This collection is located on-site.
Correspondence, memoranda, financial documents, minutes, book and lecture typescripts, printed matter, reports, press releases, news clippings, posters, architectural plans, and photographs document the activities of the New York and Washington Offices of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from 1910 until 1954, as well as the founding, administration, and activity of the Centre Europeen (CEIP Paris Office) and the work of the Carnegie Endowment in Europe in 1911-1940. The CEIP records are most complete for the 1940-1945 period, while some documentation from the post-war period was retained by the Endowment. The collection does not include any records on grants given by the CEIP. Grant files and post-1954 materials are still with the Endowment in Washington, DC.
The Activités series (1911-1938, boxes 1-49) comprises files on particular Centre Européen projects and initiatives, subjects, individuals (including special correspondents), and organizations. The Administration series (1912-1938, boxes 49-84) consists of financial material, clippings, invitations, press releases, lists and notes, personnel files, offers of collaboration, correspondence, and memoranda that document the founding and administration of the Centre and its Hôtel. The Associations Diverses files (1927-1937, boxes 84-102) consist of correspondence with and material issued by various organizations with which the Centre Européen had contact.
The correspondence, usage statistics and records, and subscription information in the Bibliothèque series (1920-1937, boxes 102-112) document the activity and administration of the Centre's Bibliothèque and Salle de Lecture. The meeting minutes, agendas, and transcipts and related correspondence in the Comité series (1912-1938, boxes 113-130) reflect the work of the various Centre committees in planning and administering the Centre's activities, as well as the priorities of individual committee members. The Correspondance series (1911-1938, boxes 130-171) includes administrative and internal correspondence (correspondance du bureau) and general correspondence (correspondance diverse).
The Cours et Conférences series (1924-1938, boxes 171-188) consists of correspondence, reports, lecture transcripts, invitations, schedules, posters, and printed matter that document the courses and lectures sponsored by and held at the Centre. Correspondence, speeches, internal memoranda, and printed material in the Directeurs series (1913-1940, boxes 189-225) document the work and travels on behalf of the Endowment of the Baron d'Estournelles de Constant (the Centre's President , 1913-1924), Earle Babcock and Malcolm Davis (its two American Directeur-Adjoints), and Nicholas Murrary Butler (the Director of the Division of Intercourse and Education). The series also include books and pamphlets by an about Andrew Carnegie and some correspondence with Louise Carnegie.
The Dotation Carnegie series (1912-1938, boxes 225-249) consists of the Centre's correspondence with the London, New York, and Washington offices of the Endowment, and the files of the French section of the Divison of Economics and History, which wokred out of the Centre. Correspondence, typescripts, page proofs, and pamphlets in the Publications series (1920-1940, boxes 250-293) document the editorial, production, and distribution aspects of the Centre's publications program.
The Subventions series (1912-1937, boxes 293-313)consists of requests for financial support from the Endowment, reports on grants given by the Endowment, and notes and minutes documenting the Centre's Comité's consideration of grant requests. (The Endowment used the Comité to evaluate requests for support and collaboration originating outside of the United States.)
Collection is divided into two record groups with separate finding aids: New York/Washington Offices and Centre Europeen in Paris. Files within record groups are arrranged into series by subject. Selected correspondence cataloged at item level (see finding aid for details). When requesting material from this collection please request by Series and subseries as well as box number.
Correspondence of US office in 1910-1936 has been indexed and bound into chronological volumes by CEIP. The indices are available online as part of the finding aid.
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.
This collection is located on-site.
Permission to publish materials must be obtained in writing from Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Curator of Carnegie Collections.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Centre Europeen Records. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries. [Box Number].
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. New York and Washington Offices. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries
James T. Shotwell Papers. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries
John Bates Clark Papers. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries
Nicholas Murray Butler Papers. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries
Malcolm Waters Davis Papers. Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Columbia University Libraries
Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
Parts of collection are available on microfilm. Please consult the curator for details.
Gift of the Carnegie Endowment, 1953 and 1954.
Source of acquisition--Carnegie Endowment. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--1953. Accession number--M-53.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Cataloged 04/17/89 CHF
Processed 1962 JAH, 2002 WS
Jennifer S. Comins converted and corrected content for EAD conversion of legacy finding aid, 9/6/2015
2014-11-06 File created.
2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace established Le Centre Européen de la Dotation Carnegie pour la Paix Internationale in Paris as part of its Division of Intercourse and Education (Division des Relations et de L'Education) in 1912. The Centre was founded with an Advisory Council composed of representative and distinguished statesmen and public leaders of Europe and Asia. An Executive Committee was appointed from this Council with the authority to carry out the work of the Division abroad. Baron d'Estournelles de Constant was President of the Advisory Council from its formation until his death in 1924.
Four Special Correspondents were appointed, nationals of Austria, England, Germany and Japan, to keep the Director informed regarding international policies and international conduct relating to their respective countries. After World War I, the Advisory Council was reconstituted to include members from additional countries, and the number of Special Correspondents was increased to seven.
The Centre Européen was reorganized again in 1925, when it's administration was placed in charge of an American Directeur-Adjoint, with the advice of a consultative committee formed of members from various European countries. In June 1939, this committee was dissolved, while the Directeur-Adjoint remained in charge.
The activities of l'Association de la Conciliation Internationale, founded in Paris in 1905, were combined with the European work of the Endowment from 1912 on, and, following a fusion of interests in 1928, the Centre Européen maintained the title of Conciliation Internationale for the series of documents it published until 1937. At that time, the Endowment merged Conciliation Internationale with l'Esprit Internationale, the quarterly review published by the Centre Européen since 1927. This publication was suspended following the collapse of France in June 1940. Its articles, relating to contemporary problems of international life were contributed by scholars and specialists and statesmen of many nationalities. A chronicle appeared in each number, giving a summary of the political and economic events in the period under review.
In collaboration with the Institut des Hautes Études Internationales under the auspices of the Faculty of Law in the University of Paris, the Centre Européen from 1926 until 1939 conducted courses of lectures on international organization and relations. Starting in 1928 the Centre Européen also offered a considerable number of shorter. The lectures were published and distributed to numerous libraries in Europe and the United States. The Centre Européen also offered an independent course under the auspices of the Chaire Carnegie, which was delivered on a different subject each year and included addresses by invited speakers from different European countries. From 1927 until 1933, the Centre maintained a Carnegie Lehrstuhl at the Deutsche Hochschule für Politik. For four years until the outbreak of the war in 1939, the Centre Européen provided a Scandinavian traveling lectureship in international law and organization.
The Library of the Centre Européen was founded in 1913 in order to establish a collection of works on international law, politics, economics, government, and social science. A separate reading room (Salle de Lecture) for current newspapers and other periodicals opened in 1926.
The Centre Européen actively participated in the work of the International Studies Conference. The European Center also supported in part the, which subsidized the work of young scholars, carried on inquiries for the International Studies Conference, published a series of Geneva Studies, and issued a monthly Information Bulletin on developments and events as seen from Geneva and on the activities of the League of Nations and the International Labor Organization
Other organizations with which the Centre Européen cooperated were the International Studies Conference , International Consultative Group, the International Migration Service, the International Student House at Geneva, the Geneva Research Center, the Department of International Relations of the Christian Michelsen Institute at Bergen, the American University, the Amerika Institut in Berlin, the Austro-American Institute of Education in Vienna, the Italo-Ameircan Institute at Florence, and the American Institute at Prague.
The Centre's activities were almost completely suspended during the Nazi occupation of Paris. After World War II, its activities were greatly reduced. In 1954 the Centre moved to Paris.
The Activités series comprises files on particular Centre Européen projects and intiatives, subjects, individuals (including special correspondents), and organizations. It includes material on the Endowment's reconstruction projects in Fargniers, Reims, and Louvain, its Division of Relations with Germany (Allemagne), the Austro-American Institute of Education, conferences and inquires on the Balkans, the American Library in Paris, the British and American Students' Conference, the Fondation des États-Unis, the Dunford House Association, the Institut International de Coopération Intellectuelle, International Mind Alcoves, International Relations Clubs, Florence Wilson, and visits organized by the Endowment.
See also Series XII. Subventions for more material on various activities supported by the Endowment.
