A. Hunter Dupree Family Papers
Scope and Contents
Located in Subgroup I, the A. Hunter Dupree papers mostly include correspondence, writings, talks, research materials, and committee files. While Dupree’s professional and scholarly activity spans from his undergraduate education at Oberlin College in the late 1930s well into his retirement in the early 2000s, the bulk of the historical material dates from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. The most comprehensive files are his writings, talks, and presentations, especially in relation to his research on Asa Gray, science policy in the federal government, measurement, and sociobiology. There is very little material directly related to his experiences on the campus of University of California, Berkeley in the early 1960s, and almost no documentation of his involvement on the NASA Historical Advisory Committee.
Before pursuing a lengthy career in academia, Dupree was a lieutenant in the United States Naval Reserve during World War II, mostly documented through his orders and correspondence (1942-1946) in Series 8. Detailed descriptions of his experiences as a radar watch officer and fighter director during the Iwo Jima and Okinawa operations in 1945 are recounted in “The History of Naval Gunfire Control,” and in a detailed letter to shipmate Don Byerly (OC ’40). Both are unpublished writings in Series 11.
The files documenting Dupree’s academic career contain materials from Texas Technological College (1950-1952), UC Berkeley (1956-1968), Brown University (1968-1981), and other appointments. Located in Series 1, these files include course materials, program proposals, and a list of students for whom he was an advisor. A sampling of student files comprises the bulk of the series, highlighting Dupree’s influence as a mentor to many future scholars. Unfortunately, except for a collection of clippings, there is little documentation of his time at Berkeley during the political and social unrest of the 1960s. While some of Dupree’s published articles address this topic, accounts of his experiences and involvement on campus are mostly discussed in letters to his parents, located in Subgroup II.
Other professional appointments include Dupree’s involvement on numerous government committees. As a member of the Library of Congress Advisory Committee (1959-1962) he helped develop The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. He contributed to the National Academy of Science’s report, Federal Support of Basic Research in Institutions of Higher Learning, in 1964. On the Atomic Energy Historical Advisory Committee (1967-1973) he assisted in documenting the history of the AEC, activities of which are referenced in the Charles Mosher Congressional Papers (RG 30/226 - Oberlin College Archives). Some of the most richly detailed committee files are from the House Panel on Science and Technology (1969-1973), which illustrate Dupree’s critique of national science policy within the Nixon administration. Series 1 also documents his participation as an advisor, fellow, or trustee for many other professional organizations including the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Society for the History of Technology.
The writings files are extensive, thoroughly documenting Dupree’s writing process and critical exploration of religion, science, and technology as elements of human culture. Recurrent themes include science policy, the relation of biological and social theories, and the history of measurement. Located in Series 11, these files contain drafts and research materials for his two major works: Science in the Federal Government, A History of Policies and Activities to 1940; and the biography of Asa Gray, an influential botanist who was one of Darwin’s strongest advocates in America. Gray, a colleague of Oberlinian George Frederick Wright, played an important role in arguing for the reconciliation of science and theology in evolutionary theory. The series includes almost all of Dupree’s published articles and book reviews from 1950 to 2003 from scholarly journals such as Daedalus, Isis, and Science; as well as from the local newsletter on Squirrel Island, Maine where his family kept a summer home. The many unpublished writings include personal narratives, detailed memos, and even some short fiction. The bulk of his talks and presentations, located in Series 10, exist in tandem with his writings and explore the same topics as his published articles. Some files are more specific to particular events, including statements made before government panels, and personal tributes to colleagues such as Glenn Seaborg, Carl Bridenbaugh, and Paul Mangelsdorf.
Extensive research in the areas of sociobiology and measurement are located in Series 9. Related to many of his writings, the files detail the social history of measurement from John Quincy Adams to the atomic clock, and include resources related to the metric system debate in the U.S. in the 1970s. The field of sociobiology, which applies evolutionary theory to social behavior, grew in popularity in the mid-1970s. The research files on sociobiology date from this period and mostly include materials from conferences and workshops, many of which are directly related to the work of Talcott Parsons and E.O. Wilson.
