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Elmer Holmes Bobst Collection

Call Number

MSS.067

Date

1862-1978, inclusive

Creator

Bobst, Elmer Holmes

Extent

40 Linear Feet

Extent

41 Sound_Disc--Lacquer
47 phonograph records: 33-1/3 (16), 78 (31)

Extent

2 U-matic

Extent

2 VHS

Extent

40 Reels
40 open reel films

Extent

10 Reels
10 open reel audiotapes

Extent

3 audiocassettes

Language of Materials

Materials primarily in English.

Abstract

Elmer Holmes Bobst was born in 1884 in Clear Springs, Maryland with aspirations to become a doctor, but instead, he taught himself pharmacology. Bobst became manager and treasurer of the Hoffman-LaRoche Chemical Works by 1920. In 1928, Hoffman-LaRoche became Roche-Nutley, and when Bobst retired from there in 1944, he was one of the nation's highest paid corporate executives. In 1945 he took charge of the ailing William Warner Company (later Warner-Lambert) and he remained board chairman. Bobst had close connections to President Eisenhower, but was also a close friend of President Nixon, helped guide his career and contributed generously to his campaigns. In 1968, Bobst became a White House advisor on health issues. Philanthropic pursuits were also of tremendous importance, particularly cancer research and education. The collection includes family documents from the American Civil War, Bobst's documents and artifacts of both a public and private nature.

Biographical Note

Elmer Holmes Bobst lived out the American dream. For this self-educated son of a Lutheran minister, intellect plus hard work did indeed produce great success.

Bobst's father served in the Union army in the Civil War and was a member of the 128th Pennsylvania Infantry. His regiment saw action at Antietam and Chancellorsville where he was captured and paroled. He re-enlisted into the 1st Pennsylvania Cavalry and served until captured and sent to Andersonville in 1864. Isaac Bobst's Civil War experiences are chronicled in Daniel Biles': 'A Soldier's Journey: An Account of Private Isaac Bobst, 128th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry and 1st Pennsylvania Cavalry, from Antietam to Andersonville. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas Publications, 1990 available to view in the Fales Library.

The third of Isaac and Alice (Holmes) Bobst's five children, Elmer (born in 1884) hoped to become a doctor. But he was able to complete just one year at Franklin and Marshall College (on a baseball scholarship) before family financial problems forced him to seek work.

Bobst took a job in a Philadelphia drug store. During his few off hours, he taught himself pharmacology, passing both Pennsylvania's assistant pharmacist and managing registered pharmacist examinations in 1905. Self-study also prepared him to pass the state's preliminary bar examination in 1907. But family responsibilities prevented him from continuing his legal education. The law's loss proved to be commerce's gain, for Bobst went on to help shape the modern pharmaceutical industry and to build two of the industry's greatest firms.

Starting as a salesman at the New York office of the Swiss company Hoffmann-LaRoche in 1911, Bobst became manager and treasurer of the Hoffman-LaRoche Chemical Works by 1920. In 1928, he moved operations to Nutley, New Jersey and restructured the U.S. branch as an independent subsidiary, Roche-Nutley. By 1940, Roche-Nutley was generating two-thirds of Hoffman-LaRoche's total profits, and Bobst, when he retired in 1944, was one of the nation's highest paid corporate executives.(1)

The parent company was not the only beneficiary of Roche-Nutley's success; so were employees of the U.S. subsidiary. As Bobst wrote in his autobiography, "I was so regularly underpaid and overworked . . . that . . . when I reached a position where I could do something about decent working conditions and generous employee benefits in the pharmaceutical industry, I did."(2)

Bobst's retirement lasted less than a year. In 1945 he took charge of the ailing William Warner Company. As president and chief executive officer, he turned the company around, later merged it with the Lambert Company, and made it one of the world's largest pharmaceutical manufacturers. He remained board chairman of Warner-Lambert.