Box 1 Folder 1-5
In 1920 under the auspices of the Centre, Justin Godart, former vice-president of the Chamber of Deputies and a member of the Centre's Advisory Council, made an unofficial visit to Albania. The resulting report was entitled L'Albanie en 1921.
Box 1 Folder 6-8
1920-1923
Box 1 Folder 9
Box 2 Folder 1-3
Box 2 Folder 4
In February 1922 the Baron d'Estournelles de Constant asked Henri Lichtenberger, professor of German Literature at the Sorbonne, to visit Germany to gauge the state of German public opinion. As a result of his visit, the Centre held a conference of representative Frenchmen and Germans. This conference led to the Centre's establishing a Division of Relations with Germany. Lichtenberger ran the division; he corresponded with individuals in Germany and Central Europe and held regular meetings and discussions in Paris. His collaborators included Hellmut von Gerlach (in Berlin) and F.W. Foerster.
This subseries includes general correspondence on the Endowment's activities in Germany, material regarding lectures on Germany or delivered in Germany (and in some cases the texts of the lectures), clippings, posters, requests for the Endowment's support, meeting minutes and transcripts (proces-verbal) and reports from Endowment correspondents on the situation in Germany.
Box 2 Folder 5
1921-1922
Box 3 Folder 1-3
1923-1927
Box 3 Folder 4
Box 3 Folder 5
Box 3 Folder 6
Box 3 Folder 7
Box 3 Folder 8
Box 3 Folder 9
Box 3 Folder 10
Box 3 Folder 11
Box 3 Folder 12-14
Box 3 Folder 1
Box 4 Folder 2-4
Box 4 Folder 5
Box 4 Folder 6
Box 4 Folder 7
Box 4 Folder 8
Box 4 Folder 9
Box 4 Folder 10
Box 4 Folder 11
Box 4 Folder 12
Box 4 Folder 13
Box 4 Folder 14
Box 4 Folder 15
Box 5 Folder 1-5
Box 5 Folder 6
Box 5 Folder 7
Box 5 Folder 8
Box 5 Folder 9
Box 5 Folder 10
Box 6 Folder 1
Box 6 Folder 2
Box 6 Folder 3
Box 6 Folder 4
Box 6 Folder 5
Box 6 Folder 6
Box 6 Folder 7
Box 6 Folder 8
Box 6 Folder 9
Box 6 Folder 10
Box 6 Folder 11
Box 6 Folder 12
Box 6 Folder 13-15
1928-1931
Box 7 Folder 1-4
1932-1937
Box 7 Folder 5-6
1932-1933
Box 8 Folder 1-4
1933-1937
Box 8 Folder 5
1932-1933
Box 9 Folder 1-3
1933-1935
Box 9 Folder 4
Box 9 Folder 5
Box 10
Box 11 Folder 1-3
Box 11 Folder 4-5
Box 12 Folder 1
Box 12 Folder 2-3
Babcock served for several years as the President of the Library's board. These files also Include material regarding École de Bibliothécaires.
See also Florence Wilson (in this series) and Babcock's Correspondance diverse (VII.B.1)
Box 12 Folder 4-5
1922-1925
Box 13
Box 14
Box 15 Folder 1-2
1933-1934
Box 15 Folder 3
Box 15 Folder 4
Box 15 Folder 5
See also Series III. Associations diverses-1935-documents (100.2)
Box 15 Folder 6
See also Series III. Associations diverses-1935-documents (100.2)
Box 16
Box 17 Folder 1
1937
The full title of the conference was "International conference held at Chatham House, London, March5-7, 1935 on steps to be taken to restore confidence by promotion of trade and reduction of unemployment, stabilization of national monetary systems, and better organization of the family of nations to give security and strengthen the foundations on which international peace must rest."
Box 17 Folder 2-4
1934-1935
Box 18 Folder 1
1935
Box 18 Folder 2
See also under individual correspondants name or region, and the Endowment's Washington and New York offices records (CEIP Records), also held in RBML.
Box 18 Folder 3
The Dunford House Association was founded in 1927 to maintain Richard Cobden's birthplace as a memorial and a center for the discussion of international affairs and to promote free trade, peace, and international understanding. The Association also held an annual Richard Cobden Lecture in London and printed and distributed the lecture in pamphlet form. The Endowment's Division of Intercourse and Education collaborated with the Association from its founding.
Includes correspondence with T. Fisher Unwin, H.S. Perris, material regarding conferences held there by Endowment and peer institutions, and photographs of the house.
Box 18 Folder 4-5
1925-1929
Box 19
1930-1934
Box 20 Folder 1-3
1935-1937
Box 20 Folder 4-5
The Endowment sponsored a study of the teaching of history throughout Europe via an examination of the textboooks being used in primary and secondary schools. The Centre published the results of the study in two volumes under the imprint of the Dotation Carnegie pour la Paix Internationale, 173 Boulevard St.-Germain. Volume I, published in 1923 covered France, Belgium, German, Austria, Great Britain, Italy, and Bulgaria. Volume II, which appeared in 1927 covered Albania, Flemish Belgium, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Romania, Yougoslavia, Russia, Czechoslovakia, and Turkey.
This subseries includes correspondence with printers, authors, page proofs and typescript reports, and correspondence of the Rapporteur Général, Jules Proudhommeaux.
Box 20 Folder 6-8
1922-1924
Box 21
1925-1926
Box 22
1926-1931
Box 23 Folder 1-3
Box 23 Folder 4
After the First World War, the Endowment supported several reconstruction projects, including the rebuilding of libraries in Louvain, Reims, and Belgrade. In 1922 the Trustees devoted $150,000 for the construction of a model public square in the French Commune of Fargniers in Aisne. The Aisne was the most devastated Department in France. Fargniers had been leveled completely. Its population of 3,000 before the war had been reduced to 1,000. The Endowment chose Fargniers as the cite for the model public square, which was known as Place Carnegie, in consultation with M. Loucheur, Minister for the Devastated Regions.
The Place was laid out as an open park. The Endowment erected several public buildings around the park: the Mairie (Town Hall), the Postes et Télégraphes, the Bibliothèque de la Ville, the Lavoir et Bains, an Ecole de Filles, and an Ecole de Garçons. On July 9, 1922 Myron T. Herrick, the American Ambassador to France, laid the corner-stone of the Town Hall. By the end of 1924 after much construction and several more opening ceremonies, construction was complete.
The material in this subseries includes correspondence with government officials, architects, and Endowment staff; financial accounts and correspondence; architectural pplans and drawings; photographs of construction progress and cermonies; clippings; meeting minutes of the Comité Fargniers-Reims; and other material, including posters and invitations that advertised the ceremonies held in Fargniers to celebrate the rebuilding of the commune.
See also Series XIII. Oversize Material
Box 23 Folder 5-6
1921-1924
Box 24
1921-1933
Box 25 Folder 1-4
Box 25 Folder 5
Box 25 Folder 6
Box 26 Folder 1-3
Box 26 Folder 4-5
This subseries contains correspondence, brochures, menus, programs, invitations, clippings, and other printed material that document receptions, dinners, visits sponsored by the Society.
See also Visites (this series).
Box 27 Folder 1
1920-1924
Box 27 Folder 2-5
Box 28 Folder 1
The Assembly and Council of of the League of Nations founded the Institute of Intellectual Cooperation (IICI) in 1924 as part of its Organization of Intellectual Cooperation. The initial grant for its founding was made by France. Twenty other countries also provided annual subsidies. The IICI and The International Committee of Intellectual Co-operation (CICI) were the two major organizations merged to form UNESCO in 1946.
This subseries includes correspondence, minutes, agendas, reports, and publications that document the work of the American National Committee on International Intellectual Cooperation, the Institution for the Scientific Study of International Relations, the Liaison Committee of Major International Associations (Comité d'Entente des Grandes Associations Internationales), the International Federation of Teachers Associations, American Coordinating Committee for International Studies, Conférence Permanente des Hautes Études Internationales (International Studies Conference), as well as that of IICI. Individuals with whom there is correspondence include F. Chalmers Wright (IICI), Henri Bonnet (IICI), Leo Gross (IICI), Jiri F. Vranek, James Shotwell (American National Committee), and J.B Condliffe (International Studies Conference).
