Preliminary
Inventory of the Katharine M. Banham Papers,
1910-1995
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Descriptive Summary
Title
Katharine M. Banham Papers,
1910-1995.
Creator
Banham, Katharine
M., b. 1897.
Extent
26 Linear Feet,
20,000
Items
Repository
University Archives, Duke
University
Katharine May Banham (1897-1995) served as
a professor in the Department of Psychology at Duke
University from 1946 to 1967, specializing in child
psychology and development. Papers include correspondence,
writings, speeches, case files and research notes, teaching
materials, diaries, memorabilia, photographs, and oral
history interviews of Katharine M. Banham, relating to her
work in the field of psychology and her contributions to
Duke University, Durham, and North Carolina. Prominent
subjects include psychological experimentation, child
psychology, geriatrics and gerontology, human social and
emotional development, children with cerebral palsy, the
Woman's College, Duke Preschool, Duke Institute for
Learning in Retirement, the North Carolina Psychological
Association, the Durham Child Guidance Clinic, and the
Center for the Study of Aging and Human
Development.
Language
English.
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Patrons must sign the Acknowledgement of Legal Responsibility and Privacy Rights form before using this collection.
For a period of twenty-five years from the
origin of the material, permission in writing from the
office of origin and the University Archivist is required for use.
After twenty-five years, records that have been processed
may be consulted with the permission of the University
Archivist.
Use Restrictions
Series 1. Materials that are personally
identifiable and relate to psychological evaluations and
testing are restricted (contained in white envelopes and
stamped restricted).
Series 4. Letters of reference and
recommendation as well as correspondence between Ruth A.
Baker, secretary of the Psychology Department and Katharine
Banham, 1990-1995 (contained in white envelopes and stamped
restricted). To be opened only by the permission of the
University Archivist.
Copyright for Official University records is
held by Duke University; all other copyright is retained by
the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants,
as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Katharine M. Banham
Papers, University Archives, Duke University.
Provenance
The University Archives received this collection
as a transfer in 1977, 1992, and 1995.
Processing Information
Processed by Laura Micham
Completed November, 1996
Encoded by Joshua McKim, December 2002; Jill Katte, April 2003
This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.
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Biographical and Historical Note
Katharine May Banham was born 26 May, 1897,
Sheffield, England and died 7 May, 1995, in
Buckinghamshire, England. Educated at University of
Manchester (England), BS., 1919; Cambridge University
(England), M.S., 1921, though this institution did not
award degrees to women at that time; University of Toronto
(Canada), MA., 1923; and University of Montreal, Ph.D.,
1934 (Cum Laude), the first woman to be awarded a Ph.D.
from that university.
After faculty and professional positions in
Canada, England, Iowa, and New Jersey, Banham was appointed
to the Duke University faculty of psychology as Associate
Professor in 1946 and Duke University Associate Professor
of Psychology, Emerita in 1967. She was appointed Senior
Psychologist at the North Carolina Board of Public Welfare
in 1950. In addition to summer positions at the New Jersey
Children's Home Society (1948), Children's Services of
Cleveland, Ohio (1950), and visiting professor at
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. (1960 and
1962), Banham was appointed as Head Psychologist of the
Infant Program at the North Carolina Cerebral Palsy
Hospital in 1967 and Consulting Psychologist at Lenox Baker
Hospital (formerly called the N.C. Cerebral Palsy Hospital)
in 1980. Banham cofounded the Duke University Nursery
School in 1946, with Dr. Wally Reichenberg-Hackett, helped
to establish the Duke Film Society and the Duke Institute
for Learning in Retirement, served in various faculty
committees, developed a freshman counseling program, and
created psychology courses in the area of infant and child
development.
Outside of the Duke community, Banham helped to
establish many organizations including the Child Guidance
Clinic of Durham; the Committee for Successful Aging; the
North Carolina Psychological Association; the Altrusa Club,
an all-women philanthropic organization; the French Club;
and the Photographic Arts Society of Durham. She was a
member and officer of many professional organizations in
the United States and abroad. She established and funded
the Alice C. Hundley Piano Student Award in 1970, for
promising piano players between twelve and fourteen years
old and the Anne McDougall Memorial Award for women in
1985, for women students to pursue study in the broad area
of psychology whose education has been interrupted or who
have not had the opportunity for college education. Honors
and awards received by her include the N.C. Cerebral Palsy
Award for Merit (1972) as well as certificates and awards
of recognition and merit from regional, national, and
international organizations. Published in both English and
French, major publications include The Social and Emotional
Development of the Preschool Child, (London: Kegan Paul,
1931) and Ring and Peg Tests of Behavior Development,
(Chicago: Psychometric Affiliates, 1965).
