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Rollin G. Osterweis

Rollin G. Osterweis (1907 – 1982) was an American historian in the Department of History at Yale University for twenty eight years while also serving as the Yale Director of Debating and Public Speaking. Osterweis was the author of numerous books and articles focused on the history of the American South and on New Haven, Connecticut.

Rollin G. Osterweis
Born(1907-08-15)August 15, 1907
DiedFebruary 28, 1982(1982-02-28) (aged 74)
EducationTaft School
Alma materYale University
OccupationHistorian
EmployerYale University
SpouseRuth Mildred Loewenstein
Children4 daughters

Early life and education edit

Rollin Gustav Osterweis was a native of New Haven, Connecticut, where his grandfather, Lewis Osterweis, had established a cigar factory in 1860. Osterweis was born on August 15, 1907, in West Haven, Connecticut, the son of Gustave and Rose Osterweis. He was educated at Hamden Hall Country Day School and Taft School, earning his B.A. in 1930 from Yale University, where he captained the varsity debate team. He attended Yale Law School and the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University before joining his family's business, Lewis Osterweis and Sons, manufacturers of cigars in New Haven.[1][2] During his ten years in the cigar business, Osterweis pursued his interests in history and American Jewish history, writing two biographies about prominent Jewish Americans, Judah P. Benjamin, Secretary of State for the Confederacy, and Rebecca Gratz, a philanthropist and social activist from a prominent family in Philadelphia. Gratz, reputed to be the inspiration for Sir Walter Scott's Rebecca in Ivanhoe, was a friend of Washington Irving's tragically short-lived fiancée, Matilda Hoffman.[3] Because of Osterweis's early interest in Scott and Washington Irving, in his late teens he began a book collection of American and British First Editions of the major works of Washington Irving. In 1942 Osterweis returned to Yale for graduate studies in history, receiving an M.A. in 1943 and a Ph.D. in 1946.[4]

Career edit

Osterweis joined Yale's History department in 1948, became an associate professor in 1954, and a full professor of history and oratory in 1968. He was a fellow of Jonathan Edwards College. His major publications were Romanticism and Nationalism in the Old South (1949) and the 1953 tercentenary history of New Haven, Three Centuries of New Haven, 1638–1938.[1]

While a professor at Yale, Osterweis taught courses on southern and urban history, and served as coach for the Yale Debate Association (YDA), which celebrated its Centennial in 2008.[5] Osterweis also served as faculty advisor to the Yale Political Union and developed an unusual course, The History and Practice of American Oratory, which included the preparation and presentation of speeches for course credit. Osterweis taught and coached several future national leaders in public speaking, including William F. Buckley Jr., Edwin Meese, David Boren, John Kerry, and George W. Bush.[6][7] The Osterweis Debate Tournament at Yale for high school students in Connecticut is named in his honor.[5] In 1976, Osterweis appeared on the CBS television station as an expert commentator for the Carter-Ford presidential debates.[8]

After Osterweis retired from Yale as professor emeritus in 1976, he became adjunct professor of history and political science at the University of New Haven, which had awarded him an honorary degree in 1975.[9] He was awarded the Yale Medal in 1982.[10]

Osterweis owned the first (and only) female bulldog to serve as Yale's mascot, selected in 1975 to celebrate co-education at the formerly all-male school. On November 10, 1979, the New York Times reported that a group of Princeton University students posing as Yale cheerleaders kidnapped Handsome Dan XII, aka Bingo Osterweis, the evening before the Yale-Princeton football game. Yale got its revenge on the field, beating Princeton 35–10, and Bingo was returned safely to Osterweis after the game. The caper made headlines throughout the region.[11]

Osterweis and his daughter Rollyn Osterweis Krichbaum helped develop a PBS 12-part Television Series narrated by William F. Buckley Jr. called "Freedom to Speak," inspired by Osterweis's course at Yale and his unpublished 1980 manuscript "American Oratory in Historical Perspective." Both father and daughter died before the series aired in February 1983, but they were listed as script consultants throughout the series;.[12][13] An article, "‘Freedom to Speak’: A Tribute to Osterweis,” appeared in the New Haven Journal Courier on January 27, 1983 and can be found, along with other articles about “Freedom to Speak,” in the Yale Manuscripts and Archives.[14]