Extensive correspondence in Series 5 includes the professional and personal letters received by Dupree from colleagues, friends, former students, and professional organizations between 1941 and 2009. The correspondence is wide ranging, providing a chronological account of the scholarly activities, professional relationships, and research interests that embodied his career. Notable and frequent correspondents include Gunther Barth, Les Fishel (OC ‘43), Paul Forman, Brooke Hindle, and Walter Massey. The bulk of the correspondence dates from 1968 to 1979. Many files from 1962 to 1967 are notably missing.
Of interest to the Oberlin community are the education files (1939-1942) from when Dupree was a student at Oberlin College. These materials, including mostly notes and exams, document the influence of professors Frederick B. Artz and Robert Fletcher during Dupree’s formative years. Materials documenting his lifelong connection to Oberlin College are evidenced by the sample of charitable contributions in Series 2 and in his letters as class president to the Oberlin Class of 1942 in Series 5. There is also correspondence from Oberlin Presidents Ernest H. Wilkins and Robert Carr. His presentation file for the first Oscar E. Anderson Memorial Lecture in 1978 is in series 10, and unpublished articles on professors Oscar Jaszi and George Frederick Wright are in Series 11.
General biographical information on A. Hunter Dupree is in Series 2. Of interest to those researching his life and career is a 1982 interview with former student and colleague Ron Numbers, and narratives of Dupree’s career by both Paul Forman and John Arrison.
Located in Subgroup II, the family papers mostly consist of detailed correspondence, as well as diaries, clippings, and genealogical materials related to the Dupree and Arnold families. There are also some materials referencing Hunter and Betty’s maternal lineages, the Hunters and the Molherins, respectively. Family photographs, including a few documenting Hunter’s professional career, are located at the end of Subgroup II. The papers are incomplete and compiled from existing documents. As a result, there are many gaps in the documentary record. Materials related to George and Sarah Dupree are mostly from the years 1912 to 1915 and 1945 to 1973, with almost no documentation between these two time periods. Betty’s papers mostly date from the 1930s and 1940s before her marriage to Hunter.
The family correspondence is the richest part of this subgroup and includes two sets of courtship letters. The letters exchanged between Betty and Hunter while he was serving in the Navy, 1944-1946, are more philosophical than romantic. They document a decidedly intellectual courtship that included reflections on the war, along with thought provoking discussions on literature, religion, and history. The other set, between George and Sarah Dupree, date from 1914 to 1915. These letters mostly tell the story of George’s struggle to find work in rural Texas, and discussions of the young couple’s plans after marriage.
Of interest to those studying Hunter’s professional career are the letters he sent to his parents between 1954 and 1973, located in Series 3. Since Hunter did not keep a diary, this correspondence serves as a journal, providing an informal narrative of his life and career. This also applies to letters he received from his children in the late 1970s and early 1980s, which oftentimes include copies of letters he sent in response. A narrative of the everyday lives of Betty, George, and Sarah Dupree, as well members of the Arnold family are also documented within the family correspondence throughout Subgroup II.
Series 2 contains journals, diaries, and a sampling of Betty’s educational materials from the University of Washington from 1936 to 1940. There are also many documents from Frederick and Nelson Department Store in Seattle where she worked between 1940 and 1945. Though there is some documentation of Betty’s interests and activities later in life, most of the materials date from 1931 to 1946.
The materials related to George Dupree in Series 3 mostly focus on the latter part of his life. These include clippings detailing his celebrated law career in Texas and certificates noting his many personal and professional achievements.
Sarah Dupree attended Oberlin College between 1910 and 1912 where she kept a scrapbook consisting of programs, ticket stubs, postcards, and personal mementos from her school days. This is located in Series 4 along with some of her college notebooks.
