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Édouard Theis Collected Papers

 Collection
Identifier: SCPC-CDG-B-France-Theis, Edouard

Scope and Contents

The collection consists of letters between Édouard Theis and Carl and Florence Sangree, who lived in the United States. The correspondence is primarily about the founding and maintenance of the Collège Cévenol in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon. Included are letters to/from André Trocmé.

Dates

  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1947-1965

Creator

Language of Materials

Materials are in English.

Conditions Governing Access

None.

Conditions Governing Use

None.

Biographical

Édouard Theis was born in 1899. He taught school in the United States, and was a missionary and teacher in Madagascar and the Cameroons, before joining the theology faculty at the University of Paris, where he met André Trocmé. Trocmé invited him to serve as half-time assistant pastor under him in the Protestant church of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon in France. As a pacifist and conscientious objector to war Theis resisted Nazi violence and racism during World War II. Along with André and Magda Trocmé, Theis and his wife, Mildred, were leaders of the town's collective efforts to hide Jewish and other refugees from the Gestapo. He was arrested on February 13, 1943, along with André Trocmé and Roger Dacissac, and interned in a camp by the Vichy police, but was released after a few months. In the last months of the Nazi occupation, often at great risk, he guided refugees through the mountains of eastern France to the border of Switzerland, where they could pass into safety.

Theis and André Trocmé co-founded the Collège Cévenol in 1945. Theis taught French, German, and Greek, and his wife taught there as well. Theis also served as the college's first [second?] director until his retirement in 1963. Theis and his wife had eight daughters.

In 1952, Carl and Florence Sangree began The American Friends of the Collège Cévenol (AFCC). The AFCC helped raise funds for the college to purchase a 16-hectare farm on the edge of Chambon as the site of a new campus. It also organized work-camps at which the school's teachers and students, along with volunteers, passed the summers living in large tents while they built the new school with their own hands. Work-camps are still run today during the summers to help participants in their French language skills and to engage in community service projects. The college itself is currently named the Le Collège-Lycée Cévenol International.

[sources: 1/ "Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed" by Philip Hallie; 2/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Coll%C3%A8ge-Lyc%C3%A9e_C%C3%A9venol_International]

Extent

0.21 linear ft. (2.5 linear in.)

Abstract

Édouard Theis was a missionary and teacher in Madagascar and the Cameroons, before joining the theology faculty at the University of Paris. As a pacifist and conscientious objector to war Theis resisted Nazi violence and racism during World War II. Along with André and Magda Trocmé, Theis and his wife, Mildred, co-founded the Collège Cévenol in 1938. Theis taught French, German, and Greek, and his wife taught there as well. Theis also served as the college's first [second?] director until his retirement in 1963.

Custodial History

The Swarthmore College Peace Collection is the official repository for these papers/records.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Jeanne Theis Whitaker, June 2010 [acc. 10A-059].

Legal Status

Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendents, as stipulated by United States copyright law.

Processing Information

Processed, and checklist created, by Anne M. Yoder (Archivist), August 2010.

Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Find It at the Library

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