<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no" ?>
<!DOCTYPE ead PUBLIC "+//ISBN 1-931666-00-8//DTD ead.dtd (Encoded Archival Description (EAD) Version 2002)//EN" "ead.dtd">
<ead relatedencoding="MARC21">

<eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="iso639-2" encodinganalog="local choice"> 
<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="TxDaM">urn:taro:smu.00034</eadid>

  <filedesc> 
	 <titlestmt> 
		<titleproper>John O. Beaty controversy papers</titleproper> 
		<subtitle>A Guide to the Collection</subtitle> 
		<author>Finding aid prepared by Paul H. Santa Cruz, 2007.</author>
	 </titlestmt> 
	 <publicationstmt> 
		<publisher>DeGolyer Library</publisher>
			<address>
				<addressline>P. O. Box 750396</addressline>
				<addressline>Southern Methodist University</addressline>
				<addressline>Dallas, TX 75275-0396</addressline>
			</address>
	 </publicationstmt> 
  </filedesc> 

  <profiledesc> 
	 <creation>Finding aid encoded by Lara Corazalla,
		<date>2007</date>.</creation> 
	 <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng">English.</language></langusage> 
  	<descrules>Description based on <title>DACS</title>.</descrules>
  </profiledesc> 
</eadheader> 

<archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="MARC 21"> 
  <did> 
	 <head>Overview</head> 
	 <repository label="Repository" encodinganalog="852$a">
		<extref href="http://www.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/index.html" show="new" actuate="onrequest"><corpname encodinganalog="852$a"><subarea>Southern Methodist University Archives, DeGolyer Library,</subarea> Southern Methodist University</corpname> </extref>
	</repository> 
	 <origination label="Creator:" encodinganalog="100"> 
		<persname>Beaty, John Owen, 1890-</persname>
	 </origination> 
	 <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245">John O. Beaty controversy papers</unittitle>
	 
	 <unitdate type="inclusive" label="Inclusive Dates:" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1949/1964">1949-1964</unitdate> 
	 <physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300">3 boxes (1.5 linear feet)</physdesc>
	 
	 <abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520">Contains the papers of Dr. John Beaty, English professor at Southern Methodist University from 1919 to 1957.  The papers pertain to controversy surrounding his 1954 publication of a pamphlet entitled <emph render="doublequote">How to Capture a University,</emph> which asserted that un-Christian and even communist influences were infiltrating SMU.  This collection includes copies of that pamphlet, in addition to depositions and exhibits taken by a school committee, newspaper clippings, and letters both condemning and supporting his charges.</abstract>
	 
	 <unitid label="Accession No:" encodinganalog="099" repositorycode="TxDaDF" countrycode="us">SMU 1992.0167</unitid>
	 <langmaterial encodinganalog="546">Material is in <language langcode="eng">English</language>.</langmaterial>
	  