Series 5 includes documents of other family members including Betty’s parents, George Wright and Marguerite Arnold, who were both born in Cleveland and have family roots in northern Ohio. This series also includes materials related to Betty’s grandfather, Eugene H. Arnold, former city engineer of Rocky River. Additional genealogical materials in this series are useful in determining family relationships.
Dates
- Creation: 1830-2011, undated
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1944 - 2004
- Other: Date acquired: 2010 July 1
Creator
- Dupree, A. Hunter (Person)
- Dupree Family (Family)
- Dupree, George W. (Person)
- Dupree, Sarah (Person)
- Dupree, Betty (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
Unrestricted
Biographical Sketch
A. Hunter and Betty Dupree
Anderson Hunter Dupree (1921-2019) was born in Hillsboro, Texas on January 29, 1921 to George Washington (1890-1973)and Sarah "Essie" Anderson Hunter Dupree (1892-1984). His mother, a former schoolteacher, and his father, an attorney, were both first generation college graduates. They raised him in Lubbock, Texas, where his father was a partner in an established law firm. After high school, Hunter attended Oberlin College where he graduated summa cum laude with a BA in History in 1942.
Immediately after graduation, Hunter hitchhiked from Oberlin to Cleveland and enlisted in the Navy, attending Officer Training School at Notre Dame University. His first duty in 1943 was as an instructor in the Naval Training School at Fort Schuyler, New York. Following assignments in Hollywood, Florida and San Diego, he received orders to Seattle, where he would meet his future wife, Betty. Assigned to sea duty in 1945, he served as a watch officer in the Combat Information Center of the USS Tennessee in the Pacific theatre of World War II. He received an honorable discharge in 1946 with a rank at separation of Lieutenant. In the Navy at Fort Schuyler, Hunter shared quarters and became friends with Carl Bridenbaugh (1903-1992), head of Fort Schuyler’s department of naval history and a professor of American History at Brown. He also experienced the information revolution born out of the war, which involved the electronic environment created by computers and radars linked in systems. These wartime experiences, along with his relationship to Bridenbaugh, played a significant role in his intellectual development, influencing his decision to pursue a career as a historian after the war.
Dupree received his MA from Harvard in 1947 under the guidance of Arthur Meier Schlesinger Sr., (1888-1965) one of the first scholars to examine the impact of science and technology on American society from a historian’s perspective. Encouraged by his mentor’s exploration of this increasingly important field, Dupree began research on the life and work of Asa Gray (1810-1888), the foremost American botanist of the nineteenth century. He was teaching history at Texas Technological College (1950-1952) when Harvard accepted his doctoral dissertation on Gray in 1952.
In 1953, Dupree became a research fellow at the Gray Herbarium at Harvard to continue his work on Asa Gray. A planned biography was interrupted when the National Science Foundation selected him to lead a research project on the history of science in the federal government. Sponsored by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, his findings were published in the landmark 1957 book Science in the Federal Government: A History of Policies and Activities to 1940. It was the first investigation of its kind, exploring the relationships between science and the American government, including the social and political impact of governmental science policies. Upon completion of the book, Dupree devoted more time to his research on Gray. Published in 1959, Asa Gray, 1810-1888, is recognized as the seminal biography of Darwin’s leading advocate in nineteenth century America.
Dupree entered the history department at UC Berkeley in 1956. By this time, his professional career was firmly rooted in the study of science and technology in American society, and the historical impact of science policy within the government. During his career at Berkeley, he held various administrative posts including Assistant to Chancellor Glenn Seaborg (1912-1999)(1960-1962) and Director of the Bancroft Library (1965-1966). Hunter was also a first hand witness to the Free Speech Movement of 1964, which resulted in the lasting reputation of Berkeley as a hotbed of student activism during the Vietnam War era.