Community leadership edit

Active in New Haven civic affairs, Osterweis held posts with the New Haven Community Chest, the New Haven Chapter of the American Red Cross as well as serving as president of the New Haven Yale Club (1950–52), the New Haven Colony Historical Society (1962–68), the Yale Faculty Club (1970–72), and the New Haven Preservation Trust (1971-1975). He was vice president of Temple Mishkan Israel (1943–44), a Reform congregation that his family had been involved with since its beginnings in the mid-19th century.[15] In May 1974 Osterweis received the Liberty Bell, the highest award of the New Haven County Bar Association, and in 1975 the University of New Haven awarded him an honorary doctorate, citing his contributions as both an historian of New Haven and civic leader. In 1977, he was elected to the Proprietor's Committee of the Common and Undivided Lands in the Town of New Haven, a committee begun in colonial times, responsible for the preservation of the New Haven Green.[4]

Personal life and death edit

Osterweis was married to the former Ruth Mildred Loewenstein of Charleston, West Virginia, and the couple had four daughters: Nancy O. Alderman, Sally O. Kopman, and identical twins Ruth O. Selig and Rollyn O. Krichbaum, the latter predeceasing him on February 4, 1982.[16] Osterweis died February 28, 1982, in Branford, Connecticut.[2]

Selected publications edit

Books:

  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1933). Judah P. Benjamin: Statesman of the Lost Cause. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. OCLC 1031734264.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1935). Rebecca Gratz: A Study in Charm. New York: G.P Putnam's Sons. Introduction by A.S.W. Rosenbach and foreword by David Philipson.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1949). Romanticism and Nationalism in the Old South. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. OCLC 2117668.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1953). Three Centuries of New Haven, 1638- 1938. New Haven: Yale University Press. Library of Congress original Catalog Card #52-12064.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. et Jacques Guicharnaud (1960). Santarem (a novel about Confederados). Paris, France: Plon.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1973). The Myth of the Lost Cause, 1865–1900. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books. OCLC 26037233.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1976). The New Haven Green and The American Bicentennial. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books. ISBN 0-208-01578-7.

Articles:

  • Osterweis, Rollin G. “The Sesquicentennial History of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences." New Haven: Reprint from Transactions, Vol. 38, Oct. 1949, pp. 103–149.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1958). "The Tallmadge Amendment." Social Education, Volume 22, no. 2: 59–62.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. (1961). "The Idea of Southern Nationalism." In The Causes of the American Civil War, Problems in American Civilization Series, edited by Edwin C. Rozwenc. Boston: D.C. Heath and Company, pp. 134–149.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. "New Haven: It's Evolution from Colonial Settlement to Modern City." In Proceedings of The Fourth International Congress on the Enlightenment and the Sixth Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies. New Haven, 1975.
  • Osterweis, Rollin G. "Industry and Culture in Nineteenth Century New Haven: Eli Whitney and the Inventive Spirit," Essays in Arts and Sciences, University of New Haven, Vol. X, No. 2, March 1982.

Awards and recognition edit

  • 1974 Liberty Bell Award from the New Haven County Bar Association [17]
  • 1975 Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters. University of New Haven.[9]
  • 1980 The Osterweis Debate Tournament, established for Connecticut high school students, was named by the Yale Debate Association in honor of Rollin Osterweis following his retirement from Yale in 1976.[5]
  • 1982 Yale Medal (the highest honor awarded by the Yale Alumni Association).[10]
  • 2012 The top 200 people of New Haven [18]

Archives edit

Papers from the professional and public life of Rollin G. Osterweis are archived in the Rollin Gustav Osterweis Papers, 1907–1983, in the New Haven Museum, Collection B30, along with its Finding Aid. Aside from a few letters and some genealogy and family history, there is no personal or family material. The material includes various awards and newspaper articles describing his contributions. The archive also includes the author's personal copies of all his articles and books. Rollin Gustav Osterweis Papers, 1907–1983.[1]

The papers of Rollin G. Osterweis as President of the New Haven Colony Historical Society have been transferred to the Archives of the Society, MSS C-1 Box I, Folder J. in the same museum archives.[1]

Most papers on Osterweis's teaching and his work with the Yale Debating Association can be found in the Yale Manuscripts and Archives. This collection includes photographs of the Yale Debate Team throughout the years Osterweis served as the Yale Debate Coach.[13]

The entire Osterweis Washington Irving Collection was donated in 2013 to the Library of Historic Hudson Valley (HHV), located in Tarrytown, New York, the home of Washington Irving. The collection's Finding Aid, including extensive biographical material about Osterweis, is available online.[3]