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Collection Overview
The Katharine May Banham Papers span the years
between 1910 and 1995, with the bulk occurring between 1945
and 1984. These papers include her master's theses and
dissertation work, professional and academic writings, case
files, and data documenting psychological experiments that
culminated in the development of tests, as well as research
articles and one monograph; transcripts of talks and
addresses; translations of French psychological texts,
teaching materials; administrative records of and records
documenting her role in various civic and academic clubs
and organizations; professional and personal
correspondence; and personal materials including art,
photographs, memorabilia, poetry and other personal
writings, diaries, biographical information, legal
documents, and tapes and transcripts of an oral history
interview done in 1980. The main subject areas include
Banham's contribution to the profession, her participation
in the Duke community, and the Durham community as well as
regional, national, and international communities and
agencies.
The collection chiefly reflects Banham's career as
a woman psychologist during a period when there was little
support for women in professional or academic careers. The
papers document Banham's research and teaching in three
countries; her contributions in the areas of child
psychology and geriatrics, particularly human social and
emotional development; functioning and development of
children with cerebral palsy and disabilities; the history
and especially the development of psychological testing of
children and adults; and parapsychological phenomena.
Research and teaching materials are located within the
Academic and Professional Psychology series and Duke
Activities series. Materials relevant to Banham's
professional development are scattered throughout all five
series.
The collection is also important for the
perspective it offers on the Duke University Psychology
Department and the Woman's College during the 1940s to the
1960s. Information related to both as well as her role in
the Admissions and scholarships Committees among other
faculty committees (see the folder list located in the
description of Duke Activities series), the Duke Preschool,
the Duke Film Society, and the Duke Institute for Learning
in Retirement can be found primarily in the Duke Activities
series. Material regarding the development and teaching of
an infant and child psychology curriculum and a series of
correspondence with graduate students are also of special
interest and can be found in the Duke Activities series.
Other materials relating to her contributions to the Duke
Community are located in the Academic and Professional
Psychology series, the Correspondence series, and the
Personal Files series.
Banham's contribution to the city of Durham is
reflected in the Agency and Club Participation series with
the most in depth materials relating to her role in
establishing the French Club, the Photographic Arts
Society, the Altrusa Club, and the Committee for Successful
Aging (which became the Golden Age Society and finally, the
Coordinating Council for Senior Citizens), and, to a lesser
degree, in the Academic and Professional Psychology series
specifically in her role as one of the founding
psychologists of the Durham Child Guidance Clinic. Banham
co-founded the North Carolina Psychological Association in
addition to being an active member and officer of other
regional, national, and international organizations such as
the League of Women Voters, the American Association of
University Women, and the International Council of Women
Psychologists.
Banham's life was defined by her professional and
academic commitments and so her closest relationships were
with her colleagues and the many individuals to whom she
gave her time and the benefit of her professional skills.
The Correspondence and personal series best reflect her
tireless efforts on behalf of the people with whom she come
into contact. Her papers are particularly useful as they
document the period of the 1920s through the 1960s in
England, Canada, and especially the United States from the
perspective of a highly educated, professional woman.
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Subject Headings
These and related materials may be accessed under
the following subject headings in the Duke University
Libraries online catalog.
-
Banham, Katharine
M., b. 1897.
-
Duke University.
Center for the Study of Aging and Human
Development.
-
Duke University.
Department of Psychological and Brain
Sciences.
-
Duke University.
Department of Experimental Psychology.
-
Duke University--Faculty.
-
Duke University.
Psychology Dept.
-
Duke University.
Woman's College--History.
-
North Carolina
Psychological Association.
-
Cerebral palsied
children.
-
Child guidance
clinics--North Carolina--Durham.
-
Child psychology--Study and teaching.
-
Children with
disabilities.
-
Emotions--Child.
-
Emotions in
children.
-
Emotions--Social
aspects.
-
Geriatrics--Study
and teaching.
-
Gerontology--Study and teaching.
-
Psychology--Experiments.
-
Oral
histories.
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Preliminary Description of the
Collection
Accessions: 77-214, A92-97,
A95-84
Box 1-8
Academic and Professional
Psychology,
1916-1986
(bulk 1946-1981).
[9.6 linear
ft.]
(Also includes one map cabinet
drawer)
The whole of the Academic and Professional
Psychology series is arranged chronologically and then
subdivided into geographic regions. These subdivisions,
England, Canada, Iowa, New Jersey, and North Carolina,
represent the locations in which Banham was working when
the contents of the folders were created.
