Christopher Henze Collection

Sean Stanley
Special Collections, Honnold/Mudd Library
800 North Dartmouth Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711
Phone: (909) 607-3977
Email: specialcollections@claremont.edu
URL: http://library.claremont.edu/scl
© 2022
The Claremont Colleges Library. All rights reserved.


Descriptive Summary

Title: Christopher Henze Collection
Dates: 1944-2020
Collection number: H.Mss.1132
Extent: 0.2 Linear Feet (1 slim document box)
Repository: Claremont Colleges. Library. Special Collections, The Claremont Colleges Library, Claremont, CA 91711.
Abstract: The collection includes personal letters, memoirs, and documents related to Christopher Henze and his uncle Carlo Henze. Christopher Henze served as a member of the Peace Corps in Côte d'Ivoire, before embarking on a lengthy career in the United States Foreign Service. An Austrian immigrant, Carlo Henze served in the U.S. Army during World War II as a member of the top-secret Alsos Mission in Europe. Christopher Henze's personal memoirs and letters and Carlo Henze's letters are available in both print and digital formats.
Physical Location: Please consult repository.
Language of Material: Languages represented in the collection: English.

Administrative Information

Access

Collection open for research.

Publication Rights

All requests for permission to reproduce or to publish must be submitted in writing to Special Collections.

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], Christopher Henze Collection (H.Mss.1132). Special Collections, The Claremont Colleges Library, The Claremont Colleges Services, Claremont, California.

Provenance/Source of Acquisition

Gift of Christopher Henze, 2020, 2022.

Accruals

No additions to the collection are anticipated.

Processing Information

Materials were placed in acid-free folders and housed in an archival document box.

Biography / Administrative History

Christopher Henze was born in Pasadena on January 3, 1942. At age 13, he was enrolled at the Thacher School, a boarding school in Ojai, California, where he completed his secondary school education. Henze would go on to attend Pomona College, graduating in 1963 as an anthropology major, with minors in French and German. In 1964, he joined the Peace Corps at age 22 and served for two years as an English and physical education instructor in Danané, Côte d'Ivoire. Returning from his Peace Corps service in 1966, Henze taught English for one year at the Polytechnic School in Pasadena before being accepted into a position with the United States Foreign Service. Embarking on life long career as a foreign service officer, Henze served in various locales and roles: South Africa (1968-69); Tanzania (1969-70); Washington D.C. (1970-74, as Assistant Science Advisor); Slovenia (1974-76); the Johns Hopkins University Center in Bologna, Italy (1976-77, for graduate work in economics, political science, and European Community Affairs); Paris (1977-81, as Press Attaché); Washington D.C. (1981-84, as Policy Officer for Europe); Geneva, Switzerland (1984-88, as Counselor for Public Affairs at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations and Other International Organizations); Paris (1988-92, as Cultural Attaché). After retiring from the Foreign Service, Henze held two subsequent jobs: working for a year as a consultant for the International Herald Tribune before spending several years as the acting head of the Press and Publications Division of the International Energy Agency. Henze is retired and lives in Paris with his wife Shana.
Carlo Henze was born in 1907 in Naples, Italy, the son of biochemist Martin Henze. Carlo and his family moved to Innsbruck, Austria where his father had become a professor of biochemistry at the University of Innsbruck. Carlo, himself, would go on to earn a medical degree from the University of Innsbruck, becoming an assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacology, before joining Sandoz Pharmaceuticals in Basel, Switzerland. With the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in March 1938 and the threat of being drafted into the German Army as an involuntary German citizen, Carlo was able to secure a company transfer to the United States, where he became medical director of Sandoz in New York City. Carlo enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1941 and was promoted to captain in the Medical Intelligence Division of the Office of the Surgeon General of the Army due to his medical background and being a native German speaker. In 1944, Henze was transferred to the European Theater and served on assignment as a member of the top-secret Alsos Mission, whose main objective was to determine German progress in developing an atomic bomb and biological and chemical weapons. Following the war, Carlo arranged for his parents to move to the United States, where they settled in Pasadena, California. Martin Henze was welcomed as a distinguished scientist at the California Institute of Technology. Carlo had returned to work at Sandoz in New York, becoming vice president in charge of the medical and research departments, and later, president of the Sandoz Foundation. Carlo Henze died in 2003.

Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Christopher Henze Collection compiles personal letters, memoirs, and documents related to Christopher Henze and his uncle Carlo Henze. Included in the collection are transcribed excerpts of Christopher Henze's letters home to his parents documenting his time working in Danané, Côte d'Ivoire as a member of the Peace Corps, as well as his personal memoir tracing his life and career as an officer in the United States Foreign Service.
Also included in the collection are transcribed letters written by Carlo Henze to his wife Harriet during World War II. Carlo Henze served as a captain in the Medical Intelligence Division of the Office of the Surgeon General of the U.S. Army and was a member of the top-secret Alsos Mission during the war. His letters provide an eyewitness account of the frontline as Allied forces moved towards Berlin and document his personal war experience. An article for the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine sharing his war recollections and a declassified report for Combined Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee co-authored by Carlo during the Alsos Mission are also included.
Christopher Henze's personal memoirs and letters and Carlo Henze's letters are available in both print and digital formats.

Organization and Arrangement

The collection is arranged alphabetically by folder title.

Indexing Terms

The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library’s online public access catalog.

Subject Terms

Alumni and alumnae
Côte d'Ivoire
Foreign service
Peace Corps (U.S.)
Pomona College (Claremont, Calif.)
United States. Army
United States. Diplomatic Service
United States. War Department. Alsos Mission
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945--Europe

Genre and Form of Materials

Articles
Biography
Correspondence
Letters
Reports


Box 1, Folder 1

Christopher Henze Peace Corps letters undated

Chris Henze Peace Corps letters

Note

Transcribed excerpts of letters home from Christopher Henze while serving in the Peace Corps. Orignal letters are housed at the J. F. Kennedy Library in Boston.
Box 1, Folder 2

"Medical Targets in Strasbourg Area" 1944

Note

Declassified report of the Combined Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee. Includes report co-authored by Carl (Carlo) Henze, Capt., M.C. Army Alsos.
Box 1, Folder 3

"Recollections of a Medical Intelligence Officer in World War II" 1973 November

Note

Written by Carlo Henze, M.D. The article was featured in the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine (Vol. 49, No. 11, November 1973).
Box 1, Folder 4

Un Chemin Ensemble 2020 November 29

Un Chemin Ensemble

Note

Memoir by Christopher Henze, retired Senior Foreign Service Officer.
Box 1, Folder 5

War letters from Carlo Henze 1944 December - 1945 June

War letters from Carlo Henze

Note

Wartime letters from Carlo Henze to his wife Harriet from December 1944 to June 1945. The letters includes his eyewitness accounts of the frontline as Allied forces moved towards Berlin and descriptions of U.S. officers' quarters in liberated Paris. The handwritten letters were edited and transcribed by Christopher Henze, with minor omissions.