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Newell L. Sims Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 30-343

Scope and Contents

The papers of Newell L. Sims document his days as a college student, and his career as a teacher and author in the fields of Sociology and Political Science. A small amount of material in one notebook, 1902-1905, contains information concerning his service as a minister. Also included is a modest amount of biographical information and correspondence.

The bulk of the collection includes notebooks relating to class notes of courses taken by Sims, schedules and appointments, notes for lectures given by Sims, and lists of baptisms, funerals and other ministerial services performed by Sims. The collection also contains writings of Newell Sims relating to social change, the democratic process, race, and a study of the standard of living in Oberlin, Ohio exclusive of Oberlin College (1931).

Dates

  • Creation: 1899-1940, undated
  • Other: Date acquired: 1969 June 11

Conditions Governing Access

Grade Book in Series III is restricted.

Biographical Sketch

Newell Leroy Sims was born in Jamestown Township, Steuben County, Indiana on 3 December 1878. He was the son of Charles N. and Elizabeth McClew Sims, both listed as deceased by Professor Sims when he began his Oberlin career in 1924.

Sims entered Tri-State College, Angola, Indiana, in 1897 from which he graduated in 1901 (AB). During the next 15 years he served as a minister in city and rural parishes in Benton Harbor, Michigan, Carthage, Missouri, Scarsdale, New York, and Columbus, Ohio. He continued his education throughout these years, earning a second AB at the University of Kentucky (1905). He completed an MA (1910) and a PhD degree (1912) in Sociology at Columbia University and also studied at Union Theological Seminary (1908-1913).

Prior to coming to Oberlin, Sims was professor and head of the Sociology and Political Science Department of the University of Florida, 1915-1920, and at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1920-1924. He taught summer sessions at Simmons College School of Social Work (1923), at Amherst College (1922), and at Smith College (1923). By the time he came to Oberlin in 1924, Sims was already recognized as a pioneer in American Sociology, highly regarded for his substantial work in rural sociology and social change.  He was a professor in the Oberlin College Sociology Department from 1924 to 1944 (emeritus, 1944-1965).

Sims wrote many articles and books in his field, including his textbook Elements of Rural Sociology (1927) which was adopted as a text in many colleges and universities. Although he is more widely known for his published textbook and for his interest in rural sociology, Sims was a pioneer in taking up such topics as race problems and immigration in the making of American society. He taught academic courses in these subjects as well as directed advanced students who cared to pursue sociological investigations in issues of race and culture. This led him in 1939 to publish The Problem of Social Change.

He was prominent in many professional organizations, a member of the American Sociological Society, President of the Ohio Sociological Society, and a special advisor to the American Red Cross. Additionally, he served as an associate editor of the American Sociological Review. In 1926 he was a delegate to the International Rural Life Congress in Brussels. He was a member of the American Social Science Committee delegation to the Soviet Union in 1931-32, and he led a European Seminar to study cooperatives in the Soviet Union in 1938.

Professor Sims married Florence Anna McNutt (b.1885) in Cincinnati, Ohio. The couple had two children, Elizabeth Florence Sims (Mrs. James Tenure) and Joe R. Sims.

Professor Sims died in Oberlin at age 86 on 31 July 1965.  His wife died in the same year at age 80 on 30 September.  They are buried in Westwood Cemetery in Oberlin. Both were members of First Church in Oberlin.

Sources Consulted

Faculty file of Newell L. Sims, Alumni and Development Records, RG 28.

Extent

0.20 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The collection is divided into four series: 1. Biographical File, 2. Correspondence, 3. Grade Books and Notebooks, and 4. Writings by Newell L. Sims.

Method of Acquisition

The papers of Newell L. Sims were received by the College Archives from William Skinner on 11 June 1969.

Accruals and Additions

Accession No: 76.

Related Materials

See also the faculty file of Newell L. Sims (RG 28).

Title
Newell L. Sims Papers Finding Guide
Author
Sabra Henke
Date
2002 March 1
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2002 March: Processed by Sabra Henke.
  • 2005 February: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 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)