Comprised of Banham's collection of 3x5
cards of bibliographic citations from 1948-1962; talks and
addresses; writings including student papers and master's
theses, essays, reviews, translations of various articles
in French as well as books by Alfred Binet and Remy
Chauvin, and research articles; research notes and
materials relating to the development of psychological
tests including School Readiness Inventory, Social
Competence Inventory for Adults, Maturity Level for School
Entrance and Reading Readiness, Quick Screening Scale of
Mental Development, Ring and Peg Tests of Mental
Development, Social Competence Inventory for Older Persons,
human and animal empathy tests, visual irradiation tests,
and various parapsychological tests; administrative
materials related to research and testing; materials
documenting professional positions at the McGill University
Nursery School in Canada, the Leicester School
Psychological Service in England, Division of Psychological
Services in Iowa, the New Jersey State Board of Children's
Guardians, the Durham Child Guidance Center, the North
Carolina Cerebral Palsy Hospital, the North Carolina State
Board of Public Welfare, the Duke University Nursery
School, Lenox Baker Hospital (formerly the N.C. Cerebral
Palsy Hospital), and numerous consultancy positions for
agencies and individuals throughout North Carolina;
professional and academic interests files; news and
magazine clippings; and curricula vitae from 1928-1983.
The series documents Banham's propensity to
work on several projects and in more than one position at
any given time throughout her career. While she was
developing new psychological tests, writing essays and
articles for various audiences, teaching and advising
undergraduate and graduate students, and doing secretarial
tasks in the psychology department, Banham worked as a
consultant doing psychological evaluation for individuals
and agencies while helping to establish the Duke Nursery
School. The series also documents Banham's extensive travel
through England, Canada, and the United States in her many
academic and professional capacities. Finally, the series
provides a picture of Banham's research and professional
methodologies, the variety of her intellectual interests,
and the depth and breadth of her commitment and service to
her profession and the individuals with whom she came into
contact throughout her career.
England,
1916-1921
Canada,
1921-1936
England,
1936-1942
Iowa,
1943-1945
New Jersey,
1945-1946
North Carolina,
1946-1986
Box 9-12
Duke Activities,
1946-1986
(bulk 1946-67).
[4.8 linear
ft.]
The Duke Activities series is arranged
alphabetically by activity and divided into eight different
activities: Admissions Committee, Department of Psychology,
Duke Institute for Learning in Retirement, Duke Preschool,
Faculty Committees and Clubs, Film Society, Library
Committee, and Scholarship Committees.
Admissions Committee
The Admissions Committee subseries spans
the years 1958-1961 and contains materials relating to
admission requirements, admission statistics,
correspondence with registrar staff, and students
considered for admission to Duke University Woman's
College.
Department of Psychology
The Department of Psychology subseries is
further divided into three categories: history and
development, course materials, and correspondence with
graduate students. The history and development section
spans the years 1946-1986 contains materials documenting
Banham's role in starting the clinical psychology program;
department of psychology colloquia announcements,
memoranda, notices, a description of the history of the
department; inventories from psychological test library
maintained by Banham. Also included is a record of graduate
student research during the 1940s, 50s, and 60s along with
copies of qualifying exams taken by Ph.D. students during
this same period. The course materials section spans the
years of Banham's professorship at Duke and contains
bibliographies of psychological texts, course syllabi and
packets, and lecture notes for classes in abnormal, social,
behavioral, and clinical psychology and particularly for
the child psychology curriculum. Course materials from
Banham's two summer teaching positions at the University of
British Columbia are included here. The third section
contains correspondence with nine graduate students. One of
these individuals maintained a correspondence with Banham
for over thirty years (1949-1985). The materials in this
section are of particular interest as the practice of
faculty-student correspondence was uncommon during this
period.
Duke Institute for Learning in
Retirement
The Duke Institute for Learning in
Retirement subseries spans the years 1977-1986 and contains
extensive administrative records of the Institute including
correspondence, notices, meetings minutes, workshop and
course materials (both given and taken by Banham), and a
draft of an autobiography written by Banham during a
writing workshop.
Duke Preschool
The Duke Preschool subseries spans the
years 1936-1967 and contains the first plan for what was
then (1936) being called the Institute for Child Study. The
plan includes a mission statement, budget, and the
curricula vitae of the persons who would run the program.
The next part of the series is a similar plan with
blueprints of the Child Study Laboratory (1946-1949), the
second permutation of the preschool. The remainder of the
series consists of materials documenting the day-today
events of the preschool including administrative records as
well as copies of the "Duke Kindergarten Newspaper." (See
Series 5 for photographic documentation of the school.)
