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COLLECTION Identifier: HUGFP 145

Papers of David McClelland

Overview

David C. McClelland was a Harvard psychologist, noted especially for his work on achievement motivation. These papers chifely document his professional life.

Dates

  • Creation: 1900-1998

Creator

Conditions on Use and Access

General Restriction
  1. Consult with the reference staff of the Harvard University Archives for details on obtaining permission to see, to photocopy, or to publish from the Papers of David McClelland.
Specific Restrictions:
  1. ___Evaluations
  2. ___Those portions of the collection in which individuals are evaluated are closed. Those portions of the collection that must be reviewed before patrons may have access includes the entirety of the series relating to undergrateuate or graduate advising and those portions of the correspondence for which the folder title is an individuals' name.
  3. ___University Records
  4. ___Records of the Department of Psychology and Social Relations; for a period of 50 years, access to these files requires the permission of the Departments of Psychology and Sociology.
  5. ___Records of University committees of which Professor McClelland was a member; for a period of 50 years, access to these files require the permission of the University department to which the committee reported.
  6. ___Records of faculty search committees of which Professor McClelland was a member; restricted for a period of 80 years.
  7. ___Records of University projects headed by Professor McClelland; for a period of 50 years, access to these files require the permission of the University department that sponsored the project.
  8. ___ Consulting
  9. ___Additional restrictions may apply to papers having to do with McClelland's consulting work.

Extent

37 cubic feet (113 boxes)

These papers document the professional life of David McClelland. While there are portions of these papers where McClelland's professional life and personal interests intersect, as in the papers relating to religion, McClelland the scholar is always more heavily documented than McClelland the private man.

Chronologically, the papers cover all of McClelland's life, including a small amount of material from his childhood. Professional papers date from his college and graduate school years. Like his career, this collection is dominated by the years at Harvard.

McClelland's activities in various arenas, teaching, consulting, pure research, are intermingled. A researcher may expect to find consulting materials from a McBer project among the reading materials for a course, while one may also find test results from a cohort of students in a folder on a reasearch topic.

Biography

David C. McClelland was a Harvard psychologist, noted especially for his work on achievement motivation.

Chronology of the life of David McClelland
1917
Born May 20, 1917 in Mt. Vernon, New York
1933
Graduates from Jacksonville, Illinois, High School
1933-1934
Special student in languages at Macmurray College in Jacksonville, Illinois
1938
Graduates from Wesleyan University , with an A.B. in Psychology
1938
First marriage to Mary Sharpless, June 25, 1938
1939
Obtains an A.M. from the University of Missouri in Psychology
1941
Obtains a Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from Yale University
Becomes Instructor of Psychology at Connecticut College
1942
Leaves Connecticut College
Instructor of Psychology at Wesleyan University
1943
Served as Assistant and Acting personnel secretary of the American Friends Service Committee , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1944
Part-time lecturer in Psychology at Bryn Mawr College
1945
Becomes an Assistant Professor on Psychology at Wesleyan University
Ends Part-time position teaching at Bryn Mawr College
1946
Becomes Chairman of the Department of Psychology at Wesleyan University
Summer 1947
Assistant Director, Sky Island Hostel for European Refugees (American Friends Service Committee)
1948
Becomes and Associate Professor of Psychology at Wesleyan University
Fellow of the American Psychological Association
1949-1950
Lectures in Social Psychology at Harvard University , then returns to Wesleyan University
Fall 1950
Becomes a staff consultant for the Social Science Research Council . This was in connection with the Ford Foundation Program for basic Social Science Development
1951
Publishes Personality, with J.W. Atkinson, R.A. Clark, E.L. Lowell
Lectures in Social Psychology at the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies , Salzburg, Austria
Becomes member of the psychology panel, National Research Council
1952-1953
Serves as Deputy Director of the Behavioral Sciences division of the Ford Foundation
1953
Becomes a Professor of Psychology at Wesleyan University
Member of the Fullbright Award Committee
Summer 1953
Lecturer in the behavioral sciences, Diplomats' Conferences, sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, Clarens, Switzerland
1955
Publishes Studies in Motivation
1956
Leaves Wesleyan University to become a Professor of Psychology in the Harvard University Department of Social Relations
Honorary M.A. from Harvard University
Member of the training grants committee, National Institutes of Mental Health
Chairman of Staff, Center for Research in Personality
1957
Honorary Sc.D. from Wesleyan University
Fellow, American Academy of Science
1958
Receives Guggenheim Fellowship
Honorary D.Phil. from the University of Maintz , Germany
1959
Travels to Italy with Guggenheim fellowship
1961
Publishes The Achieving Society, with D.G. Winter
Lectures in Social Psychology at the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies, Salzburg, Austria
1962
Chairman of the Department of Social Relations, Harvard University ,
1962-1963
Master, South House, Radcliffe College
1963
Co-founder of McBer Consulting Co. (now a part of the Hay Institute ). McBer assists managers in evaluating and training their employees.
Honorary L.L.D. MacMurray College
Submits proposal to the National Education Association to offer seventh graders in good standing college scholarships to encourage motivation.
1963-1964
Sabbatical year from Harvard University. Travels to India and Tunisia organizing research on entrepreneurial motivation.
1964
Publishes The Roots of Consciousness
Chairman of the Staff, Center for Research in Personality
President of the Eastern Psychological Association
1965
Becomes a member of the American Psychological Association Committee on Psychology in National and International Affairs
1967
Becomes President of the New England Psychological Association
Ends service as Chairman of the Department of Social Relations, Harvard University
Ends service as Chairman of the Staff, Center for Research in Personality
Spring, 1968
Peace Corps consultant, travels to Southeast Asia and East Africa
1969
Member of the Faculty of Education at Harvard University Graduate School of Education
1970
Honorary D.Litt. from Albion College
1972
Travels to Tunisia, Morocco, Spain, France, and Mexico as a U.S. Information Agency Consultant
1972
Takes a leave from Harvard. Travels to Indonesia to participate in a UNIDO conference, spends three months in Sri Lanka, writes Need for Power
1973
Ends teaching as a Faculty of Education at Harvard University
1973
Has article published in The American Psychologist stating that IQ and personality tests are poor indicators of a person's competence
1974
Travels as part of the U.S. Information Service to Sri Lanka, India, and Ethiopia.
1975
Publishes Power: The Inner Experience
1976
Receives the McKinsey Award
1980
First wife, Mary, dies in December
October 10, 1981
Second marriage to Marian Adams
1986
Retires, becoming emeritus professor of Harvard University
1986
Distinguished research professor of psychology at Boston University
1987
Receives the award for Distinguished Scientific contribution from the American Psychological Association
March 27, 1998
Receives the Bruno Klopfer Award from the Society for Personality Assessment
Dies.
1999
Receives the Henry A. Murray Award from the American Psychological Association Division 8

