Morgan, Donald G.
Papers,
1931-1985.
Manuscript Collection: MS 0574
4
boxes
Agency History/Biographical note:
Donald Grant Morgan was born on June 7, 1911 in Chicago, Illinois.
He graduated from Cornell University in 1933 and received an Ed.M.,
A.A., and Ph.D. from Harvard University. He taught at Trinity
College and in 1943 he began teaching at Mount Holyoke in the
Political Science Department. He did extensive research on the
Massachusetts Town Meeting. He married Margaret Prince, with whom he
had four children. He retired from Mount Holyoke in 1972 after
publishing two books and numerous articles. Donald G. Morgan died on
October 4, 1985 in Bellows Falls, Vermont.
Scope and Content:
The Donald G. Morgan Papers consist of correspondence, writings,
research material, student papers, biographical information, and
photographs. The material primarily concerns Morgan's professional
life as a Mount Holyoke College professor and political scientist,
1944-1976. Over the course of Morgan's career, he corresponded with
numerous people in the United States government and at other colleges
and universities for advice and assistance. Of particular note are
numerous letters to and from Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter
and Senator Sam J. Erwin, Jr. Other letters include two letters from
former president Harry S. Truman, a letter from then-Senator John F.
Kennedy, and a letter from Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Morgan also
was in frequent contact with Harvard Law School Professor Mark Antony
DeWolfe Howe and Mount Holyoke College Trustee Gerhard Loewenberg.
These letters all predominantly concern the research and publication
of his book "Justice William Johnson: The First Dissenter" and
"Congress and the Constitution: A Study in Responsibility," though
many of the letters also reflect a friendly relationship. Many Mount
Holyoke College alumnae kept in close contact with Morgan and
frequently asked him for recommendations and advice about applying to
graduate programs and law schools. Morgan also wrote frequently for
local and national papers and scholarly journals about economic,
environmental, and social concerns. In the years leading up to his
retirement, he became interested in the New England tradition of Town
Meetings and was instrumental in the creation of a documentary on the
topic. Information on this, along with a number of student research
papers on towns in Massachusetts and Vermont, is included in the
collection. Some of Morgan's writings are written in Braille, and a
significant amount of the biographical material relates to his
experience as a blind professor. Other biographical material
consists of newspaper clippings about his books and his achievements
at Mount Holyoke College. A number of formal and candid photographs
of Morgan with family, students, and his guide dogs are included in
the collection.
Cite as: Donald G. Morgan Papers, Mount Holyoke College,
Archives and Special Collections, South Hadley,
Massachusetts
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
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