Finding aid for the George McCutchen McBride papers LSC.2240
Finding aid prepared by Caroline Cubé.
UCLA Library Special Collections
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Contributing Institution:
UCLA Library Special Collections
Title: George McCutchen McBride papers
Creator:
McBride, George McCutchen
Identifier/Call Number: LSC.2240
Physical Description:
3.5 linear feet
(1 oversize box, 3 oversize boxed rolls, 7 map folders)
Date (inclusive): 1942-1949 [bulk dates 1906-1952]
Date (bulk): 1942-1949
Abstract: George McBride was the chair of the Geography department at UCLA from 1923 until 1942, subsequently serving in South America
as the Technical Advisor to the Ecuador-Peru Mixed Boundary Demarcation Commission from 1942-1949. The collection is comprised
of materials created and compiled by McBride during his tenure on the boundary commission, in which he followed closely the
activities of the commission while reporting directly to the Secretary of State on the border demarcation process.
Physical location: Stored off-site. All requests to access special collections material must be made in advance using the request button located
on this page.
Language of Material: Materials are in English.
Open for research. All requests to access special collections materials must be made in advance using the request button located
on this page.
Restrictions on Use and Reproduction
Property rights to the objects belong to UCLA Library Special Collections. All other rights, including copyright, are retained
by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue
the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright.
Provenance/Source of Acquisition
Gift of Professor George M. McBride, 19 March 1956.
UCLA Catalog Record ID:
9974146103606533
[Identification of item], George McCutchen McBride Papers (Collection 2240). UCLA Library Special Collections, Charles E.
Young Research Library, University of California, Los Angeles.
Processed by Mitchell Erzinger, April 2014.
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Dr. George McCutchen McBride was born on October 11, 1876 in Benton, Kansas. Graduating from Park College Academy and Park
College in Parkville, Missouri, he went on to receive a D.D. from Auburn Theological Seminary in New York, subsequently beginning
the first phase of his career as a missionary teacher in South America from 1901-1915, where he taught in high schools in
Santiago, Chile and La Paz, Bolivia. During this time, McBride achieved fluency in Spanish and began to develop his ideals
and interests through a firsthand understanding of traditional rural and urban life across the economic, social, and political
strata.
McBride returned to the United States in 1915 to pursue graduate work in geography at Yale, becoming an Assistant Librarian
and Research Associate for the American Geographical Society in 1917, and receiving his Ph.D. in Geography from Yale in 1921
with a dissertation on the "Land Systems of Mexico." In 1922, McBride accepted a position in the Geography department at UCLA
(then still named the University of California, Southern Branch). Integral to its expansion, he served as chairman of the
department from 1923 until 1942, at which point he was called to serve as the United States technical advisor to the Ecuador-Peru
Mixed Boundary Demarcation Commission until 1949. In this role, he followed closely the activities of the commission, preparing
multiple reports for the US Department of State on the progress of the border demarcation, in addition to supervising the
aerial photography of the border line conducted by the US Army Air Force.
In 1956, McBride was awarded for his work in South America by the American Geographical Society with the David Livingstone
Centenary Medal for "scientific achievement in the field of geography in the southern hemisphere." In 1961, he was awarded
an honorary doctor of law degree from the University of California, Los Angeles. George McBride died in Claremont, California
on October 7, 1971, just shy of his 95th birthday. His scholarly publications and journal articles have since appeared in
print in both English and Spanish, and are recognized as classics in the field.
The border conflict between Ecuador and Peru was one of the longest running border conflicts in the Western Hemisphere, rooted
in the imprecise borders and shifting territories of viceroyalties and administrative districts during the Spanish colonization
that had begun in the 16th century. After a broad series of disputes, major escalation of the conflict occurred in 1941 when
Peru invaded Ecuador after alleging that Ecuador had incurred on Peruvian territory, resulting in the Ecuadorian-Peruvian
War from July 5-31. A cease fire was subsequently agreed upon, and on January 29, 1942, the Protocol of Peace, Friendship,
and Boundaries - also known as the Rio Protocol - was ratified in Rio de Janeiro, formally addressing the border dispute between
Ecuador and Peru. The treaty designated a mixed boundary commission comprised of representatives from both countries, in addition
to representatives from the governments of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and the United States - mediating parties tasked with
being the guarantors of the treaty - to collaborate as needed to resolve disagreements during the boundary demarcation process.
Mapping of the Ecuador-Peru border was completed in 1947, and was met with near unanimous approval from both Ecuador and Peru.
However, in 1948, the government of Ecuador cited a geographical error in the Rio Protocol, wherein a single watershed between
the Zamora and Santiago rivers in the Cordillera del Condor region was identified, when in fact the geographical surveys had
revealed two watersheds. This nullity thesis reopened Ecuador's aspirations for a sovereign outlet to the Amazon, and in turn
reignited the border conflict over the subsequent decades, culminating in a month-long military clash in January 1995 known
as the Cenepa War. In February 1995, a cease-fire - the Declaracion de Paz de Itamaraty - was produced, providing for demobilization
and continued bilateral talks between Ecuador and Peru and the guarantor states of the Rio Protocol. The result was a definitive
peace agreement, the Brasilia Presidential Act, ratified on 26 October 1998.
