Collection ID: 4078516 4078516

Collection context

Summary

Creator:
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration
Extent:
103 Reels and 103 microfilm reels
Language:
English .
Preferred citation:

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration Records, Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Background

Scope and Content:

The reports and correspondence relating to UNRRA were arranged according to the nine administrative divisions of that organization that generated the documents: Bureau of Administration (26 reels); Office of the Diplomatic Adviser (4 reels); Office of the Director General (20 reels); Office of the Economic Adviser (4 reels); Office of Far Eastern Affairs (9 reels); Office of the General Counsel (19 reels); Office of the Historian (16 reels); Office of Public Information (1 reel); and Secretariat Executive Office (3 reels). Within each division, subsidiary bodies are typically separated into subject and country files.

The UNRRA papers are of primary importance to the study of the early years of the United Nations, United States foreign policy, and to the history of wartime and postwar relief and refugee initiatives in the 1940s. These reels are a secondary resource for the study of conditions in particular regions of the world (Europe, North Africa, Middle East, Soviet Union, China, Southeast Asia) as well as the expansion of bureaucratic structures (state and non-governmental, military and non-military) in the twentieth century.

Correspondence, memoranda, documents, minutes, committee reports.

Selected Glossary of Acronyms

AJDC -- American Joint Distribution Committee

APWR -- American Polish War Relief

AFHQ -- Allied Force Headquarters

AML -- Allied Military Lira

AMOMO -- Agricultural Machinery Operations and Management Office (China)

ASPO -- Administration Surplus Property Office

BOTRA -- Board of Trustees for Rehabilitation Affairs (China)

CARE -- Cooperation for American Remittance to Europe

CNRRA -- Chinese National Relief and Rehabilitation Administration

CTP -- China Tractor Program

DP -- Displaced Person

ECITO -- European Central Inland Transport Organization

ERO -- European Regional Office

EUCOM -- European Command

FEA -- Foreign Economic Administration

HAO -- Home Accounting Office

HIAS -- Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society

IEFC -- International Emergency Food Committee

IGCR -- Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees

IRO -- International Refugee Organization

JAFP -- Jewish Agency for Palestine

JCRA -- Jewish Committee for Relief Abroad

MERRA -- Middle East Relief and Rehabilitation Administration

NARC -- North African Refugee Center

NCWC -- National Catholic Welfare Conference

OFLC -- Office of Foreign Liquidation Commission

OFRRO -- Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations

SACMED -- Supreme Allied Command Mediterranean Theater

SHAEF -- Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force

SLAO -- Supplies to Liberated and Conquered Areas, Official Committee

SWPAO -- South West Pacific Areas Office

USFET -- U.S. Forces, European Theater

USPHS -- United States Public Health Service

WHO -- World Health Organization

Biographical / Historical:

The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) was created at a 44-nation conference at the White House on November 9, 1943 to confront the massive task of global reconstruction during and after World War II. Initially created as an arm of the United Nations, the name for the allied coalition fighting the Axis powers, it would eventually be subsumed under the heading of the international organization created in 1945 of the same name.

UNNRA was headed until 1946 by Herbert H. Lehman, a former governor of the state of New York and head of the U. S. State Department's Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations (OFRRO). Subsequent directors would include Fiorello LaGuardia and Major General Lowell Ward. Subject to the authority of the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Forces (SHAEF) in Europe, UNRRAs activities were global and involved a vast array of activities. These encompassed immediate relief for populations affected by war as well as aid for the recovery of agriculture industry and social services. These activities were not limited just to countries that had been battlegrounds, as numerous countries received aid simply to deal with the widespread dislocation created by war. UNRRA was also active in the massive repatriations of millions of displaced persons that characterized the war years and immediate aftermath.

However, all of UNRRAs programs were not directly related to recovery from war. In many areas, particularly China, UNRRA programs were not only aimed a promoting recovery but economic, social, and political development over and above pre-war conditions. In this respect UNRRA became an example to many at the time for the efforts at modernization that were taking shape in the postwar world. Overall UNRRA was popular internationally. However within the United States, by far the largest donor to the program, there was increasing concern after the war that the country was carrying too great of a burden. Accordingly the United States allowed the mandate of UNRRA to expire on schedule in 1947. While this was a disappointment to many, aspects of UNRRAs programs were taken over by the new United Nations and its specialized agencies, particularly the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO), as well as the International Refugee Organization (IRO) which inherited the care of 643,000 displaced persons in 1948.

Acquisition information:
Microfilm copy of selected records at the United Nations Archives, ca. 1973
Processing information:

Correspondence, memoranda, documents, minutes, committee reports Surveyed Julie Miller 05/--/87.

Finding guide prepared by Joshua Lupkin, with assistance of Edward LaLonde and Patrick Lawlor in December 2002.

Folder list based on typescript compiled by the staff of the Herbert Lehman Suite and Papers in June 1984.

Arrangement:

This collection is arranged into 9 series.

Accruals:

Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.

Rules or conventions:
appm

Access

RESTRICTIONS:

Photocopies are not permitted. Microfilm reels do not circulate via Inter-Library Loan. Requests for copies should be made to the United Nations Archives.

This collection is located on-site.

TERMS OF ACCESS:

Permission to quote or publish must be obtained in writing from the Director of United Nations Archives.

PREFERRED CITATION:

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration Records, Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

LOCATION OF THIS COLLECTION:
6th Floor East Butler Library
535 West 114th St.
New York, NY 10027, United States
CONTACT:
(212) 854-5590
rbml@library.columbia.edu