Box 28 Folder 2-5
1926-1930
Box 29
1931-1932
Box 30
1933-1934
Box 31
1934-1935
Box 32
1936-1937
Box 33
1937
Box 34
1937-1938
These files consist mostly of publications (mainly annual reports) issued by various Carnegie organizations including the Endowment, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the Carnegie Institution of Washington.
Box 35 Folder 1
1928-1932
Box 35 Folder 2
Box 35 Folder 3
Box 35
Box 35 Folder 4
Box 35 Folder 5
Box 35 Folder 6
Box 36 Folder 1
Box 36 Folder 2
Box 36 Folder 3
Box 36 Folder 4-5
Box 36 Folder 6
Box 36 Folder 7-8
Box 37 Folder 1
1934
Box 37 Folder 2-3
Box 37 Folder 4-5
See also International Relations Clubs and Florence Wilson.
Includes correspondence with La Ligue Française d'Éducation Morale.
Box 37 Folder 6
1927-1928
Box 38 Folder 1
1929-1930
Includes material regarding International Mind Alcoves.
See also Florence Wilson.
Box 38 Folder 2-5
1930-1932
Box 39 Folder 1-7
1933-1937
Box 40 Folder 1-3
Box 40 Folder 4
Box 40 Folder 5
1911
Box 41
1912-1913
Box 42 Folder 1-4
Includes photographs of cornerstone laying (in 1921 folder) and of construction site and finished library (documents folder).
See also Series XIII. Oversized Material
Box 43 Folder 1-5
1922-1928
Box 43 Folder 6
Box 44 Folder 1-2
Box 44 Folder 3-4
Box 44 Folder 5
Box 44 Folder 6-7
Box 45 Folder 1
Box 45 Folder 2
Box 45 Folder 3
Box 45 Folder 4
Box 45
Box 45 Folder 5
Box 45 Folder 6
Box 45 Folder 7
Box 45 Folder 8-9
Box 46 Folder 1
Box 46 Folder 2-3
Box 46 Folder 4
Box 46 Folder 5
Box 47 Folder 1-2
Box 47 Folder 3
The former librarian of the League of Nations, Florence Wilson served the Centre European as an administrator and consultant. She was particularly active in organizing the Endowment's International Mind Alcoves and International Relations Clubs. She also advised the Centre's Director, Earle Babcock, on library matters, and traveled to several libraries, including the American Library in Cairo, as an advisor. These files document her activities; they contain correspondence and reports, and include letters and postcards from Wilson to the Centre as she traveled in Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and the Balkans. Some of the reports contain photographs.
See also International Mind Alcoves and International Relations Clubs.
Box 47 Folder 4-5
1927
Box 48 Folder 1-4
1928-1929
Box 48 Folder 5
Box 49 Folder 1-2
Box 49 Folder 3
This series consists of financial material, clippings, invitations, press releases, lists and notes, personnel files, offers of collaboration, correspondence, and memoranda that document the founding and administration of the Centre and its Hôtel.
Box 49 Folder 4-5
1912-1913
Box 50
1914-1922
Box 51
1923-1932
Box 52
1927-1932
Box 53
1932
Box 54 Folder 1
1932
Box 54 Folder 2-3
Box 54 Folder 4
Box 54 Folder 5
Box 54 Folder 6
Box 55 Folder 1-3
1933
Box 55 Folder 4-5
Box 56 Folder 1
Box 56 Folder 2
Box 56 Folder 3
Box 56 Folder 4-5
1934
Box 57 Folder 1-2
Box 57 Folder 3-4
Box 58 Folder 1
Box 58 Folder 2
Box 58 Folder 3
Box 58 Folder 4
1935
Box 58 Folder 5
Box 58 Folder 6
Box 58 Folder 7
Box 58 Folder 8
Box 58 Folder 9
Box 58 Folder 10
1936
Box 59
1936-1938
Box 60 Folder 1
Box 60 Folder 2-4
In 1923 the Endowment purchased a building in Paris to house the Centre Européen. Previously, the Centre's offices were located in rooms at 24 rue Pierre Curie. The new building at 173 Boulevard Saint-Germain, an 18th century hôtel, contained the Centre's administration offices, lecture rooms, library, and a movie theater. The Centre also rented its rooms for lectures, and let office space to other organizations and individuals. This series documents the purchase, renovation, and day to day maintenance of the Centre Européen's headquarters. One of the Hôtel's longtime tenants was the American University Union, whose files in this subseries document its collaboration with the Endowment as well as its status as a tenant.
Box 60 Folder 5
Box 60 Folder 6
Box 60 Folder 7
Box 61 Folder 1
Box 61 Folder 2-3
Box 61 Folder 4
Box 61 Folder 5
Box 61 Folder 6
Box 61 Folder 7
Box 61 Folder 8
Box 61 Folder 9
Box 62 Folder 1
Box 62 Folder 2
Box 62 Folder 3
Box 62 Folder 4
Box 63 Folder 1-2
Box 63 Folder 3
Box 63 Folder 4
Box 63 Folder 5
Box 63 Folder 6
Box 63 Folder 7
Box 63 Folder 8
Box 63 Folder 9-10
1923-1929
Box 64 Folder 1-2
1930-1937
Box 64 Folder 3
Box 64 Folder 4
Box 64 Folder 5-6
Box 65 Folder 1
Box 65 Folder 2
Box 65 Folder 3-5
Box 65 Folder 6
Box 65 Folder 7
Box 65 Folder 8
1923-1925
Box 66 Folder 1-3
1926-1937
Box 66 Folder 4
Box 66 Folder 5
1923-1924
Box 67 Folder 1-2
1925-1937
Box 67 Folder 3
Box 67 Folder 4
Box 67 Folder 5
Box 67 Folder 6
Box 67 Folder 7
Box 67 Folder 8
Box 68 Folder 1
Box 68 Folder 2
Box 68 Folder 3
Box 68 Folder 4-6
Box 68 Folder 7
Box 68 Folder 8
1923-1924
Box 69 Folder 1-3
Box 69 Folder 4
Box 69 Folder 5
Box 69 Folder 6
Box 69 Folder 7-8
1933-1934
Box 70 Folder 1-2
1934-1937
These are name indices for the Centre's records for the given years. The cards for 1939-1941 also include individuals' addresses.
Box 71
1932
Box 72
1933
Box 73
1939-1941
Box 74 Folder 1-3
Also includes demandes d'emplois.
Box 74 Folder 4-5
1925-1927
Box 75
1928-1931
Box 76
1932-1934
Box 77 Folder 1-4
1935-1937
Box 77 Folder 5
Box 77 Folder 6
1927
Box 78 Folder 1-4
1928-1937
Box 78 Folder 5
1925-1929
Box 79 Folder 1-2
1935-1936
Box 79 Folder 3-4
Box 80 Folder 1-3
Box 80 Folder 4
Box 81 Folder 1
Box 81 Folder 2
Box 81 Folder 3-5
Box 81 Folder 6
Box 82 Folder 1
Box 82 Folder 2
Box 82 Folder 3
Box 82 Folder 4-5
Box 82 Folder 6
Box 83 Folder 1
Box 83 Folder 2
Box 83 Folder 3-4
Box 83 Folder 5
Box 83 Folder 6
Box 83 Folder 7
1927-1930
Box 84 Folder 1
1931-1934
Box 60 Folder 5
Box 60 Folder 6
Box 60 Folder 7
Box 61 Folder 1
Box 61 Folder 2-3
Box 61 Folder 4
Box 61 Folder 5
Box 61 Folder 6
Box 61 Folder 7
Box 61 Folder 8
Box 61 Folder 9
Box 62 Folder 1
Box 62 Folder 2
Box 62 Folder 3
Box 62 Folder 4
Box 63 Folder 1-2
Box 63 Folder 3
Box 63 Folder 4
Box 63 Folder 5
Box 63 Folder 6
Box 63 Folder 7
Box 63 Folder 8
Box 63 Folder 9-10
1923-1929
Box 64 Folder 1-2
1930-1937
Box 64 Folder 3
Box 64 Folder 4
Box 64 Folder 5-6
Box 65 Folder 1
Box 65 Folder 2
Box 65 Folder 3-5
Box 65 Folder 6
Box 65 Folder 7
Box 65 Folder 8
1923-1925
Box 66 Folder 1-3
1926-1937
Box 66 Folder 4
Box 66 Folder 5
1923-1924
Box 67 Folder 1-2
1925-1937
Box 67 Folder 3
Box 67 Folder 4
Box 67 Folder 5
Box 67 Folder 6
Box 67 Folder 7
Box 67 Folder 8
Box 68 Folder 1
Box 68 Folder 2
Box 68 Folder 3
Box 68 Folder 4-6
Box 68 Folder 7
Box 68 Folder 8
1923-1924
Box 69 Folder 1-3
Box 69 Folder 4
Box 69 Folder 5
Box 69 Folder 6
Box 69 Folder 7-8
1933-1934
Box 70 Folder 1-2
1934-1937
These are name indices for the Centre's records for the given years. The cards for 1939-1941 also include individuals' addresses.