The collection is comprised of materials created and compiled during the period of McBride's service in South America from
1942-1949 as the technical advisor to the Ecuador-Peru Mixed Boundary Demarcation Commission, as put into place by the Rio
Protocol. The material includes copies of the final report to the Secretary of State as prepared by George McBride, notes,
periodic reports, and supplemental research materials such as article clippings and publications used during demarcation and
in the drafting of the final report, in addition to official memorandums and McBride's professional correspondences with the
Department of State and various members of the boundary commission. Also included are a variety of maps utilized in and produced
during the demarcation process, comprised of general, political, and topographic maps, aeronautical charts and detail sketches,
aerial photography and maps of the border region conducted and prepared by the US Army Air Force, and McBride's own holograph
maps and sketches. Collection material is in English and Spanish.
Arranged in the following series:
- Clippings collected by McBride
- Correspondence
- Maps
- Memoranda
- Notes and Research
- Photographs
- Posters
- Reports
The collection is organized by type of material and chronology. Box/folder contents and titles from boxes 1-7 are taken from
McBride's original description and personal organization of the material, indicated by quotations. Alternate arrangements
and titles/additions from the processor are denoted in brackets. Maps have been separated and ordered based on size and/or
production, where applicable. The following is a summary of container contents:
- Box 1: Final Report to the Secretary of State on the Ecuador-Peru Boundary dispute.
- Box 2: Bibliographic cards, notes, reports, memos, correspondence and other research materials applicable to the boundary commission, written and/or collected by McBride for the preparation of the Final Report.
- Box 3: Official memorandums and related documents from the Technical Advisor to the Ambassador and other officials of the demarcation commission.
- Box 4: Official correspondence of George McBride, including letters sent and received from 1942-1949.
- Box 5: Notes, clippings, memos, reports and publications related to the Ecuador-Peru boundary dispute, including aerial survey notes and maps.
- Box 6: Reports and publications from the Republic of Ecuador, Peru, and neutral military parties regarding the Ecuador-Peru boundary.
- Box 7: Clippings collected by McBride regarding the Ecuador-Peru boundary dispute, from 1942-1944.
- Box 8: Aerial trimetrogon photography of the Ecuador-Peru border region conducted by the US Army Air Force.
- Box 9: Graphic posters from Ecuador and Peru.
- Box 10-18: Maps.
Items Removed from the Collection
One poster - Newsmap for the Armed Forces, Overseas edition, from 1945 - has been removed to the
Poster Collection (Collection Number 95) , as it remains contextually and thematically unassociated with the rest of the content in this collection.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Condor Range (Ecuador and Peru)
Photographs.
Newspapers.
Aerial views.
Maps.
Ecuador-Peru Conflict, 1941
Latin America-Boundaries.
Boundary disputes-20th century.
Geography
Reports
box 1, folder 1
box 1, folder 2
"Incomplete copy of Report by G.M. McBride" [Incomplete copy of Final Report to the Secretary of State]
box 1, folder 3
"Complete copy (except for one penciled change)" [Copy of Final Report to the Secretary of State]
box 1, folder 4
box 3, folder 8
box 6, folder 1
box 6, folder 2
box 6, folder 3
box 6, folder 4
box 6, folder 5
box 6, folder 6
Notes and research
box 2, folder 1
box 2, folder 2
folder 4
box 2, folder 5
box 2, folder 6
box 2, folder 7
box 2, folder 8
box 2, folder 9
box 2, folder 10
box 2, folder 11
box 2, folder 12
box 2, folder 13
box 2, folder 15
box 2, folder 17
box 2, folder 19
folder 20
box 2, folder 21
box 2, folder 22
box 2, folder 23
folder 24
box 3, folder 9
box 5, folder 3
box 5, folder 5
box 5, folder 6
box 5, folder 7
box 5, folder 8
box 5, folder 11
box 5, folder 13
box 5, folder 14
box 5, folder 15
folder 16
box 5, folder 17
Memoranda
box 5, folder 1
folder 2
Correspondence
box 4, folder 1
box 4, folder 2
box 4, folder 3
box 4, folder 4
box 4, folder 5
box 4, folder 6
box 4, folder 7
box 4, folder 10
box 4, folder 11
box 4, folder 12
box 4, folder 13
box 4, folder 14
box 4, folder 15
box 4, folder 16
Clippings collected by McBride
box 7, folder 1
box 7, folder 2
box 7, folder 3
box 7, folder 4
box 7, folder 5
box 7, folder 6
box 7, folder 7
box 7, folder 8
box 7, folder 9
box 7, folder 10
Photographs
box 8
Posters
box 9
Maps
box 10
box 11
[Small Maps (2 of 2)]
box 12
box 13
box 14
box 15
[Oversize Maps]