Series and Sub-series in the Collection

  1. Biographical Materials
  2. ___Biography, bibliography, curriculum vitae, interviews and articles
  3. ___American Friends Service Committee and Cambridge Friends Meeting
  4. ___Early papers and scrapbooks
  5. ___Images of David McClelland and family
  6. Correspondence
  7. ___Alphabetical
  8. ___Chronological
  9. Research
  10. ___Grant proposals and research plans
  11. ___Instruments
  12. ___Early research
  13. ___Applied research overseas
  14. ___Applied research consulting
  15. ___Health research
  16. ______Schizophrenia
  17. ______Alcoholism and drinking studies
  18. ______Diabetes
  19. ______Psychobiological research
  20. ___Sears follow-up studies
  21. ___Leadership in religious organizations
  22. Harvard Teaching and Administration
  23. ___Course material
  24. ___Correspondence with graduate students
  25. ___Thesis advisees
  26. ______Graduate thesis advisees
  27. ______Undergraduate honors advisees
  28. ___Undergraduate issues
  29. ___Administration and committees
  30. Writings and Speeches
  31. ___Journal articles, book chapters, and texts of speeches
  32. ___Correspondence relating to books

Acquisition Information

Accessions
  1. 11163: 1987 July 23, David McClelland
  2. 13589: 1997 June 18, David McClelland
  3. 13881: 1998 November 6, Marian McClelland
  4. 13889: 1998 December 10, Beverly Douhan
  5. 13918: 1999 March 4, Marian McClelland
  6. 14018: 1999 August 25, David G. Winter

Allied Material

See works by and about David McClelland cataloged in Harvard's on-line library information system.

Inventory update

This document last updated 2016 November 9.

Processing Information

Processed under the direction of Kate Bowers by Jill Snyder and Chris M. Lubicz-Nawrocki, September 2000 through March 2001 .

Staff at the Harvard University Archives re-housed all papers in acid-free folders and document boxes, organized the material, maintaining the original organization where possible, and produced this finding aid.

Staff in the Harvard University Archives tried to identify and preserve the organization of the papers as far as possible. While correspondence and course material arrived at the Harvard University Archives in good order, subject and project files and reprints were in no discernable order. Additionally, McClelland would re-use folders, so that sometimes the contents and the folder title are at odds. Staff o the University Archives imposed a rough subject organization where no intrinsic organization could be ascertained.

A vast amont of material was weeded from the collection. Weeded material did not meet the collecting policy of the Harvard University Archives and consisted chiefly of duplicates, drafts, articles and papers written by other researchers, and raw data with no analysis or context. A small research study of "Rorschach results on renowned scientists," conducted by Anne Roe in 1957, was given to the Archives of the History of American Psychology in Akron, Ohio.

Title
McClelland, David C. (David Clarence) Papers of David McClelland, 1900-1998 : an inventory
Author
Harvard University Archives
Language of description
und
EAD ID
hua04001

Repository Details

Part of the Harvard University Archives Repository

Holding nearly four centuries of materials, the Harvard University Archives is the principal repository for the institutional records of Harvard University and the personal archives of Harvard faculty, as well as collections related to students, alumni, Harvard-affiliates and other associated topics. The collections document the intellectual, cultural, administrative and social life of Harvard and the influence of the University as it emerged across the globe.

Contact:
Pusey Library
Harvard Yard
Cambridge MA 02138 USA
(617) 495-2461