Throughout the 1960s, Dupree held numerous advisory posts within the federal government and scientific institutions. The first of these was as a member of the Library of Congress Committee (1960-1966) where he helped develop the National Union Catalogue of Manuscript Collections (NUCMC). He was a consultant to the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Science and Public Policy (COSPUP) and, at the invitation of former Presidential Science Advisor George Kistiakowsky, drafted its report, Federal Support of Basic Research in Institutions of Higher Learning (1964). The committee noted in the introduction "its great indebtedness to Professor Dupree and Dean Price for their valuable contributions as active participants in its deliberations and in the preparation of the report." Dupree was on the NASA Historical Advisory Committee (1963-1973) and Atomic Energy Commission Historical Advisory Committee (1967-1973), where he helped prepare manuscripts documenting some of the most important scientific decisions in modern history. He also served on the House of Representatives panel on Science and Technology (1969-1973). As a member of the panel, he provided his esteemed opinions on the role science and technology could play in addressing critical problems facing the nation and world.
Dupree became George Leander Littlefield Professor of History at Brown University in 1968. Though he continued to pursue his primary research interests from the previous two decades, he also studied general systems theory, especially as it related to the controversial field of sociobiology. He began to write extensively on the social history of measurement, a topic he became interested in as a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (1967-1968).
In the 1970s, Dupree held positions in numerous professional organizations, including membership on the Smithsonian Council (1975-1985) and Secretary of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1973-1976) where he had been elected a Fellow in 1967. He was an advisor for both the National Science Foundation and National Endowment for the Humanities, and a trustee for the Museum of American Textile History (1978-1989).
Dupree retired from Brown in 1981, yet remained active in the academic community. He was Scholar in Residence at Southern Oregon State College in 1983 and Visiting Professor of the History of Science at the University of Minnesota in 1984. He served as a consultant on the National Academy of Science’s Committee on Government-University Relationships in Support of Science (1982) and was an advisor on the Research Advisory Committee for the National Air and Space Museum (1986).
Throughout the 1990s, Hunter continued to write within his areas of expertise and share his views on the direction of science policy in America. In 1995, his cousin Mike Thompson was killed in the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. Working with Mike’s brother, Oklahoma City journalist Toby Thompson, Hunter offered suggestions and guidance on the establishment of a “living memorial,” which evolved into the National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism.
In recognition of his many professional achievements, Hunter was the recipient of the New York Academy of Sciences President’s Award (1976) and the History of Science Society Sarton Medal (1990).
Hunter married Marguerite Louise (Betty) Arnold (1918-2014) on July 18, 1946. Betty was born in Seattle on May 21, 1918 to George Wright Arnold (1885-1971) and Marguerite Maude Arnold (nee Molherin) (1890-1986). Betty’s father, a native of Rocky River, Ohio, was a graduate of Western Reserve and Harvard Law School and a member of the Alaska boundary survey before moving to Seattle where he pursued his career as a patent attorney. Her mother was born in Lakewood, Ohio. She graduated from the Kindergarten Training School in Cleveland and helped establish the Girl Scouts in Seattle. In addition to Betty, they had a son, Wright Hamilton Arnold (1923-2007).
Betty attended the University of Washington where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity and Mortar Board. Upon graduating in 1940, she worked as a trainer in the personnel department at Frederick and Nelson Department Store in Seattle until marrying Hunter in 1946. Betty, a lifelong learner, took a variety of extension courses, pursuing her many interests in art and painting. She was a docent at the National Gallery in Washington D.C. and at the Oakland Art Museum, as well as an accomplished artist and calligrapher. Betty’s family has always been her first priority, and she and Hunter have functioned as a team. Betty supported Hunter by accompanying him on research trips, transcribing documents, and by creating a succession of new homes across the country. She entertained colleagues and friends, and provided a sounding board and common sense as Hunter pursued his career. Wherever they have lived, Betty and Hunter have been active members of the local Congregational church.
Hunter and Betty had a daughter Marguerite W. (b. 1950), a social and medical historian; and son Anderson “Andy” Hunter, Jr., Oberlin College ’76 Mus.B., a harpsichord builder and long-time professional with Microsoft. Marguerite married Richard Hughes Trainor (b. 1948), historian and university president; and Andy married Jillon Marie Stoppels (b. 1957), Oberlin College ’79, Mus.B., Harpsichord, a harpsichordist and teacher.