Box 71
1932
Box 72
1933
Box 73
1939-1941
Box 74 Folder 1-3
Also includes demandes d'emplois.
Box 74 Folder 4-5
1925-1927
Box 75
1928-1931
Box 76
1932-1934
Box 77 Folder 1-4
1935-1937
Box 77 Folder 5
Box 77 Folder 6
1927
Box 78 Folder 1-4
1928-1937
Box 78 Folder 5
1925-1929
Box 79 Folder 1-2
1935-1936
Box 79 Folder 3-4
Box 80 Folder 1-3
Box 80 Folder 4
Box 81 Folder 1
Box 81 Folder 2
Box 81 Folder 3-5
Box 81 Folder 6
Box 82 Folder 1
Box 82 Folder 2
Box 82 Folder 3
Box 82 Folder 4-5
Box 82 Folder 6
Box 83 Folder 1
Box 83 Folder 2
Box 83 Folder 3-4
Box 83 Folder 5
Box 83 Folder 6
Box 83 Folder 7
1927-1930
Box 84 Folder 1
1931-1934
This series consists of correspondence with various organizations with which the Centre Européen had contact. It also contains publications and other material ("documents") issued by these organizations. For@1932 there is card index to the organzations that appear throughout the records.
Box 84 Folder 2-5
1927-1929
Box 85
1929
Box 86
1930
Box 86
1931
Box 87
1931
Box 88
1931
Box 89
1931
Box 90
1931
Box 90
1932
Box 91
1932
Box 92
1932
Box 93
1932
Box 94
1932
Box 95
1933
Box 96
1933
Box 97
1934
Box 98
1934
Box 99
1935
Box 100
1935
Box 100
1936
Box 101
1936
Box 102
1936
Box 102 Folder 5
1937
The correspondence, usage statistics and records, and subscription information in this series document the activity and administration of the Centre's Bibliothèque and Salle de Lecture.
The library of the Centre was built around Frédéric Passy's library of books on international affairs and law, which the Centre purchased from the Passy estate. The librarian was Mlle. Amelot, who had been Passy's secretary. Originally in rooms adjacent to the Centre's offices at 24 rue Pierre Curie, the Passy library moved to the Centre's new headquarters in 1923. Its collections were open to the public.
Includes general correspondence regarding the purchase of books and usage statistics. Some years contain copies of the "Courrier du President Butler," a weekly update of what was in the French news, followed by a list of the clippings sent to Butler.
Box 102 Folder 6
1926-1927
Box 103
1928-1930
Box 104
1930-1932
Box 105
1932-1933
Box 106
1933-1934
Box 107
1935-1936
Box 108 Folder 1-3
1937
Box 108 Folder 4-5
This suberies includes correspondence, subscription information, reports, and lists of requests made in the reading room. Some material regarding the Salle after 1933 is filed in subseries A. Bibliothèque et annexe du Centre.
Box 108 Folder 6
1926
Box 109
1926-1927
Box 110
1927-1928
Box 111
1928-1930
Box 112 Folder 1-6
1931-1934
Box 112 Folder 7
The meeting minutes, agendas, and transcripts and related correspondence in this series reflect the work of various Centre committees in planning and administering the Centre's activities, as well as the priorities of individual committee members.
Includes minutes and other material relating to the work of the Comité Consultatif, Comité Executif, and the Conseil des Correspants.
Box 113
1912-1923
Box 114 Folder 1-3
1923-1925
This subseries includes minutes, agendas, and correspondence of the Comité d'Administration, often referred to as the Comité. This committee had several names during the Centre's time in Paris, including the Comité Paris et Europe, Conseil Consultatif, Conseil de Direction, and Comité du Centre Européen.
Box 114 Folder 4-6
1924-1925
Box 115
1925-1926
Box 116
1926
Box 117
1926-1927
Box 118
1927-1928
Box 119
1928-1929
Box 120
1929-1930
Box 121
1931-1932
Box 122
1932-1933
Box 123
1933-1934
Box 124
1934-1935
Box 125
1935-1936
Box 126
1936-1937
Box 127 Folder 1-3
1937-1938
Box 127 Folder 4
Box 127 Folder 5
Box 127 Folder 6
Box 128
1935-1936
Box 129 Folder 1-5
1937
Box 129 Folder 6
Box 129 Folder 7
1913-1914
Box 130 Folder 1-3
Correspondence files include administrative and internal correspondence (correspondance du bureau) and general correspondence (corresondance diverse).
This subseries consists administrative correspondence of the Centre. Within each year correspondence is arranged in rough alphabetical order; within some years there are several alphabetical sequences.
Box 130
1911-1912
Box 131
1911-1912
Box 132
1912-1913
Box 133
1913
Box 134
1913
Box 135
1913
Box 136
1913-1914
Box 137
1914-1921
Box 138
1922-1924
Box 139
1925
Box 140
1926-1927
Box 141 Folder 1-4
1930-1931
These files represent the general correspondence of the Centre. The correspondence is arranged in alphabetical order within each year. There are several alphabetical sequences for some years. There are separate folders for each person or organization with which there was correspondence in 1938. These names are listed below. It can be assumed that there is correspondence for many of these individuals in the files for earlier years. The correspondence folders for 1937 are followed by "documents", which consist of brochures, books, pamphlets, and other printed matter enclosed with correspondence received by the Centre.