  </did> 

  <bioghist encodinganalog="545"> 
	 <head>Biographical Note</head> 
	 	<p>John Owen Beaty (1890-1961) taught English at Southern Methodist University, from 1919 until his retirement in 1957.  During this time, he also served as head of the English Department from 1927 until 1940.  Beaty, a native of Crow, West Virginia, received his B.A. and M.A. from the University of Virginia, and later completed his Ph.D. in philosophy at Columbia University in 1921.  Professor Beaty also spent a semester studying in France at the University of Montpelier.</p> 
	 	<p>Dr. Robert Hyer, first president of Southern Methodist University, appointed Beaty to the English Department in 1918.  Beaty taught courses in sophomore English, as well as in Old English and the history of the English language.  He served in active duty during World War II in the Military Intelligence service, and rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army.  He remained in the army reserves for a total of thirty one years.</p>
	 	<p>Dr. Beaty published fourteen books, including <emph render="doublequote">Race and Population</emph> (1928), <emph render="doublequote">Swords in the Dawn</emph> (1937), <emph render="doublequote">Image of Life</emph> (1940), <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain over America</emph> (1951), and <emph render="doublequote">Crossroads.</emph>  Dr. Beaty also served as a co-editor of <emph render="doublequote">Facts and Ideas,</emph> and <emph render="doublequote">Famous Editions of English Poets,</emph> as well as working with the Modern Language Association of America and the Dictionary of American Biography.  
		His writing was not confined to his own areas of academic interest, as he also wrote various newspaper articles on foreign affairs.  Dr. Beaty was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and other honors include membership in the Modern Language Association, Texas Institute of Letters, the American Legion, and serving as president of the Conference of College Teachers of English.</p> 
	 	<p>Claims made in his 1951 work <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain over America,</emph> as well as a pamphlet published shortly thereafter, <emph render="doublequote">How to Capture a University,</emph> triggered much controversy within SMU during the early 1950s.  Dr. Beaty was charged with being anti-Semitic and spreading claims in his work that either could not be supported with the references he cited, or that were the product of inappropriate use of sources.  <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain over America</emph> attracted a great deal of attention and apparently was widely read, going through eight reprintings in 1952 alone.  
		The context of the times when these two works appeared is especially important: the fear of communist expansion worldwide in the years after World War II, the fall of China to communist forces in 1949, and domestic efforts—both on the part of the Truman administration and by Congress (including by Senator Joseph McCarthy) to expose communist infiltration—gave Beaty’s work a very receptive audience.  <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain over America</emph> charged that communism could be characterized as a Jewish conspiracy, and that world communism was rapidly gaining ground everywhere, with little or no response from the Democratic Truman administration.  
		His later pamphlet argued that Southern Methodist University, while responsible for teaching Christianity and promoting Christian values, was nevertheless being infiltrated by communist and un-Christian influences.</p>
	 	<p>Such claims garnered support, certainly, but also charges of anti-Semitism and shoddy research, and SMU responded by setting up a committee—comprised of members of the SMU board of trustees and several Methodist bishops—to investigate Dr. Beaty’s claims.  SMU President Umphrey Lee charged the Board of Trustees with addressing the allegations Dr. Beaty made in his 1954 pamphlet.  The Board established a special committee charged with investigating those claims, and that committee’s findings—depositions, exhibits, and final report—are a major portion of the collection.  That committee eventually found his charges to be unsupported by any evidence, 
		and the Board of Trustees subsequently voted to censure him.</p> 
	 	<p>Dr. Beaty continued to serve in the English department until his 1957 retirement.  He later moved to Virginia, and died in September 1961.</p>
	 </bioghist> 
  <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
	 <head>Scope and Contents of the Collection</head> 
	 	<p>The Beaty Papers contain the pamphlet <emph render="doublequote">How to Capture a University</emph> and the reactions to it from within the university and from members of the general public.  </p>
	 	<p>The entire collection can be roughly divided into three series.  First are the results of the university special committee—letter to the university community announcing the formation of the committee, exhibits cited by the committee in the course of its work, statements by committee members as well as Dr. Beaty, and the final letter from the committee rejecting Dr. Beaty’s claims.</p> 
	 	<p>Second are copies of Dr. Beaty’s writings and reactions to it—copies of <emph render="doublequote">How to Capture a University,</emph> his later pamphlet entitled <emph render="doublequote">The Cry of Anti-Semitic,</emph> correspondence of Dr. Beaty responding to the praise/outcry over his writing, and reviews/letters from both members of the historical profession and general public both supporting and condemning his writing.</p> 
	 	<p>Third is a collection of newspaper articles from the early 1960s concerning disputes over textbooks that were being considered for adoption in Texas public schools.  Several of the books, including economic texts, were thought by some to be too critical of capitalism and free enterprise; as such, they do not directly relate to the mid-1950s controversy over Dr. Beaty’s work.  However, the articles are a valuable resource in highlighting both the perceived need to keep out communist or anti-American influences—or anything that could be interpreted as an endorsement of either—from schools and universities, as well as the supposed susceptibility of educational institutions to subversive ideologies.</p> 
  </scopecontent> 
  <arrangement encodinganalog="351"> 
	 <head>Arrangement of the Collection</head> 
	 	<p>The collection is organized into 3 series:</p>
	 		<list type="simple">
				<item>Series 1: Results of the SMU Special Investigative Committee on the Beaty Controversy</item>
				<item>Series 2: Dr. Beaty’s Writings/Correspondence, and General Reaction to Controversy</item>
				<item>Series 3: Newspaper Clippings on 1960s Textbook Controversy and Miscellaneous</item>
			</list>
  </arrangement>
	
  <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"> 
	 <head>Access to Collection:</head> 
	 	<p>Collection is open for research use.</p> 
  </accessrestrict> 
  
  <userestrict encodinganalog="540"> 
	 <head>Publication Rights:</head> 
	 	<p>Permission to publish materials must be obtained from the Director of the DeGolyer Library.</p> 
  </userestrict>
  
  <userestrict encodinganalog="540"> 
	 <head>Copyright Statement:</head> 
	 	<p>It is the responsibility of the user to obtain copyright authorization.</p> 
  </userestrict>

<controlaccess> 
	 <head>Access Terms</head> 
		 <p>This collection is indexed under the following terms in the Southern Methodist University Libraries' online catalog. Researchers desiring related materials may search the catalog using these terms.</p>
	 	 
    <controlaccess> 
      <persname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="600">Beaty, John Owen, 1890-  </persname>
      <corpname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="610">Southern Methodist University --Faculty --Attitudes. </corpname>
      <corpname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="610">Southern Methodist University --Faculty --Political activity. </corpname>
      <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">English teachers --Texas --Dallas </subject>
      <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Communism in education. </subject>
      <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Antisemitism in education. </subject>
	 </controlaccess> 
</controlaccess> 

  <prefercite encodinganalog="524"> 
	 <head>Preferred Citation</head> 
		 <p>John O. Beaty controversy papers, Southern Methodist University Archives, DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University</p> 
  </prefercite> 
  
  <acqinfo encodinganalog="541"> 
	 <head>Acquisition Information</head> 
		 <p>Deposit.</p> 
  </acqinfo>

