Information: The first column shows data points from Beer, George E, active 1912-1920, news editor of `The Times' in red. The third column shows data points from Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000787.0x00000a
eng
Latn
Citation
BiogHist
BiogHist
0
George Louis Beer (July 26, 1872 – March 15, 1920) was a renowned American historian of the "Imperial school". Born in Staten Island, New York, to an affluent family that was prominent in New York's German-Jewish community, Beer studied at Columbia University before teaching there while also working in the tobacco business.
After retiring from business in 1903, he devoted his time to extensive research in British archives, and wrote three highly regarded and influential books on the British-American colonial period. Beer served as colonial expert to President Woodrow Wilson's American Commission of Inquiry during World War I and attended the 1919 Paris Peace Conference as a member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace, for which he was chief of the Colonial Division in 1918-1919. He was also a member of the Mandates Commission of the League of Nations and was appointed director of the Mandatory Section of the League's Secretariat in 1919.
Beer married Edith Hellman on November 11, 1896. She was the niece of one of his early mentors at Columbia, E. R. A. Seligman, who had also married Beer's sister. Beer and his wife had one daughter, and the marriage lasted until Beer's untimely death on March 15, 1920.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Louis_Beer
eng
Latn
Citation
Source
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Louis_Beer
0
Beer, George E, active 1912-1920, news editor of `The Times'
creatorOf
NORTHCLIFFE PAPERS. Vols. XCVII B (ff. 148). George E. Beer, news editor; 1912-1920.George E. Beer, news editor of 'The Times': Correspondence with Lord Northcliffe: 1912-1920. 1912-1920
NORTHCLIFFE PAPERS. Vols. XCVII B (ff. 148). George E. Beer, news editor; 1912-1920.George E. Beer, news editor of 'The Times': Correspondence with Lord Northcliffe: 1912-1920., 1912-1920
Title:
NORTHCLIFFE PAPERS. Vols. XCVII B (ff. 148). George E. Beer, news editor; 1912-1920.George E. Beer, news editor of 'The Times': Correspondence with Lord Northcliffe: 1912-1920. 1912-1920
NORTHCLIFFE PAPERS. Vols. XCVII B (ff. 148). George E. Beer, news editor; 1912-1920.George E. Beer, news editor of 'The Times': Correspondence with Lord Northcliffe: 1912-1920., 1912-1920
0
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920
referencedIn
Inquiry papers, 1917-1919.
Mezes, Sidney Edward. Inquiry papers, 1917-1919.
Title:
Inquiry papers, 1917-1919.
Mezes' correspondence and documents relating to the Inquiry group. Correspondents include Emily Greene Balch, George Louis Beer, Isaiah Bowman, Wilbur Cross, Cleveland H. Dodge, Stephen P. Duggan, Edward A. Filene, Glenn Frank, Robert Herrick, Robert Lansing, Edward M. House, Samuel McCune Lindsay, Walter Lippmann, Breckenridge Long, Adolph C. Miller, William Phillips, Frank L. Polk, Albert Shaw, James T. Shotwell, Vladimir G. Simkhovitch, Frank William Taussig, Allyn A. Young.
Correspondence, organizational records, reports containing historical and statistical material, maps, and other papers of The Inquiry, a group of experts assembled at the request of President Wilson to collect and collate data in preparation for a peace conference following World War I. Members of The Inquiry included Edward House, Sidney Mezes, Isaiah Bowman, Charles Seymour, David H. Miller, Walter Lippmann, James T. Shotwell, and Clive Day.
ArchivalResource:
18 linear feet (35 boxes, 4 folios)
Papers pertaining to the period 1917-1919 and specifically to diplomatic relations between Britain and the U.S. during that period. Includes correspondence between Wiseman and Edward M. House; official telegrams of the British Foreign Office and of U.S. officials; British and American official and private memoranda on war matters and on problems of the Peace Conference; and reports and correspondence on Russia and on the Zionist movement. Important correspondents include: Gordon Auchincloss, Arthur James Balfour, Winston Churchill, Thomas G. Masaryk, Ignace Jan Paderewski, the Marquis of Reading, Cecil Spring-Rice and William Tyrrell.