Box 141 Folder 5-6
1914
Box 142
1914-1915
Box 143
1915-1919
Box 144
1919-1921
Box 145
1923-1925
Box 146
1925-1927
Box 147
1928
Box 148
1928-1929
Box 149
1930
Box 150
1930-1931
Box 151
1932
Box 152
1933
Box 153
1934
Box 154
1934-1935
Box 155
1936-1937
Box 156
1937
Box 157
1937
Box 158
1937
Box 159
1937
1938:
Box 159 Folder 4
Box 159 Folder 5
Box 159 Folder 6
Box 159 Folder 7
Box 149 Folder 8
Box 159 Folder 9
Box 159 Folder 10
Box 159 Folder 11
Box 159 Folder 12
Box 159 Folder 13
Box 159 Folder 14
Box 159 Folder 15
Box 159 Folder 16
Box 159 Folder 17
Box 159 Folder 18
Box 159 Folder 19
Box 159 Folder 20
Box 159 Folder 21
Box 159 Folder 22
Box 159 Folder 23
Box 159 Folder 24
Box 159 Folder 25
Box 159 Folder 26
Box 159 Folder 27
Box 159 Folder 28
Box 159 Folder 29
Box 160 Folder 1
Box 160 Folder 2
Box 160 Folder 3
Box 160 Folder 4
Box 160 Folder 5
Box 160 Folder 6
Box 160 Folder 7
Box 160 Folder 8
Box 160 Folder 9
Box 160 Folder 10
Box 160 Folder 11
Box 160 Folder 12
Box 160 Folder 13
Box 160 Folder 14
Box 160 Folder 15
Box 160 Folder 16
Box 160 Folder 17
Box 160 Folder 18
Box 160 Folder 19
Box 160 Folder 20
Box 160 Folder 21
Box 160 Folder 22
Box 160 Folder 23
Box 160 Folder 24
Box 160 Folder 25
Box 160 Folder 26
Box 160 Folder 27
Box 160 Folder 28
Box 160 Folder 29
Box 160 Folder 30
Box 160 Folder 31
Box 160 Folder 32
Box 160 Folder 33
Box 160 Folder 34
Box 160 Folder 35
Box 160 Folder 36
Box 160 Folder 37
Box 160 Folder 38
Box 160 Folder 39
Box 160 Folder 40
Box 160 Folder 41
Box 160 Folder 42
Box 160 Folder 43
Box 160 Folder 44
Box 160 Folder 45
Box 160 Folder 46
Box 160 Folder 47
Box 160 Folder 48
Box 160 Folder 49
Box 160 Folder 50
Box 160 Folder 51
Box 160 Folder 52
Box 160 Folder 53
Box 160 Folder 54
Box 160 Folder 55
Box 160 Folder 56
Box 160 Folder 57
Box 160 Folder 58
Box 160 Folder 59
Box 160 Folder 60
Box 160 Folder 61
Box 160 Folder 62
Box 160 Folder 63
Box 160 Folder 64
Box 161 Folder 1
Box 161 Folder 2
Box 161 Folder 3
Box 161 Folder 4
Box 161 Folder 5
Box 161 Folder 6
Box 161 Folder 7
Box 161 Folder 8
Box 161 Folder 9
Box 161 Folder 10
Box 161 Folder 11
Box 161 Folder 12
Box 161 Folder 13
Box 161 Folder 14
Box 161 Folder 15
Box 161 Folder 16
Box 161 Folder 17
Box 161 Folder 18
Box 161 Folder 19
Box 161 Folder 20
Box 161 Folder 21
Box 161 Folder 22
Box 161 Folder 23
Box 161 Folder 24
Box 161 Folder 25
Box 161 Folder 26
Box 161 Folder 27
Box 161 Folder 28
Box 161 Folder 29
Box 161 Folder 30
Box 161 Folder 31
Box 161 Folder 32
Box 161 Folder 33
Box 161 Folder 34
Box 161 Folder 35
Box 161 Folder 36
Box 161 Folder 37
Box 161 Folder 38
Box 161 Folder 39
Box 161 Folder 40
Box 161 Folder 41
Box 161 Folder 42
Box 161 Folder 43
Box 161 Folder 44
Box 161 Folder 45
Box 161 Folder 46
Box 161 Folder 47
Box 161 Folder 48
Box 161 Folder 49
Box 161 Folder 50
Box 161 Folder 51
Box 161 Folder 52
Box 161 Folder 53
Box 161 Folder 54
Box 161 Folder 55
Box 161 Folder 56
Box 161 Folder 57
Box 161 Folder 58
Box 161 Folder 59
Box 161 Folder 60
Box 161 Folder 61
Box 161 Folder 62
Box 161 Folder 63
Box 161 Folder 64
Box 161 Folder 65
Box 161 Folder 66
Box 162 Folder 1
Box 162 Folder 2
Box 162 Folder 3
Box 162 Folder 4
Box 162 Folder 5
Box 162 Folder 6
Box 162 Folder 7
Box 162 Folder 8
Box 162 Folder 9
Box 162 Folder 10
Box 162 Folder 11
Box 162 Folder 12
Box 162 Folder 13
Box 162 Folder 14
Box 162 Folder 15
Box 162 Folder 16
Box 162 Folder 17
Box 162 Folder 18
Box 162 Folder 19
Box 162 Folder 20
Box 162 Folder 21
Box 162 Folder 22
Box 162 Folder 23
Box 162 Folder 24
Box 162 Folder 25
Box 162 Folder 26
Box 162 Folder 27
Box 162 Folder 28
Box 162 Folder 29
Box 162 Folder 30
Box 162 Folder 31
Box 162 Folder 32
Box 162 Folder 33
Box 162 Folder 34
Box 162 Folder 35
Box 162 Folder 36
Box 162 Folder 37
Box 162 Folder 38
Box 162 Folder 39
Box 162 Folder 40
Box 162 Folder 41
Box 162 Folder 42
Box 162 Folder 43
Box 162 Folder 44
Box 162 Folder 45
Box 162 Folder 46
Box 162 Folder 47
Box 162 Folder 48
Box 162 Folder 49
Box 162 Folder 50
Box 162 Folder 51
Box 162 Folder 52
Box 162 Folder 53
Box 162 Folder 54
Box 162 Folder 55
Box 162 Folder 56
Box 162 Folder 57
Box 163 Folder 1
Box 163 Folder 2
Box 163 Folder 3
Box 163 Folder 4
Box 163 Folder 5
Box 163 Folder 6
Box 163 Folder 7
Box 163 Folder 8
Box 163 Folder 9
Box 163 Folder 10
Box 163 Folder 11
Box 163 Folder 12
Box 163 Folder 13
Box 163 Folder 14
Box 163 Folder 15
Box 163 Folder 16
Box 163 Folder 17
Box 163 Folder 18
Box 163 Folder 19
Box 163 Folder 20
Box 163 Folder 21
Box 163 Folder 22
Box 163 Folder 23
Box 163 Folder 24
Box 163 Folder 25
Box 163 Folder 26
Box 163 Folder 27
Box 163 Folder 28
Box 163 Folder 29
Box 163 Folder 30
Box 163 Folder 31
Box 163 Folder 32
Box 163 Folder 33
Box 163 Folder 34
Box 163 Folder 35
Box 163 Folder 36
Box 163 Folder 37
Box 163 Folder 38
Box 163 Folder 39
Box 163 Folder 40
Box 163 Folder 41
Box 163 Folder 42
Box 163 Folder 43
Box 163 Folder 44
Box 163 Folder 45
Box 163 Folder 46
Box 163 Folder 47
Box 163 Folder 48
Box 163 Folder 49
Box 163 Folder 50
Box 163 Folder 51
Box 163 Folder 52
Box 163 Folder 53
Box 163 Folder 54
Box 163 Folder 55
Box 163 Folder 56
Box 163 Folder 57
Box 163 Folder 58
Box 163 Folder 59
Box 163 Folder 60
Box 163 Folder 61
Box 163 Folder 62
Box 163 Folder 63
Box 163 Folder 64
Box 163 Folder 65
Box 163 Folder 66
Box 163 Folder 67
Box 163 Folder 68
Box 163 Folder 69
Box 163 Folder 70
Box 163 Folder 71
Box 163 Folder 72
Box 163 Folder 73
Box 163 Folder 74
Box 164 Folder 1
Box 164 Folder 2
Box 164 Folder 3
Box 164 Folder 4
Box 164 Folder 5
Box 164 Folder 6
Box 164 Folder 7
Box 164 Folder 8
Box 164 Folder 9
Box 164 Folder 10
Box 164 Folder 11
Box 164 Folder 12
Box 164 Folder 13
Box 164 Folder 14
Box 164 Folder 15
Box 164 Folder 16
Box 164 Folder 17
Box 164 Folder 18
Box 164 Folder 19
Box 164 Folder 20
Box 164 Folder 21
Box 164 Folder 22
Box 164 Folder 23
Box 164 Folder 24
Box 164 Folder 25
Box 164 Folder 26
Box 164 Folder 27
Box 164 Folder 28
Box 164 Folder 29
Box 164 Folder 30
Box 164 Folder 31
Box 164 Folder 32
Box 164 Folder 33
Box 164 Folder 34
Box 164 Folder 35
Box 164 Folder 36
Box 164 Folder 37
Box 164 Folder 38
Box 164 Folder 39
Box 164 Folder 40
Box 164 Folder 41
Box 164 Folder 42
Box 164 Folder 43
Box 164 Folder 44
Box 164 Folder 45
Box 164 Folder 46
Box 164 Folder 47
Box 164 Folder 48
Box 165 Folder 1
Box 165 Folder 2
Box 165 Folder 3
Box 165 Folder 4
