Contents


Collection Overview

Administrative Information

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE

SERIES III. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

SERIES IV. RESEARCH FILES OF CHARLES MODLIN

Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson Papers, 1901-1993 (bulk 1922-55)

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Maida Goodwin.

2008

Collection Overview

Creator: Anderson, Eleanor Copenhaver, d. 1985
Title: Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson Papers
Dates: 1901-1993
Dates: 1922-55
Abstract: YWCA worker, Labor reform advocate. The papers are primarily related to her professional and public life and focus on her work for the YWCA of the U.S.A. Types of materials include correspondence; writings; photographs; press releases; reports; journal and newspaper articles; transcripts of interviews; and memorabilia. Included is a copy of her 1933 Columbia masters thesis on working women in San Francisco. The correspondence is revealing of Anderson's intensely religious family background. Of particular note is a small amount of revealing behind-the-scenes correspondence between YWCA staff members, and a small amount of Sherwood Anderson scholar Charles Modlin's research materials on Eleanor.
Extent: 2 boxes(1 linear ft.)
Language: English
Identification: MS 622

Administrative Information

The Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson papers were donated to the Sophia Smith Collection in 2008 by Marjorie Modlin, widow of the Sherwood Anderson scholar Charles Modlin.

Related materials are in the YWCA of the U.S.A. Records.

Processed by Maida Goodwin, 2008

Please use the following format when citing materials from this collection:

Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson Papers, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.

The Papers are open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia Smith Collection without any additional restrictions.

Copyright ownership of Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson's writings is unknown. Copyright to materials authored by persons other than Anderson may be owned by those individuals or their heirs or assigns. It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of all copyrights. Permission to publish reproductions or quotations beyond "fair use" must also be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection as owners of the physical property.

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Biographical Note

Eleanor Gladys Copenhaver was born on June 15, 1896 in Marion, Virginia, to Bascom Eugene and Laura Lu Scherer Copenhaver.

Laura Lu's father founded Marion Female College, which was located next door to the family home, "Rosemont." Laura Lu attended Marion College and later taught English there. Her husband, B.E. Copenhaver, first taught at Marion and then became Smyth County superintendent of schools. In addition, Laura Lu was very active in the Lutheran Church and on the local social scene. She wrote pageants, poetry, and articles for the church and a variety of magazines. She also helped provide employment for local rural women when she founded Rosemont Industries, which marketed mountain handicrafts.

Copenhaver first attended Marion College, then transferred to Westhampton College in Richmond, Virginia, where she earned a B.A. in English in 1917. She taught high school English in Richmond for the 1917-18 school year, then enrolled in the certificate program in Social Economy and Social Research at Bryn Mawr College. In the summer of 1919 she was Camp Director for the New York College Settlement. Bryn Mawr awarded her a certificate in social economy in 1920. Copenhaver joined the national staff of the YWCA in September 1920 as a Field Secretary in the South and Central region. From 1920 to 1923 she primarily worked in rural communities organizing programs, studying conditions, and "interpreting" the Association to public gatherings and church and school groups. She switched to a specialization in industrial communities beginning in 1923, first working in the Central Region, then as National Industrial Secretary based at headquarters in New York City beginning in 1925. She completed a masters degree in political economy at Columbia University in 1933.

The writer Sherwood Anderson began spending summers in Smyth County, Virginia, in the 1920s. He came to know the Copenhaver family after he purchased two small local newspapers. First befriending Laura Lu, Anderson met Eleanor in 1928 when she was visiting from New York. Still married to his third wife at the time, Anderson began following Copenhaver on her travels for the YWCA, eventually convincing her to marry him. They were wed on July 6, 1933, in Virginia.

From 1937 to 1947 Copenhaver Anderson was head of the National YWCA's Industrial Program. She continued to travel extensively for her job, which provided the main financial support for the couple and for various family members through the Depression. Some have speculated that this, Sherwood Anderson's fourth marriage, lasted as long as it did in part because Eleanor was away so much. He died in 1941.

As the National YWCA began to drastically reduce its programs for employed women, Anderdson accepted a two-year assignment with the Foreign Division, departing for Italy in 1947. There she worked on a cooperative program between the YWCA and Amalgamated Clothing Workers, and served as an advisor to the YWCA of Italy on relief projects and employed women's programs.

