Dudley Harmon papers
Scope and Contents
Collection consists of correspondence, scrapbooks, articles journals and materials from his time at the New England Council and at the Higher Education Assistance Program.
Early years are documented in clippings, typed manuscripts and journals. Collection also includes some photographs and ephemera.
Dates
- Creation: 1907-1976
Creator
- Dudley, Harmon, 1886-1976 (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research.
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 material is in public domain - No Copyright - United States
Biographical / Historical
Dudley Harmon, Wesleyan Class of 1909, was born November 18, 1886 in Meriden, CT. Upon graduation he joined the editorial staff of The Washington (D.C.) Herald, and was a reporter for The Washington Times, 1909-10. He married fellow reporter Selene Ayer Armstrong, of Washington, Georgia on September 20, 1910.
In 1911 he joined the Washington Bureau of The Sun, (New York), and became the Washington editor for The Ladies Home Journal in 1915. In 1918 he returned to Connecticut as assistant to the president of the Manufacturers Association of Connecticut.
In 1925 the governors of the six New England states established the New England Council to work on regional economic cooperation and development. Harmon was appointed vice president the following year. He retired from this organization in 1951.
After his retirement from the Council, Harmon continued writing a weekly column for New England newspapers on the region, its economic problems and progress. In 1956, Gov. Christian Herter of Massachusetts called him out of semiretirement to head the state Higher Education Assistance Corporation and run its pioneer student loan program, the Higher Education Loan Plan (HELP). He retired from this position in 1968.
Dudley Harmon was awarded two honorary degrees: Brown (June 4, 1951) and Worcester Polytechnic Institute (June 6, 1959)
Harmon died on December 8, 1976. He was survived by third wife, Edith Chase Hall and 3 daughters, Carolyn Harmon Scott, Rose Terry Harmon Talbot, and Selene Harmon Howe. He was pre-deceased by his eldest daughter, eponymously named Dudley Harmon.
Extent
1.0 Linear Feet (2 hollinger boxes and 2 large envelopes)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Dudley Harmon ('09) began his professional life as a newspaper reporter in Washington, D.C. He went on to become an adminstrator for several corporations: the Manufacturers Association of Connecticut (1918-1926), the New England Council (1926-1951), and the Massachusetts Higher Education Assistance Program (1956-1968). His 1913 journal contains numerous anecdotes about political figures, notably Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan, Woodrow Wilson, William Howard Taft, former secretary of State Philander Knox; and about newspaper reporters and editors. Correspondence includes letters from Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Sorensen and John F. Kennedy.
Arrangement
Collection consists of six series:
- Scrapbooks
- Manuscripts
- Correspondence
- Higher Education Loan Plan
- New England Council
- Personal
Immediate Source of Acquisition
These papers of Dudley Harmon (1886-1976) were the gift of his daughters, Carolyn Harmon Scott, Rose Terry Harmon Talbot, and Selene Harmon Howe, in July and November, 1984. A printed book accompanying the gift, "The British Isles and the Baltic States", by Frank G. Carpenter and Dudley Harmon, (Carpenter’s World Travels series, Doubleday, Page, 1926), has been catalogued for the Wesleyan collection.
Subject
- Dudley, Harmon, 1886-1976 (Person)
- New England Council (Organization)
- Title
- Dudley Harmon papers, 1907-1976
- Status
- Unprocessed
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the University Archives Repository