Box 165 Folder 5
Box 165 Folder 6
Box 165 Folder 7
Box 165 Folder 8
Box 165 Folder 9
Box 165 Folder 10
Box 165 Folder 11
Box 165 Folder 12
Box 165 Folder 13
Box 165 Folder 14
Box 165 Folder 15
Box 165 Folder 16
Box 165 Folder 17
Box 165 Folder 18
Box 165 Folder 19
Box 165 Folder 20
Box 165 Folder 21
Box 165 Folder 22
Box 165 Folder 23
Box 165 Folder 24
Box 165 Folder 25
Box 165 Folder 26
Box 165 Folder 27
Box 165 Folder 28
Box 165 Folder 29
Box 165 Folder 30
Box 165 Folder 31
Box 165 Folder 32
Box 165 Folder 33
Box 165 Folder 34
Box 165 Folder 35
Box 165 Folder 36
Box 165 Folder 37
Box 165 Folder 38
Box 165 Folder 39
Box 165 Folder 40
Box 165 Folder 41
Box 165 Folder 42
Box 165 Folder 43
Box 165 Folder 44
Box 165 Folder 45
Box 165 Folder 46
Box 165 Folder 47
Box 165 Folder 48
Box 165 Folder 49
Box 165 Folder 50
Box 165 Folder 51
Box 165 Folder 52
Box 165 Folder 53
Box 165 Folder 54
Box 165 Folder 55
Box 165 Folder 56
Box 165 Folder 57
Box 165 Folder 58
Box 165 Folder 59
Box 165 Folder 60
Box 165 Folder 61
Box 165 Folder 62
Box 165 Folder 63
Box 166 Folder 1
Box 166 Folder 2
Box 166 Folder 3
Box 166 Folder 4
Box 166 Folder 5
Box 166 Folder 6
Box 166 Folder 7
Box 166 Folder 8
Box 166 Folder 9
Box 166 Folder 10
Box 166 Folder 11
Box 166 Folder 12
Box 166 Folder 13
Box 166 Folder 14
Box 166 Folder 15-16
Box 166 Folder 17
Box 166 Folder 18
Box 166 Folder 19
Box 166 Folder 20
Box 166 Folder 21
Box 166 Folder 22
Box 166 Folder 23
Box 166 Folder 24
Box 166 Folder 25
Box 166 Folder 26
Box 166 Folder 27
Box 166 Folder 28
Box 166 Folder 29
Box 167 Folder 1
Box 167 Folder 2
Box 167 Folder 3
Box 167 Folder 4
Box 167 Folder 5
Box 167 Folder 6
Box 167 Folder 7
Box 167 Folder 8
Box 167 Folder 9
Box 167 Folder 10
Box 167 Folder 11
Box 167 Folder 12
Box 167 Folder 13
Box 167 Folder 14
Box 167 Folder 15
Box 167 Folder 16
Box 167 Folder 17
Box 167 Folder 18
Box 167 Folder 19
Box 167 Folder 20
Box 167 Folder 21
Box 167 Folder 22
Box 167 Folder 23
Box 167 Folder 24
Box 167 Folder 25
Box 167 Folder 26
Box 167 Folder 27
Box 167 Folder 28
Box 167 Folder 29
Box 167 Folder 30
Box 167 Folder 31
Box 167 Folder 32
Box 167 Folder 33
Box 167 Folder 34
Box 167 Folder 35
Box 167 Folder 36
Box 167 Folder 37
Box 167 Folder 38
Box 167 Folder 39
Box 167 Folder 40
Box 167 Folder 41
Box 167 Folder 42
Box 167 Folder 43
Box 167 Folder 44
Box 167 Folder 45
Box 167 Folder 46
Box 167 Folder 47
Box 167 Folder 48
Box 167 Folder 49
Box 167 Folder 50
Box 167 Folder 51
Box 167 Folder 52
Box 167 Folder 53
Box 167 Folder 54
Box 167 Folder 55
Box 167 Folder 56
Box 167 Folder 57
Box 167 Folder 58
Box 168 Folder 1
Box 168 Folder 2
Box 168 Folder 3
Box 168 Folder 4
Box 168 Folder 5
Box 168 Folder 6
Box 168 Folder 7
Box 168 Folder 8
Box 168 Folder 9
Box 168 Folder 10
Box 168 Folder 11
Box 168 Folder 12
Box 168 Folder 13
Box 168 Folder 14
Box 168 Folder 15
Box 168 Folder 16
Box 168 Folder 17
Box 168 Folder 18
Box 168 Folder 19
Box 168 Folder 20
Box 168 Folder 21
Box 168 Folder 22
Box 168 Folder 23
Box 168 Folder 24
Box 168 Folder 25
Box 168 Folder 26
Box 168 Folder 27
Box 168 Folder 28
Box 168 Folder 29
Box 168 Folder 30
Box 168 Folder 31
Box 168 Folder 32
Box 168 Folder 33
Box 168 Folder 34
Box 168 Folder 35
Box 168 Folder 36
Box 168 Folder 37
Box 168 Folder 38
Box 168 Folder 39
Box 168 Folder 40
Box 168 Folder 41
Box 168 Folder 42
Box 168 Folder 43
Box 168 Folder 44
Box 168 Folder 45
Box 168 Folder 46
Box 168 Folder 47
Box 168 Folder 48
Box 168 Folder 49
Box 168 Folder 50
Box 168 Folder 51
Box 168 Folder 52
Box 168 Folder 53
Box 168 Folder 54
Box 168 Folder 55
Box 168 Folder 56
Box 168 Folder 57
Box 168 Folder 58
Box 168 Folder 59
Box 168 Folder 60
Box 168 Folder 61
Box 168 Folder 62
Box 168 Folder 63
Box 168 Folder 64
Box 168 Folder 65
Box 168 Folder 66
Box 168 Folder 67
Box 168 Folder 68
Box 168 Folder 69
Box 168 Folder 70
Box 168 Folder 71
Box 168 Folder 72
Box 168 Folder 73
Box 168 Folder 74
Box 168 Folder 75
Box 168 Folder 76
Box 168 Folder 77
Box 168 Folder 78
Box 168 Folder 79
Box 168 Folder 80
Box 168 Folder 81
Box 168 Folder 82
Box 168 Folder 83
Box 168 Folder 84
Box 168 Folder 85
Box 168 Folder 86
Box 169 Folder 1
Box 169 Folder 2
Box 169 Folder 3
Box 169 Folder 4
Box 169 Folder 5
Box 169 Folder 6
Box 169 Folder 7
Box 169 Folder 8
Box 169 Folder 9
Box 169 Folder 10
Box 169 Folder 11
Box 169 Folder 12
Box 169 Folder 13
Box 169 Folder 14
Box 169 Folder 15
Box 169 Folder 16
Box 169 Folder 17
Box 169 Folder 18
Box 169 Folder 19
Box 169 Folder 20
Box 169 Folder 21
Box 169 Folder 22
Box 169 Folder 23
Box 169 Folder 24
Box 169 Folder 25
Box 169 Folder 26
Box 169 Folder 27
Box 169 Folder 28
Box 169 Folder 29
Box 169 Folder 30
Box 169 Folder 31
Box 169 Folder 32
Box 169 Folder 33
Box 169 Folder 34
Box 169 Folder 35
Box 169 Folder 36
Box 169 Folder 37
Box 169 Folder 38
Box 169 Folder 39
Box 169 Folder 40
Box 169 Folder 41
Box 169 Folder 42
Box 169 Folder 43
Box 169 Folder 44
Box 169 Folder 45
Box 169 Folder 46
Box 169 Folder 47
Box 169 Folder 48
Box 169 Folder 49
Box 169 Folder 50
Box 169 Folder 51
Box 169 Folder 52
Box 169 Folder 53
Box 169 Folder 54
Box 169 Folder 55
Box 169 Folder 56
Box 169 Folder 57
Box 169 Folder 58
Box 169 Folder 59
Box 169 Folder 60
Box 169 Folder 61
Box 169 Folder 62
Box 169 Folder 63
Box 169 Folder 64
Box 169 Folder 65
Box 169 Folder 66
Box 169 Folder 67
Box 169 Folder 68
Box 169 Folder 69
Box 169 Folder 70
Box 169 Folder 71
Box 169 Folder 72
Box 169 Folder 73
Box 169 Folder 74
Box 169 Folder 75
Box 169 Folder 76
Box 169 Folder 77
Box 169 Folder 78
Box 169 Folder 79
Box 169 Folder 80
Box 169 Folder 81
Box 169 Folder 82
Box 169 Folder 83
Box 169 Folder 84
Box 170 Folder 1
Box 170 Folder 2
Box 170 Folder 3
Box 170 Folder 4
Box 170 Folder 5
Box 170 Folder 6
Box 170 Folder 7
Box 170 Folder 7a
Box 170 Folder 8
Box 170 Folder 9
Box 170 Folder 10
Box 170 Folder 11
Box 170 Folder 12
Box 170 Folder 13
Box 170 Folder 14
Box 170 Folder 15
Box 170 Folder 16
Box 170 Folder 17
Box 170 Folder 18
Box 170 Folder 19
Box 170 Folder 20
Box 170 Folder 21
Box 170 Folder 22
Box 170 Folder 23
Box 170 Folder 24
Box 170 Folder 25
Box 170 Folder 26
Box 170 Folder 27
Box 170 Folder 28
Box 170 Folder 29
Box 170 Folder 30
Box 170 Folder 31
Box 170 Folder 32
Box 170 Folder 33
Box 170 Folder 34
Box 170 Folder 35
Box 170 Folder 36
Box 170 Folder 37
Box 170 Folder 38
Box 170 Folder 39