Active in politics, Bobst was a close friend of Richard Nixon, helped guide his career, contributed generously to his campaigns, and was instrumental in his joining the New York law firm of Nixon, Mudge, Rose, and Alexander. After Nixon's election in 1968, Bobst became a White House advisor on health issues. But he makes clear in his autobiography his opposition to U.S. military action in Vietnam(3) and his disapproval of the Watergate cover-up.(4)

A man of strong principles, Bobst enjoyed a reputation for fairness and honesty. Columnist Jack Anderson described him as "a veritable saint among the robber barons of the drug industry," who "steered clear of price-fixing and other scandals that have characterized the industry." While with Hoffman-LaRoche, he forced the parent company to end its dealings in illicit drugs. As head of Warner-Lambert he turned down an opportunity to acquire the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, feeling that such an acquisition was inconsistent with his efforts to promote health.(5)

A dedicated philanthropist, he enjoyed great success selling war bonds during World War II. But his major and most sustained commitment was to the American Cancer Society. "As I look over all I have done in my life," Bobst said," there is nothing more rewarding than my Cancer Society experience. If I have performed a service to mankind, that is it."(6) In addition to generous support of the Cancer Society, Bobst also made substantial gifts to such educational institutions as Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, Franklin and Marshall College, the Elmer Holmes Bobst Institute of Clinical Research at Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital in Philadelphia, and Chungang University in Seoul, Korea.

A notable contribution to education was his $11.5 million gift to New York University for the Elmer Holmes Bobst Library and Study Center. NYU President James Hester wrote, in his forward to Bobst's autobiography, "Mr. Bobst has made a major contribution to a library because he knows the value of libraries in his own self-education."(7)

Among the many awards accorded Elmer Bobst were honorary degrees from Franklin and Marshall College, Hahnemann Medical College, Rider College, and the University of Pennsylvania. He received the Henry Busby Award from Columbia University's College of Pharmacy in 1961, the National Cancer Society Award in 1962, the Horatio Alger Award in 1965, and the Albert Gallatin Award of New York University in 1966.

Bobst's first wife, the former Ethel Rose, died in 1953. His only child, Elmer Walton Bobst, died in 1964, leaving two daughters and four grandchildren. In 1961, Elmer

Bobst married the former Mamdouha As-Sayyid, a social scientist serving on Lebanon's delegation to the United Nations.

Until his death in 1978, at the age of 93, Bobst remained active. His legacy is a rich one, and his work goes on, sustained today by the philanthropic efforts of his widow, Mamdouha Bobst.

Sources:

  1. (1.) Moritz, Charles. Current Biography Yearbook. New York: Wilson, 1973. p.49.
  2. (2.) Bobst, Elmer Holmes. Bobst: the Autobiography of a Pharmaceutical Pioneer.New York, 1973. p.149.
  3. (3.) Bobst, p.149.
  4. (4.) Moritz, p.50.
  5. (5.) Moritz, p.50.
  6. (6.) Moritz, p.50.
  7. (7.) Moritz, p.50.

Arrangement

Folders are generally arranged alphabetically in seven series:

I: Photograph Albums, Scrapbooks, and Ships' Logs

II: Loose Framed and Unframed Photographs and Prints

III: Awards, Plaques, Medals, Certificates and Honors

IV: Articles, Press Releases, Speeches and Correspondence

V: Film, Audio and Video Tape, Slides and Recordings

VI: Miscellaneous Items and Oversize

VII: Books and Periodicals Belonging to Elmer Holmes Bobst

Scope and Contents

The contents of this collection represent a portion of the material generated by, or related to, the public and private life of Elmer Holmes Bobst covering the time period between 1863 and 1978. Material covering the period from 1978 to the present time, representing his legacy to New York University and to the world, enriches the collection.

The records have been divided into seven series according to type of artifact or document. Arrangement within series is alphabetical or chronological, except when the physical shape of an item rendered this impractical. Included in the collection are: photograph albums, scrapbooks, loose photographs and prints, awards, medals, plaques, certificates, honors, press releases, newspaper and magazine articles, speeches, correspondence, 16 and 8 millimeter film, audio and video tape, slides, recordings, and memorabilia.

