockefeller Foundation for a study on the rebirth of liberal education. From 1952-1954 he served as president of the American Association of University Professors. In this role he pushed back against Senator Joseph McCarthy and the members of the House Un-American Activities Committee and their efforts to stifle academic freedom.
Professor Millett was born February 19, 1890 in Brockton, MA, to Daniel Edwin Millett and Mary Avalina Churchill Porter. In 1908 he was valedictorian for the graduating class of Whitman (MA) Public High School. He was orphaned during his years at Amherst College but graduated magna cum laude in 1912, a member of Phi Beta Kappa. For the next four years he was a lecturer in English at Queen’s University in Ontario, and in 1916 he began a fellowship at the University of Chicago. Drafted in 1918, he rose to the rank of second lieutenant at Officers Training School before being discharged in 1919. From 1919 to 1927 he taught at Carnegie Institute of Technology. He began as assistant professor of English and became associate professor in 1926. In 1927 he was hired as an assistant professor at the University of Chicago rising to associate professor there in 1932. While at Chicago he completed his Ph.D., (1931). He left Chicago to come to Wesleyan in 1937.
After his retirement from Wesleyan, Millett served briefly as Distinguished Professor of English at the State University of New York at Albany. Otherwise, he divided his time between his Whitman home and Cape Cod, working on his journals and maintaining his interest in all the arts, as well as some scholarly activity. He edited the eighth edition of A History of English Literature in 1964. Millett died on January 1, 1976, in Brockton, MA.
Extent
71 Linear Feet (133 letter boxes, 3 paige boxes, 3 hollinger boxes, 1 envelope, 1 large broadside, 1 scrapbook, 1 stack, 2' bound volumes, and 12 volumes)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Professor Fred B. Millett taught at Wesleyan from 1937 until his retirement in 1958. He was director of the Honors college for 15 years and was named Olin Professor of English in 1952. This collection contains extensive correspondence, memorabilia and historical information.
Subject
- Millett, Fred B. (Fred Benjamin), 1890-1976 (Person)
- Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.). Honors College (Organization)
- Title
- Fred B. Millett papers, 1898-1962
- Status
- Unprocessed
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the University Archives Repository