Box 170 Folder 40
Box 170 Folder 41
Box 170 Folder 42
Box 170 Folder 43
Box 170 Folder 44
Box 170 Folder 45
Box 170 Folder 46
Box 170 Folder 47
Box 170 Folder 48
Box 170 Folder 49
Box 170 Folder 50
Box 170 Folder 51
Box 170 Folder 52
Box 170 Folder 53
Box 170 Folder 54
Box 170 Folder 55
Box 170 Folder 56
Box 170 Folder 57
Box 170 Folder 58
Box 170 Folder 59
Box 170 Folder 60
Box 170 Folder 61
Box 170 Folder 62
Box 170 Folder 63
Box 170 Folder 64
Box 170 Folder 65
Box 170 Folder 66
Box 170 Folder 67
Box 170 Folder 68
Box 170 Folder 69
Box 170 Folder 70
Box 170 Folder 71
Box 170 Folder 72
Box 170 Folder 73
Box 170 Folder 74
Box 170 Folder 75
Box 170 Folder 76
Box 170 Folder 77
Box 171 Folder 1
Box 171 Folder 2
Box 171 Folder 3
Box 171 Folder 4
Box 171 Folder 5
Box 171 Folder 6
Box 171 Folder 7
Box 171 Folder 8
Box 171 Folder 9
Box 171 Folder 10
Box 171 Folder 11
Box 171 Folder 12
Box 171 Folder 13
Box 171 Folder 14
Box 171 Folder 15
Box 171 Folder 16
Box 171 Folder 17
Box 171 Folder 18
Box 171 Folder 19
Box 171 Folder 20
Box 171 Folder 21
Box 171 Folder 22
Box 171 Folder 23
Box 171 Folder 24
Box 171 Folder 25
Box 171 Folder 26
Box 171 Folder 27
Box 171 Folder 28
Box 171 Folder 29
Box 171 Folder 30
Box 171 Folder 31
Box 171 Folder 32
Box 171 Folder 33
Box 171 Folder 34
Box 171 Folder 35
Box 171 Folder 36
Box 171 Folder 37
Box 171 Folder 38
Box 171 Folder 39
Box 171 Folder 40
Box 171 Folder 41
Box 171 Folder 42
Box 171 Folder 43
Box 171 Folder 44
Box 171 Folder 45
Box 171 Folder 46
Box 171 Folder 47
Box 171 Folder 48
Box 171 Folder 49
Box 171 Folder 50
Box 171 Folder 51
Box 171 Folder 52
Box 171 Folder 53
Box 171 Folder 54
Box 171 Folder 55
This series consists of correspondence, reports, lecture transcripts, invitations, schedules, posters, and printed matter that document the courses and lectures sponsored by and held at the Centre. This series includes material relating to Thomas Mann's lecture delivered at the Centre in January 1926 (See 178.2 and 185.4).
From 1926 through 1939 in collaboration with the Institut des Hautes Études Internationales and under the auspices of the Faculty of Law in the University of Paris, the Centre Européen conducted courses of lectures on international organization and relations. Starting in 1928 the Centre offered a considerable number of shorter courses. The lectures were published and distributed to libraries in Europe and the United States.
For each year, there is correspondence, mostly with the lectureres and printers, and documents. The documents consist of posters, invitations, schedules, budgets, and typed and printed versions of the courses.
See also Series XIII. Oversise material for posters and announcements and the CEIP Records (III.C.5. Cours) for more transcripts of the lectures.
Box 171"56
1926-1927
Box 171A
1927-1928
Box 172
1928-1929
Box 173
1930-1931
Box 174
1931-1932
Box 175
1933-1934
Box 176
1934-1935
Box 177 Folder 1-4
1936-1937
In addition to the Cours, the Centre offered independent courses under the auspices of the Chaire Carnegie, which it established in 1925. Each year, the Chaire and invited authorities delivered a series of lectures on a subject selected in agreement with the consultative committee. André Tibal (University of Nancy and previously Directeur of L'Institut Français at Prague) occupied the Chaire from 1925 until 1940.
From 1927 until 1933 the Centre also maintained a Carnegie Lehrstuhl at the Deutsche Hochschule für Politik in Berlin. Unlike the Chaire in Paris, until 1931 the Lehrstuhl was not entrusted to one professor, but was conducted as a series of lectures and seminars given yearly at the Hochschule and the University of Berlin by several professors from different countries. In 1931 Hajo Holborn of the University of Heidelberg was appointed permanent incumbent of the Chaire Carnegie in Berlin. In 1933 the German Government made the Hochschule an official school and the Carnegie Lehrstuhl was discontinued.
This series includes correspondence (mostly with lecturers and printers), clippings, press releases, posters, lectures in typescript and published versions, and invitations.
See also Subseries VII.C. (Conférences diverses) for other material on lectures delivered under the auspices of the Chaire.
Box 177 Folder 5-7
1925-1926
Box 178
1926-1928
Box 179
1928-1930
Box 180
1929-1932
Box 181
1931-1935
Box 182 Folder 1-5
1936-1938
Box 182 Folder 6
1926-1927
Box 183
1927-1931
Box 184 Folder 1-4
1932-1934
Box 184 Folder 5
Box 184 Folder 6
This subseries consists of correspondence relating to and the typescripts of various lectures delivered at the Centre. Many of the lectures for which there is material in this subseries were given under the auspices of the Chaire Carnegie.
Box 185
1924-1927
Box 186
1927-1930
Box 187
1931-1933
Box 188
Correspondence, speeches, internal memoranda, and printed material document the work and travels on behalf of the Endowment of the Baron d'Estournelles de Constant (the Centre's President, 1913-1924), Earle Babcock and Malcolm Davis (its two American Directeur-Adjoints), and Nicholas Murrary Butler (the Director of the Division of Intercourse and Education). Babock's and Davis's files include separate groups of correspondence with Butler and Henry Haskell, who was Butler's assistant. The series also include books and pamphlets by an about Andrew Carnegie and some correspondence with Louise Carnegie.
Baron d'Estournelles was President of the Centre Européen from its founding until his death in 1924.
The correspondence in this suberies consists of letters between Baron d'Estournelles and the staff of the Centre. The notes and mementos are also those exchanged between the Baron and the Centre's staff and include monthly reports on the Centre's activities. The "En voyage" file contains material concerning the Baron's trips to England and Holland in 1924. The biographical material includes correspondence, clippings, postcards, and speeches about the Baron's life and achievements.
Box 189
1913-1915
Box 190
1916-1924
Box 191
Box 192 Folder 1
Box 192 Folder 2
Box 192 Folder 3-4
Earle Babcock served as the Centre's Directeur-Adjoint from 1925 until 1935.
For some years correspondance diverse files include two or more separate sequences (in chronological and alphabetical order) and include letters and reports from the Centre staff to Babcock.
