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William H. Warren Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 30-332

Scope and Contents

The papers of William H. Warren are comprised of materials collected by Warren that document the efforts of the World War II Memorial Sponsoring Committee to plan, design, and fund the World War II memorial on the Oberlin College campus. Warren served as the chair and guiding force of the committee from its inception in 1995. Received in two accessions in 2001–with one later addition in 2003–the materials document the work of the committee as a group and of Warren as an individual to create the content of the memorial, establish an accurate list of Oberlin alumni who died during the war, and raise the money necessary for the memorial's construction and maintenance as well as for the establishment of a World War II Memorial Scholarship. In most cases, Warren's basic arrangement of the materials has been retained at the folder level.

The collection is separated into four series: Series I. Memorial Design and Construction Files; Series II. Research Files; Series III. Fundraising Files; and Series IV. Photographs. The first three series contain a variety of materials, including a sizable amount of correspondence. Copies of articles and personal notes also make up a large part of the materials, many of which are copies of originals in the Oberlin College Archives.

A basic documentary history of the committee's work is contained within Series I. Of particular interest are the memos sent by Warren to committee members over the course of their work together, 1995-2000. The committee reached consensus on a variety of issues: whom to include in the memorial's list of names; what quotation to add, and what tone to set; what to call the memorial, itself, and where to locate it; what font to use for words inscribed in the memorial's sandstone; how ambitious to be in fundraising. Throughout the process, Warren maintained a wide correspondence with committee members, Oberlin staff and alumni, those involved in the construction process, and many from outside the college community interested in the building of the memorial for one reason or another.

The architectural plans are also contained in Series I, as is correspondence between the landscape architect for the project (James McKnight), Warren, and others. Another subject documented in the correspondence is the controversy surrounding the eventual inclusion on the memorial of Masaru Nakamura, a graduate of the Oberlin School of Theology who died while apparently serving in the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Also, with Warren as the collecting nexus, the papers document the research undertaken to compile a list of alumni names for the memorial, as well as the project's fund raising. Photographic prints and photocopies provide a visual context for the collection as a whole.

Dates

  • Creation: 1995-2003, undated
  • Creation: Majority of material found in 1995-2000
  • Other: Date acquired: 2001 May 25

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted.

Biographical Sketch

William "Bill" Howe Warren (1923-2016) was born in Holden, Massachusetts, to William H. and Edith Brierly Warren. Warren was the youngest of his parents' three children.

In 1942, Bill enrolled in Oberlin College. He joined the U.S. Naval Reserve and was soon called to active duty on a transport ship. After the end of World War II, Bill returned to Oberlin, receiving his AB in psychology in 1948. In 1947, he married Caroline "Kerrin" Harker Morris (1924-2016; Class of '46). Bill and Kerrin had two sons, William Howe Warren Junior and Robert Llewelyn Warren.

Bill Warren earned an AM in education from the University of Chicago and a Doctorate of Education from Harvard University. He worked in administration at Antioch College beginning in 1952. While at Antioch, he served as the Assistant and Associate Dean of Students and the Senior Vice President. In 1969, the Warren family spent a year on Kauai, Hawaii, where Bill directed a field study program for the Union of Experimenting College and Universities. He returned to Antioch after the program's completion. In 1978, Bill and Kerrin moved to Silver Spring, Maryland, where he served as the Vice Chancellor of University College (a continuing education campus of the University of Maryland). The couple retired to Vermont in 1988.

Bill was a passionate advocate for higher education and was a highly involved Oberlin alumnus. Warren served as Preisent of the Alumni Association, Alumni Trustee, and President of his 50th Reunion class. According to his obituary, he considered his work to establish the World War II Memorial Garden and Scholarship Fund one of his proudest accomplishments.

Bill and Kerrin moved to Connecticut in 2009 in order to be closer to their sons. William Warren died of complications of pancreatic cancer in December of 2016, diagnosed one month after Kerrin's August 2016 death. The couple was married for 69 years.

Sources Consulted:

"William Howe Warren," Concord Funeral Home, December 2016, https://obits.concordfuneral.com/william-warren-1.

"Caroline 'Kerrin' Warren," Burlington Free Press, August 2016, https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/burlingtonfreepress/name/caroline-warren-obituary?id=20733326.

Biographical Sketch written by Emily Rebmann.

World War II Memorial History

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR II MEMORIAL, 1995-2002

The idea of creating a memorial to Oberlin College alumni who had lost their lives in the Second World War first surfaced at a special alumni reunion held in Oberlin, Ohio, August 17-20, 1995, entitled “Reflection on the 40’s: Impact of the War Years.” Moved by a monument they had seen at Oxford University listing all alumni who had been killed in the war, irrespective of the nation they had served, William H. ( Class of ’48) and Caroline Morris Warren (Class of ‘46) informally suggested creating such a memorial at Oberlin. Those with whom they spoke responded favorably, some agreeing to serve on a sponsoring committee, so the idea was proposed to the college administration and supported by President Nancy Schrom Dye and Chairman of the Board of Trustees, William Perlik (Class of ’48). Mr. Warren, a Trustee of Oberlin College at the time, organized a sponsoring committee to conceptualize, design, build and fund the memorial. On September 17, 1995, he convened the committee of Paul Arnold (Class of ’40), Father John Kinkopf (Class of ’47), The Reverend William Reid (Class of ’45), James Sunshine (Class of ’49), James Truitt (Class of ’47), Anne Parker Tuck (Class of ’46), Norman Williams (ex-’45), and Barbara King Wright (Class of ’41).  Mr. Warren was elected chairman and Geoffrey Blodgett (Class of ’53), the Danforth Professor of History who had a strong interest in Oberlin architecture, was added to the committee.

