Critchfield
Family Papers, 1937-1994 (Mss 210)
Scope and Content
The
Critchfield family was one that wrote numerous letters. The family
moved around North Dakota, Iowa, and even Germany. Many letters were
written to relatives back home in Iowa or North Dakota. The family
was not always together. William "Bill" Critchfield attended U.C.
Berkeley while the family resided in Germany and previous to this he was
stationed at various forts throughout the United States and the Solomon
Islands during World War II. Richard (Pat or Dick) Critchfield attended
high school and college in Seattle, Washington while the family resided
in Iowa and Germany. Peggy Critchfield Moffett lived in California
and New Zealand. They all shared a strong concept of family and were
determined to keep in touch with one another. The letters reflect
wishes to know how things are a home and what has happened in their absence.
The letters also let the family members what was happening in the letter
writer's life. The letters are divided into three correspondence series:
Family and friends, Critchfield family, and Collins family. In the
finding aid folder are typed comments made by Peggy Moffett regarding the
letters written by each person.
The
Family and Friends Correspondence Series consists of letters from Menten
Sveen (Richard Critchfield's fraternity brother and roommate from the University
of Washington), various family friends and letters from the Critchfield's
Iowa cousins. The letters from Sveen are checking up on Richard to
see how he is doing after graduation and are rather few in number.
The letters from the family friends are merely lines dropped to ask how
things are going. The letters from the Iowa cousins consist mainly
of wedding announcements, thank you notes, and Christmas and birthday cards.
The
Critchfield Family Correspondence Series consists mainly of letters from
William Critchfield, Richard Critchfield, Anne Louise Critchfield and Peggy
Moffett Critchfield. These letters consist of family news and what
was going on in their lives. The majority of Bill's letters cover
his years as a navy Seabee and his travels from various bases in the United
States to Treasury Island located in the Solomon Island chain. Richard
Critchfield's letters cover his years as a journalist covering the Third
World and a small fraction cover his university days in Austria.
The majority of his correspondence is from his time of teaching journalism
at Nagpur, India up to the early 1990s. Richard's correspondence
during his years of reporting in Vietnam is scant because of the constant
stress he was under. Also his letters let his family know roughly
what his location would be at a given time, especially when he was researching
his books. He signed his letters either Pat or Dick. Peggy's
letters mainly cover her New Zealand years, 1971-1980. Her letters
are to let her family know what is going on in New Zealand and an attempt
to find out what is happening back home. Anne's letters are mainly
to her sisters as well as her children Bill, Richard and Peggy. The
majority of her correspondence is from 1948-1950 when she lived in Germany
and was writing home to her sisters. Anne signed her letters either
Louise or Louie. There are also letters from Betty Critchfield Herm
(a sister to Richard, Bill and Peggy) and her two daughters, Ann Herm Foley
and Jean Herm Krogster. These letters consist mainly of family news.
The
Collins Family Correspondence Series consists of letters from Helen and
Mary Collins, Anne Louise Critchfield's sisters. The letters from
Mary Collins are very few in number and consist mainly of family news.
The letters from Helen Collins cover the years 1974-1986 with the majority
covering 1980-1982. She wrote quite often to her sister, Anne, especially
after Anne broke her hip and moved into a nursing home. Helen then
wrote to Richard or Bill saying she was concerned about Anne's health and
asked them to look in on her along with letters of family news.
Critchfield
Family Papers | Personal and Family
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