Box 192 Folder 5-6
1925-1926
Box 193
1926-1927
Box 194
1927-1929
Box 195
1930-1932
Box 196
1932-1933
Box 197
1933-1934
Box 198
1934-1935
Box 199 Folder 1
Box 199 Folder 2
Box 199 Folder 3
Box 199 Folder 4
Box 199 Folder 5
Box 199 Folder 6
Box 199 Folder 7
Box 199 Folder 8
Box 199 Folder 9-11
Box 199 Folder 12
Box 199 Folder 13
Box 199 Folder 14
Box 199 Folder 15
Box 200 Folder 1
Box 200 Folder 2
Box 200 Folder 3
Box 200 Folder 4
Box 200 Folder 5
Box 200 Folder 6
Box 200 Folder 7
Box 200 Folder 8
Box 200 Folder 9
Box 200 Folder 10-12
Box 201 Folder 1
Box 201 Folder 2
Box 201 Folder 3
Box 201 Folder 4
Box 201 Folder 5
Box 201 Folder 6
Box 201 Folder 7
Box 201 Folder 8
Box 201 Folder 9-12
1925-1927
Box 202
1928-1931
Box 203
1931-1933
Box 204 Folder 1-2
1934
Box 204 Folder 3-6
1925-1927
Box 205
1928-1930
Box 206
1930-1931
Box 207
1931-1932
Box 208
1932-1934
Box 209 Folder 1
1934
Box 209 Folder 2-5
Box 210
1930-1932
Box 211
1933-1934
Malcolm Davis was Directeur-Adjoint of the Centre from 1935 until 1940.
Box 212
1935-1936
Box 213
Box 214 Folder 1-3
Box 214 Folder 4-6
1935
Box 215
1936-1937
Box 216 Folder 1-4
Box 216 Folder 5-6
1935-1936
Box 217 Folder 1-2
1937-1938
This subseries consists of correspondence, itineraries, schedules, clippings, and other material related to Butler's trips to Europe. It also includes typescript and printed versions of various speeches that Butler delivered.
Box 217 Folder 3-5
1921
Box 218
Box 219
1925-1926
Box 220
Box 221
1930-1931
Box 222
1931
Box 223
1931-1934
Box 224 Folder 1-4
1933-1937
Box 224 Folder 5
Box 225 Folder 1
Box 2
Box 225
This series consists the Centre's correspondence with the London, New York, and Washington offices of the Endowment, and the files of the French section of the Divison of Economics and History, which worked out of the Centre.
Box 225 Folder 3-6
1935-1936
Box 226
1937-1938
Box 227 Folder 1-4
1938
Box 227 Folder 5
1912
Box 228
1912-1914
Box 229
1914-1917
Box 230
1918-1922
Box 231
1922-1924
Box 232
1924-1925
Box 233
1926-1928
Box 234
1928-1931
Box 235
Box 236 Folder 1-3
1938
Box 236 Folder 4-5
1911-1914
Box 237
1915-1925
Box 238
1926-1932
Box 239
1933-1937
Box 240 Folder 1
1938
Box 240 Folder 2-6
1923-1926
Box 241 Folder 1-2
Box 241 Folder 3-6
Box 242 Folder 1-3
1924-1933
Box 242 Folder 4-6
1912-1914
Box 243
1921-1925
Box 244
1921-1924
Box 245 Folder 1-3
1925-1926
Box 245 Folder 4
Box 245 Folder 5
1921-1922
Box 246 Folder 1-5
1921-1927
Box 246 Folder 6
Box 247 Folder 1
Box 247 Folder 2-4
Box 247 Folder 5
Box 248 Folder 1-2
Box 248 Folder 3-5
Box 249
While most photographs in the records are filed with the corresponding material, this small group of photographs was kept separate. The series consists mostly of large matted photographs, often in multiple copies, but also includes smaller prints and some negatives. The series includes photographs of Butler, Erich von Prittwitz und Gaffron, the Hôtel du Centre, and various group shots (some posed) taken at Dunford House, the League of Nations, the Geneva Institute for International Relations, and the Second Vienna Summer School.
See also Series XIII. Oversize material.
Box 250 Folder 1
1926-1930
Box 250 Folder 2
1935-1937
Box 250 Folder 3
Correspondence, typescripts, page proofs, and pamphlets document the editorial, production, and distribution aspects of the Centre's publications program.
This subseries consists of the typescripts and proofs for the pamphlet published by the Centre that described the foundation, administration, and activities of the Centre. The Centre published French, German, and English versions. This subseries also contains some correspondence regarding the pamphlet's production.
Box 250 Folder 4-6
1928
Box 251
1928-1929
Box 252 Folder 1-4
1929-1933
Box 252 Folder 5
1927-1928
Box 253
1927-1929
Box 254
1929
Box 255
1930
Box 256
1930
Box 257
1930
Box 258
1931
Box 259
1931
Box 260
1932
Box 261
1932
Box 262
1932
Box 263
1933
Box 264
1933
Box 265
1933-1934
Box 266
1934
Box 267
1934
Box 268
1934-1935
Box 269
1935-1936
Box 270
1936
Box 271 Folder 1
1937
Box 271 Folder 2-6
1927-1935
Box 272 Folder 1-2
1936-1938
Box 272 Folder 3-6
1920-1925
Box 273
1926-1929
Box 274
1930-1933
Box 275
1934-1935
Box 276
1936-1937
Box 277 Folder 1
Box 277 Folder 2-7
Box 278
1925-1929
Box 279
1928-1932
Box 280
1931-1933
Box 281
1934-1935
Box 282 Folder 1-4
1935-1940
Box 282 Folder 5-6
1927-1928
Box 283
1929-1932
Box 284
1933-1936
Box 285 Folder 1-4
1937-1940
Box 285 Folder 5-6
1926-1929
Box 286 Folder 1-4
1930-1940
Box 286 Folder 5-6
Box 287
1926-1931
Box 288
1932-1937
Box 289 Folder 1-4
Box 289 Folder 5
Box 289 Folder 6
Box 289 Folder 7
1923-1924
Box 290 Folder 1-3
1925-1928
Box 290 Folder 4
Box 290 Folder 5
Box 290 Folder 6
Box 290 Folder 7
Box 291 Folder 1-2
Box 291 Folder 3
Box 291 Folder 4
Box 291 Folder 5
Box 291 Folder 6
Box 291 Folder 7
Box 291 Folder 8
Box 291 Folder 9
Box 291 Folder 10
Box 292 Folder 11-12
1936
Box 292 Folder 1-2
Box 292 Folder 3-5
Box 293 Folder 1-2
1935
This series consists of requests for financial support from the Endowment, reports on grants given by the Endowment, and notes and minutes documenting the Centre's Comité's consideration of grant requests. The Endowment used the Comité to evaluate requests for support and collaboration originating outside of the United States. These files often supplement material in the Activités files (Series I).
Box 293 Folder 3-4
1912-1914
Box 293 Folder 5
1921
Box 294
1921-1923
Box 295
1923
Box 296
1923-1924
Box 297
1924-1925
Box 298
1926
Box 299
1926-1927
Box 300
1927-1928
Box 301
1928-1929
Box 302
1929-1930
Box 303
1930
Box 304
1931
Box 305
1931-1932
Box 306
1932
Box 307
1932
Box 308
1933
Box 309
1933-1934
Box 310
1934-1935
Box 311
1935
Box 312
1936
Box 313
1937
The Oversize series consists of material removed from other parts of collections. The series is organized by the series and subseries from which it was removed. The description of the item(s) is followed by the box and folder number (177.3) in which the material was stored originally. Most of the oversize material is announcements of courses, lecture offerings, and other events(affiches) made by the Centre and other associations, but the series also inlcudes more graphic posters promoting peace and disarmament, maps, photographs, and archictectural drawings.
Mapcase 14-E-1 Folder 1
Box 315 Folder 1
Mapcase 14-E-1 Folder 2
Box 314 Folder 1
Mapcase 14-E-1 Folder 3
Box 4
Box 314 Folder 2
Mapcase 14-E-1 Folder 5
Box 315 Folder 2
Box 314 Folder 3
Box 315 Folder 3
Box 315 Folder 4
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 6
Box 314 Folder 4
Box 5
Box 315
Box 315
Mapcase 14-E-1 Folder 7-9
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 1
Box 314 Folder 6
Box 314 Folder 7
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 2
Box 315 Folder 7
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 3-5
Box 315 Folder 8
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 6
Box 314 Folder 8
Box 9
Box 315 Folder 9
Box 314 Folder 10
Box 315
Box 315 Folder 11
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 7
Box 315 Folder 12
Mapcase 14-E-2 Folder 8