Collection #

SC 1509

 

 

Kurt Vonnegut
correspondence, 1945–1980

Collection Information

Biographical Sketch

Scope and Content Note

Contents

Cataloging Information

 

 

 

Processed by

Paul Brockman
March 2007

Manuscript and Visual Collections Department
William Henry Smith Memorial Library
Indiana Historical Society
450 West Ohio Street
Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269

www.indianahistory.org

 

COLLECTION INFORMATION

VOLUME OF
COLLECTION:

1 folder  (6 letters)

COLLECTION
DATES:

1945–1980

PROVENANCE:

Kurt Vonnegut, Sr. via Ralph Henderson, September 1954; Offices of the Indiana Historical Society, September 1979

RESTRICTIONS:

None

COPYRIGHT:

 

REPRODUCTION
RIGHTS:

Permission to reproduce or publish material in this collection must be obtained from the Indiana Historical Society.

ALTERNATE
FORMATS:

 

RELATED
HOLDINGS:

 

ACCESSION
NUMBERS:

1954.0920; 1979.0917

NOTES:

 

BIOGRAPHiCAL SKETCH

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922) was born in Indianapolis and is the son and grandson of Indianapolis architects.  He attended Shortridge High School where he gained notoriety for his work on the school’s newspaper, The Echo.  Vonnegut attended Cornell University but left to enlist in the Army during World War II and served in the 106th Infantry Division.  He was taken prisoner by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge on 19 December 1944 and worked as a laborer in Dresden during the firebombing of the city which claimed the lives of 135,000 civilians (February1945).  His experiences became the basis of his novel, Slaughterhouse-Five (1969).

After the war he attended the University of Chicago majoring in anthropology before obtaining a job in the public relations department at General Electric in Schenectady, New York, in the late 1940s.  Vonnegut left GE in 1950 to write full time and sold his first short story to Collier’s Magazine the same year.  Among his books are Player Piano; The Sirens of the Titans: Cat’s Cradle; God Bless You Mr. Roswater; Welcome to the Monkey House; Breakfast of Champions; Palm Sunday; Timequake; Hocus Pocus; Galapagos; Hocus Pocus: Slapstick; and A Man Without a Country.

 

Sources:

Encyclopedia of Indianapolis, p. 1073

Notables from Indiana Historical Society web site (www.indianahistory.org) accessed 1 March 2007.

 

 

SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

The collection consists of six letters written by or to Kurt Vonnegut, 1945–1980.  The main item is a copy of letter written by Vonnegut to his father shortly after his release from a prisoner of war camp giving a detailed account of his capture and imprisonment, including a description of the results of the bombing of Dresden, 29 May 1945.  The remaining five letters from 1970–80, deal with Vonnegut family genealogy and correspondence with the Indiana Historical Society.

CONTENTS

CONTENTS

CONTAINER

Correspondence, 1945–80

Folder 1

CATALOGING INFORMATION

For additional information on this collection, including a list of subject headings that may lead you to related materials:

1.      Go to the Indiana Historical Society's online catalog:  http://opac.indianahistory.org/

2.      Click on the "Basic Search" icon.

3.      Select  "Call Number" from the "Search In:" box.

4.      Search for the collection by its basic call number (in this case, SC 1509).

5.      When you find the collection, go to the "Full Record" screen for a list of headings that can be searched for related materials.