John and Robb Carson Letters, 1903-1908: Finding Aid (original) (raw)

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John and Robb Carson Letters, 1903-1908: Finding Aid

AC017

The Carson twins, from the Class of 1907 album.

The Carson twins, from the Class of 1907 album.

Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library
65 Olden Street
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA
Phone: 609-258-6345
Fax: 609-258-3385
mudd@princeton.edu
http://www.princeton.edu/~mudd

Published in 2001

©2006 Princeton University Library

Summary Information

Creator:

Carson, John Renshaw, 1887-1940.

Title and dates:

John and Robb Carson Letters, 1903-1908

Abstract:

This collection contains the personal letters of John Renshaw Carson (1886-1940) and his twin brother Joseph Robb Carson (1886-1953) to their parents in Sewickley, Pennsylvania. The Carson letters provide a first hand account of life at Princeton University in the early twentieth century. The bulk of the letters were written when John and Robb were undergraduates at Princeton (Class of 1907). The letters of 1903 to 1904 contain the most detail about student life at the university.

Size:

0.2 linear feet

Call number:

AC017

Location:

Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
Princeton University Archives.
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA

Language(s) of material:

English.

Storage note:

This collection is stored onsite at the Mudd Manuscript Library.

Biography of John Renshaw Carson

John Renshaw Carson was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 28, 1886. He graduated from Princeton University in 1907 with a Bachelors of Science degree. He then attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology for one year before returning to Princeton to continue his studies. Princeton University awarded him a degree in Electrical Engineering in 1909 and a master of Science degree in 1912. From 1912 to 1914 John Carson was an instructor in Electrical Engineering and Physics at Princeton University. In 1913 he was offered a position at American Telephone and Telegraph Company and in 1914 he resigned his position at the university. At American Telephone and Telegraph he was a transmission theory engineer involved in early radio telephone experiments. In 1917 he invented the “side band” system which allowed several telephone calls to be transmitted simultaneously by a single electrical circuit. He was responsible for the first installation of this system between Pittsburgh and Baltimore. Carson also developed the mathematical background for the use of metal pipes to guide radio waves. In 1924 the Institute for Radio Engineers endowed him with the Liebman Memorial prize. From 1925 until the time of his death in 1940 he worked for Bell Telephone Laboratories as a mathematician and electrical engineer. He received an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute in 1937, and was given the Elliot Cresson medal from the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia in 1939. Carson was the author of approximately fifty professional papers. His best known work is the Electric Circuit Theory and the Operational Calculus. At his death on October 31, 1940, he was survived by his wife Frances Atwell Carson and his son John Jr.

Biography of Joseph Robb Carson

Joseph Robb Carson (1886-1953) was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 28, 1886. Robb attended the Allegheny Preparatory School before entering Princeton University in 1903. He received a Bachelors of Science degree from the university in 1907. Afterwards he studied law at the University of Pittsburgh for one year. Later he was a Professor of Economics at Decatur University. Poor health plagued his life and interrupted his academic career. His many interests were demonstrated by working at a variety of jobs such as engineering in Idaho, writing at the Wall Street Journal, and as a statistician for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company before retiring in 1927 from all activity. He was married in 1930 and spent the remainder of his life in California and Arizona. His 107 classmates remember that “his was a gentle and lovely spirit and his mind before his illness was a brilliant one.” He died in February 1953, in Burbank California.

Description

The correspondence to their parents cover the period 1903-1908. The collection also contains undated and partially dated letters. The bulk of the letters were written from 1903 to 1907 when Robb and John were undergraduates at Princeton. A smaller portion of letters were written by John when he was an Electrical Engineering graduate student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston and Princeton University from 1907 to 1908. John and Robb also wrote to their parents from Chautaugua, New York (July 1903) and Schenectady, New York (letters undated). The collection also contains nine postcards.

Some of the letters convey a good sense of the issues and circumstances which shaped student life at Princeton University during a time of change.

The letters from the academic year of 1903 and 1904 contain the most detail about the relationship between Freshmen and Sophomore students. A letter dated December 4, 1903, reveals some of the ways Sophomores “horse” the Freshmen. A discussion of the “expulsion of students” resulting from a cheating scandal is discussed in letters of February 6 and 7, 1904. Sophomores “horsing” of Freshmen involved a variety of initiation activities. Throwing bags of flour on Freshmen when they were having their class picture taken and being “ambushed” by Sophomores with snowballs as they crossed campus are but two of the many “horsing” rituals. In his February 10th, 1904 letter John relates how students reacted when they found out Robb and he were twins. The lifting of Freshmen restrictions and the number of “students flunked” after mid terms are discussed in a letter of February 21, 1904. A reaction to President Wilson's new policies and the preceptorial system can be seen in letters of May 1, 1904 and February 23 and 28, 1905. There are two letters from friends which are in response to invitations by John and Robb.

Arrangement

The letters are arranged chronologically.

Access and Use

Access

Collection is open for research use.

Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the University Archivist. Copyright is held by the Trustees of Princeton University.

Acquisition and Appraisal

Provenance and Acquisition

The collection was obtained at auction by Dedrick M. Hervas of Arlington, Virginia, and donated in March of 1977 to Princeton University President William G. Bowen, who forwarded it to the Archives.

Processing and Other Information

Processing Information

This collection was processed by Monica G. Ruscil in January 1993. Finding aid written by Monica G. Ruscil in January 1993.

Descriptive Rules Used

Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.

Encoding

Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks and Cristela García-Spitz on October 20, 2006.

Finding aid written in English.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); John and Robb Carson Letters, Box and Folder Number; University Archives, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.

Subject Headings

These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.

Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:

Contents List

  1. Letters to John and Robb, 1903 Box 1
  2. Robb and John from Chautaugua, N.Y., 1903 Box 1
  3. John from Princeton, N.J., 1903-1906 Box 1
  4. Robb from Princeton, N.J., 1903-1906 Box 1
  5. Postcards from Robb in N.Y., 1906 Box 1
  6. John from Boston, MA, 1907 Box 1
  7. Postcards from John, 1907 Box 1
  8. John from Boston, MA, 1908 Box 1
  9. John from Princeton, N.J., 1908 Box 1
  10. John from Princeton & Philadelphia, PA, undated Box 1
  11. Robb from Princeton, N.J., undated Box 1
  12. John from Boston, MA, undated Box 1
  13. John from Boston, MA, Incomplete & undated Box 1
  14. John from Princeton Grad School, undated Box 1
  15. John from Schenectady, N.Y., undated Box 1

Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/qj72p7137

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