Conditions Governing Access
Conditions Governing Use
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Provenance
Related Materials
Biographical Note
Scope and Content
Arrangement
Title: Eric Hoffer Papers
Date (inclusive): 1946-2005
Identifier/Call Number: BASC 6
Creator:
Hoffer, Eric
Physical Description:
4 pamphlet boxes, 1 carton, 1 flat box, 1 oversize folder
(3.5 cubic feet)
Contributing Institution:
Book Arts & Special Collections
100 Larkin Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
(415) 557-4567
info@sfpl.org
Abstract: The collection contains the notebooks, clippings, AV recordings, and photographs of Eric Hoffer, who wrote a best-seller while
working on the docks of San Francisco and became known as America's "longshoreman philosopher."
Physical Location: Collection is stored onsite.
Language of Materials: Collection materials are in
English.
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research and is available for use during Book Arts & Special Collections hours.
Conditions Governing Use
Original notebooks may be photographed but not photocopied.
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to the San Francisco Public Library. All requests for permission to publish or quote from
materials must be submitted in writing to Book Arts & Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of
the San Francisco Public Library as the owner of the physical items.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item/Title of folder], Eric Hoffer Papers (BASC 6), Book Arts & Special Collections, San Francisco Public
Library.
Provenance
The 23 original notebooks were donated by Eric Hoffer to the San Francisco Public Library in August 1964, prior to the opening
of the Rare Books & Special Collections Department on October 1, 1964. Other recordings and publications have been added to
the collection as they were produced.
Related Materials
Researchers are encouraged to see also the Eric Hoffer papers at the Hoover Institution Archives and the George Knight photograph
collection at the Bancroft Library.
Biographical Note
Eric Hoffer was born either in 1898 or 1902 in the Bronx, New York City. What is known of his early life is based on his own
recollections. Hoffer's parents came to the U.S. from Alsace-Lorraine and Hoffer himself spoke with a German accent throughout
his life. He learned to read English and German by the time he was five. Hoffer became blind shortly after his mother's death
when he was 7, but regained his sight at age 15, leading him to become a voracious reader lest he lose his eyesight again.
He never received any formal education. After his father died in 1920, he left for Los Angeles. For the next two decades,
he worked a series of odd jobs on LA's Skid Row, then as a migratory farm worker and gold miner, travelling up and down the
state of California. He accumulated library cards from various towns along the way and carried books with him wherever he
went. Drawing from his readings, experiences, and observations, he began to write in the late 1930's. In 1943, he gained steady
employment as a longshoreman on the San Francisco waterfront. The job, which allowed him more time and income, enabled him
to focus heavily on his writing. After many trips to the San Francisco Public Library, Hoffer completed his first book
The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements,
which was published in 1951. The book sold 500,000 copies and brought Hoffer celebrity. After the success of his first book
he published a book of aphorisms,
The Passionate State of Mind
in 1955, and then another study of the psychology of mass society,
The Ordeal of Change,
in 1963. He went on to write seven more books as well as a syndicated column in the
San Francisco Examiner.
He was interviewed on national television and for a variety of publications on numerous occasions. In February 1983, he was
awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Ronald Reagan for his life work. He passed away shortly after in May in San Francisco.
Scope and Content
The collection contains 23 of Eric Hoffer's original notebooks and daybooks, one of which is a complete manuscript for
The Passionate State of Mind.
During the waterfront strike of 1946 and 1948, Hoffer found the time to begin a series of notebooks and daybooks in which
he organized what he had read and his own insights into modern society. What he wrote in these accounts were to be the basis
for his books
The True Believer,
The Passionate State of Mind,
and
The Ordeal of Change.
The collection also includes newspaper clippings, student writings, AV materials, and photo reproductions.
Arrangement
The collection is organized into four series: Series 1. Notebooks, daybooks, and manuscripts; Series 2. Publications by and
about Eric Hoffer; Series 3. Photographs; and Series 4. Audiovisual recordings.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Hoffer, Eric -- Quotations
Aphorisms and apothegms
Intellectuals -- United States
United States -- Social conditions -- 1945-
Social psychology
Philosophy
Stevedores -- California -- San Francisco