Wiseman, William, Sir, b. 1885-1962. Sir William Wiseman papers, 1916-1961
Title:
Sir William Wiseman papers
Papers pertaining to the period 1917-1919 and specifically to diplomatic relations between Britain and the U.S. during that period. Includes correspondence between Wiseman and Edward M. House; official telegrams of the British Foreign Office and of U.S. officials; British and American official and private memoranda on war matters and on problems of the Peace Conference; and reports and correspondence on Russia and on the Zionist movement. Important correspondents include: Gordon Auchincloss, Arthur James Balfour, Winston Churchill, Thomas G. Masaryk, Ignace Jan Paderewski, the Marquis of Reading, Cecil Spring-Rice and William Tyrrell. During World War II Wiseman was again engaged in intelligence operations for Great Britain and also devoted himself to war-relief work. A small amount of papers document some of these activities. Business and financial papers from his partnership in the banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Company (1929-1955) include correspondence, particularly in relation to the promotion of capital investment in underdeveloped countries. Among the few personal items are several photographs, memorabilia, and letters from friends and his three daughters.
Wiseman, William, Sir, b. 1885. Sir William Wiseman papers, 1916-1961 (inclusive).
0
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920
creatorOf
Frances Hellman travel letters to Edith and George L. Beer, 1900
Frances Hellman travel letters to Edith and George L. Beer, 1900
Title:
Frances Hellman travel letters to Edith and George L. Beer, 1900
The collection consists of some 47 letters from Frances Hellman to her daughter and son-in-law, Edith and George L. Beer, during a journey with her husband and a small party of friends throughout the Mediterranean region and into Eastern Europe, Jan.-July 1900. The letters are bound in chronological order, and include vivid and enthusiastic descriptions of places visited and events witnessed, with her commentary, and asides about friends and family members, often recorded on hotel or ship letterhead. They travelled by steamship, yacht, and train, visiting Gibraltar, Alexandria, Cairo, up the Nile River, Beirut, Damascus, Jerusalem, Constantinople, Athens, Naples, Corfu, Sicily, Rome, Tyrol, Vienna, Munich, and Paris.
Also includes a photograph of the travel party posed on camels with native guides in front of the Sphinx, a two-page poem in praise of travelling companion Virginia Stern on her birthday, and a picture post card from Paris.
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920. [Diary : Paris Peace Conference] : diaries, 9 December 1918-11 August 1919.
0
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920
creatorOf
George Louis Beer papers [manuscript].
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920. George Louis Beer papers [manuscript].
Title:
George Louis Beer papers [manuscript].
The collection comprises the research papers of George Louis Beer, historian (1872-1920). Included are notes on British colonial affairs and immigration to Canada. An unpublished work on South Carolina is also included.
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920. George Louis Beer papers [manuscript].
0
Beer, George Louis, 1872-1920
referencedIn
The Inquiry papers, 1915-1921 (inclusive).
The Inquiry papers, 1915-1921 (inclusive).
Title:
The Inquiry papers, 1915-1921 (inclusive).
Correspondence, organizational records, reports containing historical and statistical material, maps, and other papers of The Inquiry, a group of experts assembled at the request of President Wilson to collect and collate data in preparation for a peace conference following World War I.
ArchivalResource:
l8 linear ft. (35 boxes, 4 folios)
U.S. American Commission to Negotiate Peace Records 1898-1919 (bulk 1918-1919)
U.S. American Commission to Negotiate Peace Records, 1898-1919, (bulk 1918-1919)
Title:
U.S. American Commission to Negotiate Peace Records 1898-1919 (bulk 1918-1919)
Abstracts, agreements, articles, maps, memoranda, notebooks, pamphlets, petitions, reports, and other typescript and mimeograph material, including documents from the study group, the Inquiry. Items deal with geographical, racial, religious, political, cultural, and legal aspects of countries and areas with which the commission was concerned.
ArchivalResource:
14,000 items; 43 containers plus 1 oversize; 17.5 linear feet
We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.