The items in the collection are housed in acid-free boxes of varying size depending on the article in question. A few oversize items are shelved out of series sequence and are so indicated in the series list.

Items of special interest include: The writings of Elmer Holmes Bobst [Series IV, Box 2] Correspondence between Elmer Holmes Bobst and presidents Nixon and Eisenhower [Series IV, Box 8] A number of letters written by Isaac Bobst, the father of Elmer Holmes Bobst during the American Civil War. There is also a spoon that the elder Bobst used while at Andersonville [Series IV, Box 9]. Voice recordings of Elmer Holmes Bobst [Series V, Box 6] include an interview conducted by noted journalist Edward R. Murrow. Several works on pharmaceutical and medical theory from the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth century are included in Series VII.

Conditions Governing Access

Repository permission is required for access. Please contact Fales Library and Special Collections, 212-998-2596, fales.library@nyu.edu.

Conditions Governing Use

This collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).

Preferred Citation

Identification of item, date; Elmer Holmes Bobst Collection; MSS 067; box number; folder number or item identifier; Repository Name, New York University.

Location of Materials

Materials are stored offsite and advance notice is required for use. Please request materials at least two business days prior to your research visit to coordinate access.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

The Elmer Holmes Bobst Collection, donated to New York University by Mrs. Mamdouha Bobst, represents a portion of the records and personal effects of her late husband, Elmer Holmes Bobst. This material was transferred to the New York University Archives by Mrs. Bobst from her residence in New York in 1988 in order to establish a permanent home for the collection in the library which bears the Bobst name. Additional material given by Mrs. Bobst after 1989 has been incorporated with the original gift. The accession number associated with this gift is 1998.067.

Audiovisual Access Policies and Procedures

Access to audiovisual materials in this collection is available through digitized access copies. Researchers may view an item's original container, but the media themselves are not available for playback because of preservation concerns. Materials that have already been digitized are noted in the collection's finding aid and can be requested in our reading room. To request an access copy, or if you are unsure if an item has been digitized, please contact special.collections@nyu.edu with the collection name, collection number, and a description of the item(s) requested. A staff member will respond to you with further information.

Separated Materials

The framed oil painting of people working in Renaissance apothecary (MSS.067.cuid20338); and framed oil painting of man working at fire (MSS.067.cuid20339); were removed from the collection and transferred to the Grey Art Gallery and Study Center in February 2019.

Collection processed by

Nancy Cricco

About this Guide

This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 2024-02-06 14:24:34 -0500.
Using Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language: Finding aid written in English

Processing Information

Decisions regarding arrangement, description, and physical interventions for this collection prior to July 2019 have not yet been recorded. In July 2019 materials were rehoused by Preservation and sent to offsite storage.

In March 2023, 6 phonodiscs and 12 audiocassettes were deaccessioned because they were found to be duplicate recordings.

Revisions to this Guide

July 2018: Updated by Jacqueline Rider to reflect incorporation of additional non-print and oversize materials.
July 2019: Updated by Jennifer E. Neal to incorporate materials being sent to offsite storage in 2019 and for compliance with DACS and ACM Required Elements for Archival Description
March 2021: Updated by Rachel Mahre to incorporate two boxes of phonograph records
March 2023: Updated by Rachel Mahre to state that audio materials have been digitized and are accessible to patrons, and to record a deaccession
April 2023: Updated by Maddie DeLaere to describe digitized films and state that they are accessible to patrons
June 2023: Updated by Olivija Liepa to state that audio materials have been digitized and are accessible to patrons
August 2023: Updated by Olivija Liepa to state that films have been digitized and are accessible to patrons
January 2024: Updated by Anna Björnsson McCormick to reflect the rehousing of materials

Repository

Fales Library and Special Collections
Fales Library and Special Collections
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
2nd Floor
New York, NY 10012