Papers related to the Osterweis's family business, Lewis Osterweis and Sons, a cigar manufacturing company in New Haven, Connecticut, 1860–1954, can be found in the New Haven Museum, in MSS Collection B53. This collection includes a Finding Aid with historical material on the history of the Osterweis family in New Haven.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "New Haven Museum » History of NHM". collections.newhavenmuseum.org.
  2. ^ a b "Rollin G. Osterweis, 74, Dies; History Professor and Author". The New York Times. 1982-03-02.
  3. ^ a b "The Rollin G. Osterweis Washington Irving Collection Finding Aid" (PDF). hudsonvalley.org. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  4. ^ a b "Retired Yale History Professor, Rollin G. Osterweis, Dies At 74". The Hartford Courant, 03-02-1982
  5. ^ a b c Ward-Packard, Samuel (2019-04-07). "Osterweis Tournament". Yale Debate Assoc. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  6. ^ "Debate Preparation Began With a Professor at Yale". The New York Times. 2004-09-27. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  7. ^ "Speech" (PDF). voicesofdemocracy.umd.edu. 2002. Retrieved 2020-12-09. See footnote 4.
  8. ^ "Retired Yale History Professor, Rollin G. Osterweis, Dies At 74". The Hartford Courant, 03-02-1982”
  9. ^ a b “Our July Salute: Prof. Rollin G. Osterweis.” The New Haven Register, July 30, 1976. P. 10.
  10. ^ a b "Volunteer Recognition — Award Recipients | Yale Alumni Association". alumni.yale.edu.
  11. ^ "Yale Mascot in Absentia". The New York Times. 10 November 1979.
  12. ^ "Diary of the final journey". www.washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  13. ^ a b "Found 1 results | Archives at Yale". archives.yale.edu.
  14. ^ "Obituary and newsclippings re: documentary "Freedom to Speak" about Rollin Osterweis (1983), 1980-1983 | Archives at Yale". archives.yale.edu.
  15. ^ “Mishkan Israel: 1840—1940” by Rollin G. Osterweis. In Centennial Volume, Congregation Mishkan Israel, New Haven, Connecticut, edited by Edgar E. Siskin and Rollin G. Osterweis: 1940.
  16. ^ "Diary of the final journey". www.washingtonpost.com. 1983. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  17. ^ "Annual awards". www.newhavenbar.org. 1974. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  18. ^ Ryser, Rob; Mayko, Michael P.; Zahn, Brian; Stannard, Ed; Perkins, Julia (2012-12-07). "200 TOP PEOPLE: Rollin G. Osterweis". New Haven Register. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  19. ^ "Info" (PDF). www.newhavenmuseum.org. 1984. Retrieved 2020-12-09.