  
  <processinfo encodinganalog="583"> 
	 <head>Processing Information</head> 
	 	<p>Finding aid written by Paul H. Santa Cruz, 2007.</p> 
  </processinfo> 
  
	<processinfo encodinganalog="583">
  		<head>Encoded by</head> 
  			<p>Lara Corazalla, 2007.</p> 
  	</processinfo>  
	  
    <dsc type="combined"> 
	 <head>Detailed Description of the Collection</head> 
	 	  
<c01 level="series" id="series1"> 
	<did> 
		<unitid>Series 1:</unitid> 
		<unittitle>Results of the SMU Special Investigative Committee on the Beaty Controversy</unittitle> 
		<physdesc>
			<extent>1 box</extent>
		</physdesc> 
	</did> 
	<scopecontent> 
		<p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
	</scopecontent> 

		<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">1</container><unittitle>Beaty Committee Report, 1954</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">2</container><unittitle>Report of Special Investigating Committee Appointed by the Board of Trustees, SMU</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">3</container><unittitle>Report of Special Investigative Committee on Beaty Matter, 1954</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">4</container><unittitle>Special Investigating Committee, 1954, Report—Beaty Controversy</unittitle></did></c02>
 
</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series2"> 
	<did> 
		<unitid>Series 2:</unitid> 
		<unittitle>Dr. Beaty’s Writings/Correspondence, and General Reaction to Controversy</unittitle> 
		<physdesc>
			<extent>2 boxes</extent>
		</physdesc> 
	</did> 
	<scopecontent> 
		<p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
	</scopecontent> 
 
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">1</container><unittitle>Beaty Essay, <emph render="doublequote">The Cry of Anti-Semitic</emph></unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">2</container><unittitle><emph render="doublequote">How to Capture a University,</emph> and Campus Reaction</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">3</container><unittitle>Jewish Community Response</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">4</container><unittitle>Public Affairs Luncheon Club (correspondence and statements regarding a resolution passed by the Club which took a critical stance toward some of the speakers that SMU invited to deliver lectures on campus; this, and not the debate over Dr. Beaty’s charges, was the real issue as far as the Club was concerned) </unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">5</container><unittitle>Patrick Henry Brigade, American National Research, etc. (assortment of materials from various right-wing organizations—included are many of the same ideas expressed by Dr. Beaty)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">6</container><unittitle>Academic Freedom</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">7</container><unittitle>Methodist Church Response</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">8</container><unittitle>SMU Press</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">9</container><unittitle>Dallas Times Herald and Dallas Morning News (Articles on local reaction to claims, actions taken by the SMU Board of Trustees, retirement and death of Dr. Beaty)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">10</container><unittitle>Correspondence about Beatty</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">11</container><unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">12</container><unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle></did></c02>
 
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">1</container><unittitle><emph render="doublequote">Southwest Review,</emph> Autumn 1948 (Margaret Hartley article, <emph render="doublequote">The Apotheosis of Average,</emph> in reference to President Willis Tate’s August 1954 commencement speech, 
		in which he argued that the desire to conform and refrain from expressing individuality, not communism, was the greatest threat to the United States)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">2</container><unittitle><emph render="doublequote">Southwest Review,</emph> Summer 1952 (Margaret Hartley article, <emph render="doublequote">The Subliterature of Hate in America</emph>)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">3</container><unittitle><emph render="doublequote">Southwest Review,</emph> Autumn 1953 (Margaret Hartley article, <emph render="doublequote">The Protestant Underworld</emph>)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">4</container><unittitle>Reviews in National Press (of <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain Over America</emph>)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">5</container><unittitle><emph render="doublequote">The Cross and the Flag,</emph> May, June 1953 (conservative periodical, May 1953 issue contains a brief review of <emph render="doublequote">The Iron Curtain Over America</emph> </unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">6</container><unittitle>Reading List for Military Intelligence</unittitle></did></c02>

</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series3"> 
	<did> 
		<unitid>Series 3:</unitid> 
		<unittitle>Newspaper Clippings on 1960s Textbook Controversy and Miscellaneous</unittitle> 
		<physdesc>
			<extent>1 box</extent>
		</physdesc> 
	</did> 
	<scopecontent> 
		<p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
	</scopecontent> 

		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">7</container><unittitle>Illustrations for Henry George’s <emph render="doublequote">Progress &amp; Poverty</emph></unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">8</container><unittitle>Dr. Beaty, 1954 (Newspaper clippings, photo negatives)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">9</container><unittitle>Textbook Controversy, 1960s, Dr. Paul Boller (Boller was a professor of history at SMU during this period, and argued that the supposed communist threat in the United States had been greatly exaggerated)</unittitle></did></c02>
		<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><container type="Folder">10</container><unittitle>Bibliography of Newspaper Articles regarding Beaty Controversy (also copy of April 12, 1954 issue of <emph render="doublequote">Time;</emph> article on Beaty, pg. 57</unittitle></did></c02>

</c01>

</dsc> 
</archdesc>
</ead> 