George and Sarah Dupree
Hunter’s father, George Washington Dupree, was born in Johnson County, Texas on September 22, 1890. The son of Virgil Freeman (1857-1942) and Jemima "Jimmie" Caroline Brewer Dupree (1864-1938), he was raised on a farm in Erath County and attended a one room schoolhouse in Clariette. George graduated from John Tarleton College and studied law at the University of Texas, where he received his Bachelor of Laws in 1914. He practiced law in Hillsboro from 1914 to 1928 before moving to Lubbock where he partnered with the firm Bledsoe and Crenshaw. This firm eventually established itself as Crenshaw, Dupree, and Milam in 1940 and became one of the largest and most respected law firms in West Texas. He practiced law for nearly 60 years in both civil and criminal cases. In 1965, Texas Technological College conferred upon him an honorary Doctor of Laws for his work in the community and leadership in the establishment of the Law School at Texas Tech.
A prominent citizen of Texas, George Dupree participated in many civic activities and held numerous posts. He served as colonel on Governor Daniel James Moody Jr.’s (1893-1966) staff and was appointed commander of the Texas Navy by Governor Preston Earnest Smith (1912-2003). He was a director of the Pioneer Natural Gas Company, chairman of the Lubbock County Bar Committee, organizer and fellow of the Texas Technological Law Foundation, and an elder at Westminster Presbyterian Church. He was a Master Mason and Rotary member for nearly 50 years.
George married Sarah “Essie” Anderson Hunter on January 6, 1916. Sarah was born on August 7, 1892, in Saginaw, Texas, to Anderson (1834-1923) and Mary Lucia Jones Hunter (1860-1945). She attended Oberlin College from 1910 to 1912 before transferring to the University of Texas, graduating in 1914. She taught in the Fort Worth public schools until 1916. Sarah was active in the Westminster Presbyterian Church where she was a Sunday school teacher for nearly 50 years. She was a member of the PEO Sisterhood, American Association of University Women, and Chi Omega Fraternity. She maintained a home in Lubbock until the death of her husband.
George and Sarah had another son, George "Bo" Weldon Dupree (1917-2008), in addition to Hunter. George Dupree, Sr. died in Lubbock on January 30, 1973. Sarah died in Greenville, Rhode Island on November 18, 1984.
Sources Consulted:
A. Hunter Dupree Family Papers (OCA 30/417), Subgroup I. Series 2. Biographical Files; Series 3. Committee and Advisory Post Files; and Series 11. Writings Files.
Biographical file of George W. Dupree (Subgroup II. Series 3).
Funeral documentation of Sarah Hunter Dupree (Subgroup II. Series 4).
G. Wright and Marguerite Arnold obituaries (Subgroup II. Series 5).
Note written by Nate Scheible.
Extent
33.50 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
The A. Hunter Dupree Family Papers primarily document the life and career of A. Hunter Dupree, a prominent historian of American science and technology, active in the profession for over a half-century. The related family papers relate to the lives of Dupree's wife, Betty Arnold, and his parents, George and Sarah Dupree.
Method of Acquisition
The A. Hunter Dupree Family Papers were received by the Oberlin College Archives in two accessions. The bulk of the collection was donated by A. Hunter Dupree in 2010 (2010/094). Additional papers were donated by Andy Dupree (son of A. Hunter Dupree) in 2011 (2011/095).
Accruals and Additions
Accession No: 2010/94, 2011/95
- Title
- A. Hunter Dupree Family Papers Finding Guide
- Author
- Nate Scheible
- Date
- 2012 May 1
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Revision Statements
- 2011-2012: Processed by Nate Scheible, assisted by student assistant Jonathan Morales (Class of 2012) and volunteer Sabra Henke (Class of 1954).
- 2025: Prepared for migration by Louisa C. Hoffman.
Repository Details
Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)
archive@oberlin.edu