rollin, osterweis, 1907, 1982, american, historian, department, history, yale, university, twenty, eight, years, while, also, serving, yale, director, debating, public, speaking, osterweis, author, numerous, books, articles, focused, history, american, south, . Rollin G Osterweis 1907 1982 was an American historian in the Department of History at Yale University for twenty eight years while also serving as the Yale Director of Debating and Public Speaking Osterweis was the author of numerous books and articles focused on the history of the American South and on New Haven Connecticut Rollin G OsterweisBorn 1907 08 15 August 15 1907New Haven Connecticut U S DiedFebruary 28 1982 1982 02 28 aged 74 Branford Connecticut U S EducationTaft SchoolAlma materYale UniversityOccupationHistorianEmployerYale UniversitySpouseRuth Mildred LoewensteinChildren4 daughters Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Community leadership 4 Personal life and death 5 Selected publications 6 Awards and recognition 7 Archives 8 ReferencesEarly life and education editRollin Gustav Osterweis was a native of New Haven Connecticut where his grandfather Lewis Osterweis had established a cigar factory in 1860 Osterweis was born on August 15 1907 in West Haven Connecticut the son of Gustave and Rose Osterweis He was educated at Hamden Hall Country Day School and Taft School earning his B A in 1930 from Yale University where he captained the varsity debate team He attended Yale Law School and the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University before joining his family s business Lewis Osterweis and Sons manufacturers of cigars in New Haven 1 2 During his ten years in the cigar business Osterweis pursued his interests in history and American Jewish history writing two biographies about prominent Jewish Americans Judah P Benjamin Secretary of State for the Confederacy and Rebecca Gratz a philanthropist and social activist from a prominent family in Philadelphia Gratz reputed to be the inspiration for Sir Walter Scott s Rebecca in Ivanhoe was a friend of Washington Irving s tragically short lived fiancee Matilda Hoffman 3 Because of Osterweis s early interest in Scott and Washington Irving in his late teens he began a book collection of American and British First Editions of the major works of Washington Irving In 1942 Osterweis returned to Yale for graduate studies in history receiving an M A in 1943 and a Ph D in 1946 4 Career editOsterweis joined Yale s History department in 1948 became an associate professor in 1954 and a full professor of history and oratory in 1968 He was a fellow of Jonathan Edwards College His major publications were Romanticism and Nationalism in the Old South 1949 and the 1953 tercentenary history of New Haven Three Centuries of New Haven 1638 1938 1 While a professor at Yale Osterweis taught courses on southern and urban history and served as coach for the Yale Debate Association YDA which celebrated its Centennial in 2008 5 Osterweis also served as faculty advisor to the Yale Political Union and developed an unusual course The History and Practice of American Oratory which included the preparation and presentation of speeches for course credit Osterweis taught and coached several future national leaders in public speaking including William F Buckley Jr Edwin Meese David Boren John Kerry and George W Bush 6 7 The Osterweis Debate Tournament at Yale for high school students in Connecticut is named in his honor 5 In 1976 Osterweis appeared on the CBS television station as an expert commentator for the Carter Ford presidential debates 8 After Osterweis retired from Yale as professor emeritus in 1976 he became adjunct professor of history and political science at the University of New Haven which had awarded him an honorary degree in 1975 9 He was awarded the Yale Medal in 1982 10 Osterweis owned the first and only female bulldog to serve as Yale s mascot selected in 1975 to celebrate co education at the formerly all male school On November 10 1979 the New York Times reported that a group of Princeton University students posing as Yale cheerleaders kidnapped Handsome Dan XII aka Bingo Osterweis the evening before the Yale Princeton football game Yale got its revenge on the field beating Princeton 35 10 and Bingo was returned safely to Osterweis after the game The caper made headlines throughout the region 11 Osterweis and his daughter Rollyn Osterweis Krichbaum helped develop a PBS 12 part Television Series narrated by William F Buckley Jr called Freedom to Speak inspired by Osterweis s course at Yale and his unpublished 1980 manuscript American Oratory in Historical Perspective Both father and daughter died before the series aired in February 1983 but they were listed as script consultants throughout the series 12 13 An article Freedom to Speak A Tribute to Osterweis appeared in the New Haven Journal Courier on January 27 1983 and can be found along with other articles about Freedom to Speak in the Yale Manuscripts and Archives 14 Community leadership editActive in New Haven civic affairs Osterweis held posts with the New Haven Community Chest the New Haven Chapter of the American Red Cross as well as serving as president of the New Haven Yale Club 1950 52 the New Haven Colony Historical Society 1962 68 the Yale Faculty Club 1970 72 and the New Haven Preservation Trust 1971 1975 He was vice president of Temple Mishkan Israel 1943 44 a Reform congregation that his family had been involved with since its beginnings in the mid 19th century 15 In May 1974 Osterweis received the Liberty Bell the highest award of the New Haven County Bar Association and in 1975 the University of New Haven awarded him an honorary doctorate citing his contributions as both an historian of New Haven and civic leader In 1977 he was elected to the Proprietor s Committee of the Common and Undivided Lands in the Town of New Haven a committee begun in colonial times responsible for the preservation of the New Haven Green 4 Personal life and death editOsterweis was married to the former Ruth Mildred Loewenstein of