This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the FAQ section for more information.
Expand/collapse
Collection Overview
| Size | 2.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 2350 items) |
| Abstract | Elmer Roberts (1863-1937) was an Associated Press correspondent in Berlin, Germany, circa 1900-1914, and chief of the Associated Press office in Paris, France, 1914-1927. The collection includes correspondence, memoranda, scrapbooks, political commentaries, and other papers, relating to Roberts's work for the Associated Press in Berlin and Paris, and including extensive material on European political affairs before, during, and after World War I. Also included are correspondence with reporters in Cuba in the 1890s and a scrapbook of clippings about the Spanish-American War; a scrapbook about Germany, 1903-1904; correspondence, drafts, and source materials for Roberts's biography of Friedrich von Holstein; copies of lectures of Rudolf Steiner and other materials about Rosicrucianism; and other items. |
| Creator | Roberts, Elmer, 1863-1937. |
| Language | English |
Expand/collapse
Information For Users
Expand/collapse
Subject Headings
The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Expand/collapse
Biographical
Information
Elmer Roberts (1863-1937) was an Associated Press correspondent in Berlin, Germany, circa 1900-1914, and chief of the Associated Press office in Paris, France, 1914-1927.
Back to Top
Expand/collapse
Scope and Content
The collection includes correspondence, memoranda, scrapbooks, political commentaries, and other papers, relating to Elmer Roberts's work for the Associated Press in Berlin, Germany, and Paris, France, and including extensive material on European political affairs before, during, and after World War I. Papers, 1914-1918, include correspondence, telegrams, extensive memoranda on various aspects of the situation in Europe and on American-French relations, and numerous instructions from Associate Press headquarters in New York reflecting problems of censorship, competition with the United Press and International News Services, and reporting techniques. Two informational communications, 19 September and 1 October 1917, from D. Nasson, apparently a member of the Lafayette Escadrille, are also included. Papers, 1918-1919, include memoranda on Germany's advance into Eastern Europe, Japan's occupation of part of Siberia, conditions in France following the war, press problems after the war, reactions of European Allies against President Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points and the United States in general, and a mimeographed confidential report on Neuse-Argonne by Captain Arthur E. Hartzell. Also included are correspondence with reporters in Cuba in the 1890s and a scrapbook of clippings about the Spanish-American War; a scrapbook about Germany, 1903-1904; correspondence, drafts, and source materials for Roberts's biography of Friedrich von Holstein; copies of lectures of Rudolf Steiner and other materials about Rosicrucianism; and other items. Undated items include political essays on such topics as "Georges Clemenceau at Eighty-five," conditions before World War I, reasons for the United States entering the war, growth of the German Navy, political morality, the Kaiser in exile in Doorn, Holland, and articles regulating press correspondents with the army. There are also photographs of political, diplomatic, and military personnel; the Associate Press newsroom; World War I trenches; and portraits of various persons including Elmer Roberts, his wife Claire Livingston Roberts, and opera singer Florence Easton.
Back to Top
Expand/collapse
Elmer Roberts Papers, 1835-1937.
Processed by: SHC Staff
Encoded by: Noah Huffman, December 2007
Updated by: Kate Stratton and Jodi Berkowitz, June 2010
This collection was rehoused and a summary created with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
This finding aid was created with support from NC ECHO.
Diacritics and other special characters have been omitted from this finding aid to facilitate keyword searching in web browsers.
Back to Top