While Anderson was in Italy, attacks on the YWCA for its supposed communist leanings became especially virulent. Copenhaver Anderson's name was among the many YWCA staff-particularly those in the Industrial Department--accused of communist ties in the 1948 booklet "Behind the Lace Curtains of the YWCA." In Italy, she made the mistake of authorizing an unsecured loan of YWCA funds which were lost when the individual to whom she made the loan disappeared.

After her return to the U.S., Copenhaver Anderson was terminated rather abruptly in 1950 when the YWCA of the U.S.A. eliminated its programs for employed women. During her forced leisure, she organized and transferred Sherwood Anderson's papers to the Newberry Library in Chicago.

Copenhaver Anderson was rehired in 1951 under the auspices of the YWCA and United Community Defense Services, an agency formed from fifteen social service organizations to provide short-term "health, welfare, and recreation services" to rapidly-growing communities near defense industries. She retired from the YWCA-UCDS work in 1961.

In retirement, Copenhaver Anderson spent winters in New York City and summers at "Rosemont" and "Ripshin" in Virginia. She graciously greeted Sherwood Anderson scholars and encouraged their work on her late-husband.

Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson died on September 12, 1985 in Marion, Virginia.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson Papers consist of one linear foot and are primarily related to her professional and public life, dating from 1901 to 1993. Types of materials include correspondence; writings; photographs; press releases; reports; journal and newspaper articles; transcripts of interviews; and memorabilia.

The bulk of the papers date from 1922 to 1955 and focus on Copenhaver Anderson's work for the YWCA of the U.S.A. Included among the Biographical Materials in SERIES I is a fairly extensive file of clippings giving a sense of Anderson's busy travel schedule as well as a copy of her 1933 Columbia masters thesis on working women in San Francisco. The correspondence in SERIES II is revealing of Anderson's intensely religious family background. Of particular note in the YWCA materials in SERIES III. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES is a small amount of revealing behind-the-scenes correspondence between YWCA staff members. SERIES IV. consists of a small amount of Sherwood Anderson scholar Charles Modlin's research materials on Eleanor.

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Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into four series:

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SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS


Box

Folder

1 1
General 1948-51, n.d.

2-4
Clippings 1922-62, n.d.

5
Address and telephone books n.d.

6
Business cards n.d.

7
"Daily Reminder" diaries 1929-33

8
Death 1985


Education

9
General 1917-33

10-11
Masters Thesis: "Working Women in San Francisco, California," political science, Columbia University[original and photocopy] 1933


Family

12
Copenhaver family and Rosemont Weavers 1901-84, n.d.

13
Sherwood Anderson's Secret Love Letters: For Eleanor, a Letter a Day, edited by Ray Lewis White, LSU Press 1991

Box

Folder

2 1
FBI file 1938-54

2
Financial 1922-23

3
Oral history interview by Mary Frederickson, Southern Oral History Program, University of North Carolina: transcript 1975

4
Photographs 1922-84, n.d.

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE


Box

Folder

2 5
Miscellaneous 1922-72, n.d.

6
Copenhaver, Bascom Eugene (father) 1920-23, n.d.

7
Copenhaver, John Randolph (brother) 1921, n.d.

8
Copenhaver, Laura Lu Scherer (mother) 1921-25, n.d.

9
Scherer, Minerva May (aunt) 1918, 1921, n.d.

SERIES III. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES


Box

Folder

2 10
Notes on Southern Louisiana for Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation Jul 1956


YWCA of the U.S.A.

11
General 1922-53, n.d.


Conferences

12
General 1926-31, n.d.

13
Findings of the Southern Industrial Conference 1940


Correspondence

14
General 1920-55

15
Leonard, Louise 1923, n.d.

16
Miscellaneous YWCA Secretaries 1928-50, n.d.

17
Radio script for appearance on "Woman of Tomorrow" with Nancy Craig Nov 1942

18
Reference file on southern textile industry strikes 1929-30


Reports

19
Report of the Ford Study on the Rural-Industrial Section by Eleanor Copenhaver, Margaret Forsyth, Donald McConnell, Dorothy P. Gary, and Lois MacDonald 1926

20
American Federation of Labor Convention 1936

21
Friendship Train, Italy Jan 1948

22
"Social Ideals" worship service, Winston-Salem YWCA 1933

23
Writings for YWCA 1929-50

SERIES IV. RESEARCH FILES OF CHARLES MODLIN


Box

Folder

2 24
Chronology n.d.


Correspondence

25
with YWCA 1975, 1988

26
re entry for Dictionary of Virginia Biography 1993