Faculty Committees and Clubs
The faculty committees and clubs subseries
spans the years 1948 to 1986 and documents Banham's service
to a variety of faculty committees and clubs (see folder
list at the end of this description). Of particular
interest are the Academic council (1983-1985), the Center
for Study of the Aging (1982-1985), the Committee on
Retirement Housing for Duke Faculty and Staff (1966-1971),
the Duke Council on Women's Studies (1985-1986), and the
Experimental Dormitory Committee (1961-1964).
Film Society
The Film Society subseries spans the years
1949 to 1965. These records represent the entire lifetime
of the Society whose aim it was to promote the showing of
experimental, foreign, or documentary films. Materials
include the original mission statement; administrative
records; an extensive run of correspondence between Banham
and other members, University administration, and film
distributors: news clippings; and documentation of the
Society's dissolution and support for the student-run
group, Quadrangle Pictures.
Library Committee
The Library Committee subseries spans the
years between 1935 and 1985 and includes correspondence,
memoranda, and acquisition lists. The papers broadly
reflect Banham's service within the psychology department
as she represented the department to the university
libraries as well as concerned herself with the
departmental library. Particular areas of interest include
Banham's role on the Woman's College Library Committee,
acquisitions in the discipline of psychology between the
years 1935 and 1985, and the library within the Psychology
Department. The subseries provides an example of faculty
involvement in library matters and collection
development.
Scholarship Committees
The Scholarship Committees subseries spans
the years 1945-1986 and reflect Banham's strong interest in
this element of university life. Materials in this group
include administrative records, correspondence, and news
clippings regarding scholarships and prizes in several
different disciplines including two, the Alice C. Hundley
Piano Scholarship and the Anne McDougall Award for Women
that Banham herself established.
Box 12-13
Oversize
1
Agency and Club Participation,
1924-1986
(bulk 1945-1981).
[2.7 linear ft.]
The Agency and Club Participation series is
arranged alphabetically by the names of the agencies and
clubs.
Though the bulk of the materials relate to
Banham's work for the Altrusa Club (1934-1985), an
all-women philanthropic organization, the series documents
more than twenty organizations in which Banham played
various roles from member to officer to founder. The
materials included in this series consist of
correspondence, notices, reports, minutes, membership
records, agency histories, constitutions, by-laws, mission
statements, and news clippings. The records of these
agencies and clubs are of particular interest not only for
Banham's contribution, but also for the role they played in
the history of the city of Durham and the State of North
Carolina: the American Association of University Women,
Durham Branch (1948-1976); the Coordinating Council For
Senior Citizens (1967-1985); the French Club (1956-1965 and
1969-1976); the Golden Age Club (1949-1968); the League of
Women Voters of Durham (1980-1986); the North Carolina
Psychological Association (1948-1986); and, the
Photographic Arts Society (1964-1984).
Box 14-16
Correspondence,
1920-1995
(bulk 1940-1986).
[3.6 linear
ft.]
The correspondence series is arranged
chronologically and divided into two subseries:
professional correspondence and personal
correspondence.
Professional Correspondence,
1920-1982
The professional subseries, which spans
the years 1920-1982, is largely composed of correspondence
related to Banham's various academic and professional
positions, consultations with individuals, requests by
agencies and individuals for her psychological tests,
relationships with colleagues at other universities, and
letters of reference and recommendation.
Personal Correspondence,
1940-1995
The personal subseries, which spans the
years 1940-1995, primarily contains correspondence between
Banham and her family in England with the bulk of it
between herself and her sister or mother. The subjects of
these letters include announcements of births, deaths, and
other family events, details of Banham's many trips and
those of various family members, and general correspondence
and thank you notes from her nephews. The rest of the
series consists of correspondence between Banham and the
many friends she made throughout her life and career in
England, Canada, and the US. and reflect the close
connection between her personal and professional life.
Box 17-18
Oversize
2
Personal Files,
1910-1986.
[4.0 linear ft.]
The Personal Files are a series of subject
files arranged alphabetically by subject matter.
Subjects include biographical and
autobiographical information; certificates and awards;
Banham's collection of materials pertaining to British
culture; her favorite camera; legal documents regarding her
change of citizenship; materials relating to her courtship
with J. W. Bridges; diaries from the 1940s to the 1980s;
genealogical information about the Banham family; an oral
history interview and transcript done with Banham in 1980;
journals written by Banham as a part of a continuing
education course; newsclippings; materials relating to
parties planned by Banham; photographs of family, friends,
and colleagues; poetry and other personal writings;
recipes; taped recordings by her sister; files related to
Banham's religious life and research into retirement
accommodation; travel files including two file relating to
the excavation she participated in at Winchester, England;
and materials she saved from the second world war. The
materials in this series are relevant for the perspective
they give into the nature of Banham's life when she was not
working and her lifestyle during her retirement.