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Daniel S. and Jane Balderston Dye papers

 Collection
Call Number: RG 22

Scope and Contents

These papers provide valuable documentation regarding West China. Substantive letters refer to the social and political scene in the Chengdu (Chengtu) area, as well as providing biographical information regarding the Dyes and a thorough account of their educational mission work at West China Union University. These papers complement in a useful way the official files of West China Union University found in YDSL Record Group No. 11, Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia. Daniel Dye was also a friend and colleague of Thomas Torrance, whose papers are available in YDSL Record Group No. 16.

The papers include unique documentation of patterns and designs used in West China latticework, woven belts, and pottery. Drawings of hundreds of different patterns recorded by Dye and his artistic assistants are available in the collection. Dye spent many years in analyzing the origins and symbolism of the patterns which he collected. He was unable to complete the scholarly work which he hoped to produce on this subject, but his explanations and theories are available for appraisal in myriad drafts.

The Dye Papers are also valuable for the thorough documentation they provide regarding the life of a successful woman missionary. Jane Balderston Dye, married but childless, found herself in ideal circumstances to be effective in a university teaching career, to travel broadly, to assist her husband in his scholarly pursuits, and to pursue her own avocation of the study of birds in West China.

The correspondence in Series I consists primarily of letters written by Dan and Jane Dye to their families in the United States. For many years they wrote long, descriptive letters to their "home folks" every week. Beginning shortly before their marriage in 1919, Dan and Jane alternated weeks writing to both families. The correspondence becomes less frequent and more condensed during the 1930s and 1940s. During the early part of 1927, Jane was evacuated to Shanghai due to political unrest in West China. The months of separation, before Dan joined her in Shanghai, provide the only correspondence between Jane and Dan (1927 Feb-Apr.)

Series II consists of published writings by Dan and Jane Dye, unpublished essays by Dan, and extensive notes and reflective drafts by Dan for his anticipated work Swastica Sinica: The Pattern of Patterns of the Far East. These notes and drafts were written primarily during the period from Dan's retirement in 1950 until his death in 1977. Eleanor Hough wrote in her biographical memoir about Dan: "We know that DSD found writing very difficult, hence the dozens and dozens of repetitions of the same material. The fact that he never seemed to arrive at a satisfactory and complete statement of any of the segments of his research was a combination of advancing years and his realization that his conclusions might be denounced by those he admired and respected." The categories used to organize the notes and drafts follow the arrangement made prior to their donation to the Divinity Library. The drawings of designs included in this Series represent hours of painstaking effort to accurately record the lattice and belt designs discovered by Dye during his travels throughout West China and Tibet. The drawings have been transferred from their original folders into acid-free folders, and any notations on the old folders have been transferred to the new. There does not seem to be any particular order to or classification of the designs.

Series III, Personal Items and Memorabilia, includes biographical documentation regarding the Dyes, and an interesting collection of photographs and slides. The photographs and slides provide valuable illustration of Western missionaries in West China and of the costumes, artwork, architecture, and landscapes of West China.

The Addendum represented by Series IV was received from the estate of J. Calvin Bright, a colleague of the Dyes in West China. It includes correspondence and writings of Daniel and Jane Balderston Dye that are very similar to the materials in Series I and II. It is not clear why these materials were in the possession of Bright.

Dates

  • 1905-1987

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The materials are open for research.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Nancy Balderston Conrad and Herbert E. Sloan, 1990. Addendum gift of estate of J. Calvin Bright, 1999.

Arrangement

  1. I. Correspondence, 1908-1987
  2. II. Writings and Notes, 1907-1977
  3. III. Personal Items and Memorabilia, 1905-1977, n.d.
  4. IV. Addendum

Extent

8 Linear Feet (19 boxes + 1 oversize portfolio)

Language of Materials

English

Catalog Record

A record for this collection is available in Orbis, the Yale University Library catalog

Persistent URL

https://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/divinity.022

Abstract

Substantive letters refer to the social and political scene in the Chengdu (Chengtu) area, as well as providing a thorough account of the educational mission work of the Dyes at West China Union University. The papers include unique documentation of patterns and designs used in West China latticework, woven belts, and pottery. Drawings of hundreds of patterns and notes regarding their origin and symbolism are included. Daniel Sheets Dye taught academic courses at West China Union University in Chengdu, Sichuan (Chengtu, Szechuan Province), from 1910 to 1949, serving under the American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society. As an avocation Dye recorded and analyzed window lattice and woven belt patterns, which often had swastika designs, throughout West China. Jane Balderston went to West China in 1915, serving under the Friends Foreign Mission Association of Great Britain and Ireland. After her marriage to Daniel Dye in 191, she taught mathematics and education courses at Woman's Normal School in Chengdu (Chengtu) and West China Union University Normal School.

Biographical / Historical

1884 February 7
Daniel Sheets Dye born in New Matamoras, Washington, Ohio.
1886 April 21
Jane Canby Balderston born in Colora, Cecil, Maryland.
1907
Daniel Dye graduated from Denison University, Phi Beta Kappa.
1908
Jane Dye graduated from Wellesley College.
1908
Daniel Dye went to Sichuan (Szechuan), West China to study Chinese in preparation for teaching science at West China Union University.
1908-1915
Jane Dye taught at secondary schools in Ohio and Pennsylvania.
1910-1949
Daniel Dye taught at West China Union University, serving under American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society. As an avocation, DSD recorded and analyzed window lattice and woven belt patterns, which often had swastika designs, throughout West China. DSD was a founder of the West China Border Research Society and of the West China Union University museum.
1915
Jane Dye went to West China under the auspices of the Friends Foreign Mission Association of Great Britain and Ireland; taught at Szechuan Boarding School in Tongchuan (Tungchwan).
1919 Jun 26
Daniel and Jane Dye married in Chengdu (Chengtu). Under the auspices of the American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society, Jane Dye taught mathematics and education at Woman's Normal School in Chengdu (Chengtu) and West China Union University Normal School. Jane Dye became an expert on birds of West China.
Study during furloughs in the United States led to an M.A. from Cornell University for Daniel Dye and an M.A. from Columbia University for Jane Dye.
1937
Two volume work by DSD entitled A Grammar of Chinese Lattice published by Harvard University Press.
1940
Daniel Dye received honorary doctorate from Denison University.
1949
Returned to Colora, Maryland following Communist takeover in China.
1950-1960
Served as co-directors of John Woolman Memorial in Mt. Holly, New Jersey prior to retirement in Colora. Jane Dye instrumental in organizing North East Maryland branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
1976 Nov 26
Jane Dye died in Colora, Maryland; buried in Colora Friends Meeting Cemetery.
1977 Sep 9
Daniel Dye died in Colora, Maryland; buried in Colora Friends Meeting Cemetery.

Processing Information

Place names were modernized in the description, with the name originally used in the collection material or in an older version of the finding aid in parenthesis: e.g. “Beijing (Peking)” or “Benin (Dahomey)”.

Title
Guide to the Daniel S. and Jane Balderston Dye Papers
Author
Compiled by Nathan H. Price and Martha Lund Smalley
Date
1992, 2000
Description rules
Finding Aid Prepared According To Local Divinity Library Descriptive Practices
Language of description note
Finding aid written in English.

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