Charleston West Virginia and the couple had four daughters Nancy O Alderman Sally O Kopman and identical twins Ruth O Selig and Rollyn O Krichbaum the latter predeceasing him on February 4 1982 16 Osterweis died February 28 1982 in Branford Connecticut 2 Selected publications editBooks Osterweis Rollin G 1933 Judah P Benjamin Statesman of the Lost Cause New York G P Putnam s Sons OCLC 1031734264 Osterweis Rollin G 1935 Rebecca Gratz A Study in Charm New York G P Putnam s Sons Introduction by A S W Rosenbach and foreword by David Philipson Osterweis Rollin G 1949 Romanticism and Nationalism in the Old South New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press OCLC 2117668 Osterweis Rollin G 1953 Three Centuries of New Haven 1638 1938 New Haven Yale University Press Library of Congress original Catalog Card 52 12064 Osterweis Rollin G et Jacques Guicharnaud 1960 Santarem a novel about Confederados Paris France Plon Osterweis Rollin G 1973 The Myth of the Lost Cause 1865 1900 Hamden Connecticut Archon Books OCLC 26037233 Osterweis Rollin G 1976 The New Haven Green and The American Bicentennial Hamden Connecticut Archon Books ISBN 0 208 01578 7 Articles Osterweis Rollin G The Sesquicentennial History of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences New Haven Reprint from Transactions Vol 38 Oct 1949 pp 103 149 Osterweis Rollin G 1958 The Tallmadge Amendment Social Education Volume 22 no 2 59 62 Osterweis Rollin G 1961 The Idea of Southern Nationalism In The Causes of the American Civil War Problems in American Civilization Series edited by Edwin C Rozwenc Boston D C Heath and Company pp 134 149 Osterweis Rollin G New Haven It s Evolution from Colonial Settlement to Modern City In Proceedings of The Fourth International Congress on the Enlightenment and the Sixth Annual Meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies New Haven 1975 Osterweis Rollin G Industry and Culture in Nineteenth Century New Haven Eli Whitney and the Inventive Spirit Essays in Arts and Sciences University of New Haven Vol X No 2 March 1982 Awards and recognition edit1974 Liberty Bell Award from the New Haven County Bar Association 17 1975 Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters University of New Haven 9 1980 The Osterweis Debate Tournament established for Connecticut high school students was named by the Yale Debate Association in honor of Rollin Osterweis following his retirement from Yale in 1976 5 1982 Yale Medal the highest honor awarded by the Yale Alumni Association 10 2012 The top 200 people of New Haven 18 Archives editPapers from the professional and public life of Rollin G Osterweis are archived in the Rollin Gustav Osterweis Papers 1907 1983 in the New Haven Museum Collection B30 along with its Finding Aid Aside from a few letters and some genealogy and family history there is no personal or family material The material includes various awards and newspaper articles describing his contributions The archive also includes the author s personal copies of all his articles and books Rollin Gustav Osterweis Papers 1907 1983 1 The papers of Rollin G Osterweis as President of the New Haven Colony Historical Society have been transferred to the Archives of the Society MSS C 1 Box I Folder J in the same museum archives 1 Most papers on Osterweis s teaching and his work with the Yale Debating Association can be found in the Yale Manuscripts and Archives This collection includes photographs of the Yale Debate Team throughout the years Osterweis served as the Yale Debate Coach 13 The entire Osterweis Washington Irving Collection was donated in 2013 to the Library of Historic Hudson Valley HHV located in Tarrytown New York the home of Washington Irving The collection s Finding Aid including extensive biographical material about Osterweis is available online 3 Papers related to the Osterweis s family business Lewis Osterweis and Sons a cigar manufacturing company in New Haven Connecticut 1860 1954 can be found in the New Haven Museum in MSS Collection B53 This collection includes a Finding Aid with historical material on the history of the Osterweis family in New Haven 19 References edit a b c d New Haven Museum History of NHM collections newhavenmuseum org a b Rollin G Osterweis 74 Dies History Professor and Author The New York Times 1982 03 02 a b The Rollin G Osterweis Washington Irving Collection Finding Aid PDF hudsonvalley org Retrieved 2020 12 09 a b Retired Yale History Professor Rollin G Osterweis Dies At 74 The Hartford Courant 03 02 1982 a b c Ward Packard Samuel 2019 04 07 Osterweis Tournament Yale Debate Assoc Retrieved 2020 12 09 Debate Preparation Began With a Professor at Yale The New York Times 2004 09 27 Retrieved 2020 12 09 Speech PDF voicesofdemocracy umd edu 2002 Retrieved 2020 12 09 See footnote 4 Retired Yale History Professor Rollin G Osterweis Dies At 74 The Hartford Courant 03 02 1982 a b Our July Salute Prof Rollin G Osterweis The New Haven Register July 30 1976 P 10 a b Volunteer Recognition Award Recipients Yale Alumni Association alumni yale edu Yale Mascot in Absentia The New York Times 10 November 1979 Diary of the final journey www washingtonpost com Retrieved 2020 12 09 a b Found 1 results Archives at Yale archives yale edu Obituary and newsclippings re documentary Freedom to Speak about Rollin Osterweis 1983 1980 1983 Archives at Yale archives yale edu Mishkan Israel 1840 1940 by Rollin G Osterweis In Centennial Volume Congregation Mishkan Israel New Haven Connecticut edited by Edgar E Siskin and Rollin G Osterweis 1940 Diary of the final journey www washingtonpost com 1983 Retrieved 2020 12 09 Annual awards www newhavenbar org 1974 Retrieved 2020 12 09 Ryser Rob Mayko Michael P Zahn Brian Stannard Ed Perkins Julia 2012 12 07 200 TOP PEOPLE Rollin G Osterweis New Haven Register Retrieved 2020 12 09 Info PDF www newhavenmuseum org 1984 Retrieved 2020 12 09 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rollin G Osterweis amp oldid 1205577591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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