TY - GEN AU - Simpson,Smith TI - Smith Simpson papers, KW - Bruère, Robert W. KW - Colegrove, Kenneth W. KW - Hedges, M. H. KW - Hohman, Elmo Paul, KW - Lemmers, Marcel J. KW - Moran, Hugh Anderson, KW - Moran, Irene H. KW - Moran, Jean KW - Shotwell, James T., KW - Simpson, Edith Smith KW - Simpson, Hendree P. KW - Tayler, William L. KW - Thorne, Florence Calvert KW - Underwood, Oscar W. KW - Waelbroeck, Pierre, KW - Watt, Robert J. KW - Wilson, Richard KW - Winant, John C. KW - Hendree family. KW - Simpson family. KW - Smith family. KW - Tinsley family. KW - Georgetown University KW - Institute for the Study of Diplomacy KW - International Labour Organisation KW - Wabash (Frigate) KW - Communism KW - Europe KW - Diplomacy KW - Diplomatic and consular service KW - Diplomatic and consular service, American KW - India KW - Mozambique KW - Industrial relations KW - United States KW - International labor activities KW - Labor attachés KW - Belgium KW - Greece KW - Mexico KW - Labor unions KW - Labor unions and mass media KW - Peace movements KW - Fort Fisher (N.C. : Fort) KW - Capture, 1865 KW - Foreign relations KW - History KW - Civil War, 1861-1865 KW - Campaigns KW - Diplomats KW - itoamc N1 - Open to research; Restrictions may apply to unprocessed material N2 - Correspondence, oral history interview, subject files, family papers, scrapbooks, printed matter, photographs, and other papers relating to Simpson's career as a diplomat and industrial relations specialist. Documents his work as a labor and industrial relations expert prior to World War II and to his postwar service as labor attaché in Belgium (1945-1948), Greece (1947-1949), and Mexico (1949-1953); deputy consul general in India (1952-1954); and consul general in Mozambique (1954-1957). Subjects include the American peace movement during the post-World War I period; the International Labour Organisation; communist penetration of trade unions in western and southern European countries following World War II; portrayal of labor in the American popular, official, industrial, and trade union press (1945-1954); conduct and history of diplomacy; recruitment and training of Foreign Service officers; and the Georgetown University Institute for the Study of Diplomacy. Family papers concern the genealogy of the Hendree, Simpson, Smith, and Tinsley families. Includes a letter (1865 January 16) describing the participation of the USS Wabash (Frigate) in the capture of Fort Fisher in North Carolina during the Civil War; Family correspondents include Simpson's parents, Edith Smith Simpson and Hendree P. Simpson. Other correspondents include Robert W. Bruère, Kenneth W. Colegrove, M.H. Hedges, Elmo Paul Hohman, Marcel J. Lemmers, Hugh Anderson Moran, Irene H. Moran, Jean Moran, James Thomson Shotwell, William L. Tayler, Florence Calvert Thorne, Oscar W. Underwood, Pierre Waelbroeck, Robert J. Watt, Richard Wilson, and John C. Winant UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010247 UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010247.3 ER -