During the fall of 1995 the committee addressed issues relating to the scope of the memorial. Issues discussed were: potential inclusion of the Korean and Vietnam Wars; the location, design, and content of the monument; and the criteria for inclusion in the memorial. With college approval, a site along the south wall of Finney Chapel was selected. The committee proposed to construct a “War Memorial Garden” with a monument listing the names of all alumni – military and civilian, irrespective of the nation served – who had lost their lives due to the Second World War, to fund maintenance of the Garden, and to endow a college scholarship in memory of those who had died in the war. The overall design was to include space for memorials of other wars, should there be subsequent interest. Don Van Dyke (Class of ’47), a volunteer researcher at the Oberlin College Archives, undertook pro bono the task of establishing an accurate and complete list of the dead, building on a list developed by Margaret Sahs Erickson (Class of ’62) of the Alumni Office. His task was aided by a card file of names of those in service, including the alumni who had died in the war, located at the Oberlin College Archives in the papers of Oberlin WW II-era president Ernest Hatch Wilkins. Wilkins corresponded with all Oberlin alumni in wartime service. A notice placed in the Oberlin Alumni Magazine also yielded names and several contacts with families of those who had died. The discovery that Masaru Nakamura, a graduate of the Oberlin School of Theology, had been killed while serving in the Imperial Japanese Navy prompted the committee to re-examine their criteria for inclusion in the memorial. Following discussion in which most members favored including Nakamura, all agreed to incorporate his name.

Fundraising was launched in late 1995 with an appeal letter to about 5,000 alumni from the classes of 1930 through 1949. The college staff solicited proposals from several landscape designers and architects and the committee and staff awarded the contract to landscape architect James McKnight, of Cleveland, Ohio. Drawing on the Cass Gilbert Romanesque design and the materials of Finney Chapel, McKnight created a low wall in the garden, reminiscent of ruins from a cloister, on which the names of the dead were inscribed in bands of individual bronze plaques. At the committee’s request, the design of the garden included cuttings of ivy from vines planted by President Wilkins in 1946 at the northeast portico of the Men’s Building (now Wilder Hall) in memory of Herbert Derwig (Class of ’46), who was killed in action.

The groundbreaking for the Garden was held during the 1996 commencement/reunion weekend, the 50th Reunion for many of those involved. Warren presented the memorial to the College and President Nancy Schrom Dye accepted, unveiling drawings and a model of the design. Three other members of the committee offered reflections: Barbara King Wright spoke of her experience as a female Marine and discussed the bombing of Hiroshima. James Sunshine framed the lives and deaths of several of his classmates and friends in the larger narrative of the war. Norman Williams described his own experience as a conscientious objector, his being haunted by a personal letter from the battlefront, and the need to extend the reach of the memorial beyond Oberlin’s dead. (His remarks were read by Geoffrey Blodgett in his absence.) Other committee members read the roll of the seventy-five alumni named on the memorial, and Father Jack Kinkopf, the Rev. Bill Reid, and Rabbi Shimon Brand from the college’s Office of Chaplains each offered a benediction, followed by the playing of “Taps.”

Over the summer and fall the design was refined and fundraising continued. In March of 1997, real – as opposed to symbolic – ground was broken and the memorial was completed by commencement weekend in 1997 at a total cost of $52,026, in addition to materials, plantings and labor contributed by the College. Ten thousand dollars was transferred to the endowment, income from which would cover maintenance and replacement costs. Following completion of the Memorial Garden, at the committee’s request the College agreed to permit additional fundraising until June 30, 2002. In the ensuing five years, reunion classes from the World War II era and other special groups were targeted for gifts to the Fund.

The College established in May 2000 an endowed World War II Memorial Scholarship Fund to provide financial aid to an entering student. The initial $60,000 endowed fund, which came from three sources, now exceeds $100,000. The College first made the award to an entering student in the 2000-01 academic year.

Sources Consulted

The William H. Warren Papers RG 30/332. William H. Warren (OC 1948) provided additional information and editorial comments.

Note written by Mark Genszler.

Extent

0.80 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Method of Acquisition

The William H. Warren papers were received in two accessions in 2001 (2001/050 and 2001/104). Don Van Dyke, OC 1947, donated a separate file of research materials in 2001. In 2003 a folder of correspondence pertaining to Richard Cowan’s class year was added to what became Series II.

Accruals and Additions

Accession Nos: 2001/050, 2001/104.

Related Materials

Records of the Office of the Secretary (RG 5), Historical Files (World War II), Subgroup IX, Series 6, Subseries 2.

Ernest Hatch Wilkins Papers (RG 2/7).

Architectural Records (RG 53) (1999/037), Architectural Drawings of the World War II Memorial Garden, James McKnight.

Title
William H. Warren Papers Finding Guide
Author
Mark Genszler
Date
2005 February 1
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2005 February: Processed by Mark Genszler.
  • 2025: Prepared for migration by Emily Rebmann.

Repository Details

Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository

Contact:
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)