Administrative files created by John S. Galbraith, the second chancellor (1964-1968) of UCSD. The collection includes correspondence relating to matters of personal concern to Galbraith, including his relations with members of the campus and San Diego communities, relations with his professional colleagues, the "Flag Incident" of 1967, and issues such as campus drug use and Galbraith's two resignations. Included are correspondence between Galbraith and U.C. President Clark Kerr and materials documenting their conflict over funding for the UCSD Library. The collection is arranged in three series: 1) PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE, 2) SUBJECT FILES, and 3) SCRAPBOOKS.
UC San Diego. Office of the Chancellor Records (Galbraith), 1964-1971 (RSS 4)
Extent: 4.6 Linear feet (4 archives boxes and 4 flat boxes)
John S. Galbraith succeeded Herbert F. York as chancellor of the University of California, San Diego, in 1964. He quickly became a popular and respected administrator and continued the UCSD tradition of finding outstanding people to fill academic and administrative posts. Galbraith involved himself in a wide array of San Diego community affairs and thereby helped promote better relations between the University and the San Diego's political and social leaders.
Dr. Galbraith, like other UCSD Chancellors, had ambitious plans for the campus. Among Galbraith's highest priorities was the development of the University Library. Because of his background as an academic historian, he understood the importance of large and comprehensive collections for scholarly research -- especially for research in the humanities. He had discussed this subject with President Kerr prior to assuming the chancellorship, and Kerr had assured Galbraith that UCSD would eventually have the third greatest library in the U.C. system, with an acquisitions rate equal to those in Berkeley and Los Angeles. However, Kerr was slow in fulfilling this committment, and this caused Galbraith to postpone the UCSD inauguration, originally scheduled for September 1965, to November of that year.
The library issue and other administrative matters created friction between Galbraith and Kerr. On February 18, 1966, Galbraith and UCSD Vice Chancellor Robert Biron submitted their resignations to the U.C. President. Precipitating the resignations was Kerr's failure to add to the Regents' agenda the approval of the design of the UCSD Medical School. Although the resignations were later withdrawn, relations between Kerr and Galbraith improved little.
Like other college campuses in the 1960s, UCSD witnessed the growth of what would eventually become a nation-wide student movement organized, in part, as opposition to U.S. military involvement in Indochina. In November 1967, during Dr. Galbraith's administration, one group of students who had set up an informational table in Revelle Plaza began flying the North Vietnamese flag in protest of the U.S. military effort. The flag angered Leucadia assemblyman John Stull, and Stull demanded that Galbraith have the flag forcibly removed. Galbraith, after consulting with the U.C. legal counsel, declared that the university had no legal basis for removing the flag. Stull then called for Galbraith's suspension, among other measures. However, Galbraith successfully defended his stance on the issue, and he argued that the university administration, as well as the students, must abide by the rule of law. Dr. Galbraith handled this "Flag Incident," as he handled other such controversies, in a thoughtful and diplomatic way, earning him the respect of students, administrators and community members.
Dr. Galbraith had never planned on an administrative career, and in 1968 he resigned the UCSD chancellorship to return to teaching and scholarship.
The ADMINISTRATIVE FILES FOR JOHN S. GALBRAITH represent only a small portion of the materials created in the Office of the Chancellor during the Galbraith term. Most of the files created during that term were probably retained by the Office and augmented during the terms of subsequent chancellors. Many of the files retained by the Office probably found their way into the files of the Administrative Records office when that office was created in the 1970s.
Most of the records transferred to the Library -- and now included in the present collection -- relate to matters of personal concern to Chancellor John S. Galbraith. These matters include Galbraith's relations with members of the campus and San Diego communities, relations with his professional colleagues and issues such as library funding and Galbraith's two resignations.
Arranged in three series: 1) PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE, 2) SUBJECT FILES and 3) SCRAPBOOKS.