Charles Hickman Titus Papers, 1900-1965

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Charles Hickman Titus Papers, 1900-1965

Charles Hickman Titus (1896-1965) taught at Whitman College and Stanford before coming to teach at UCLA in 1927. He was an expert on American political theory and studied U.S. voting habits. During World War II, Titus served as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Signal Corps in New Guinea and Australia. The collection consists of Titus' personal and professional papers and papers relating to Hickman's father, grandfather, and related families.

42 boxes (21 linear ft.); 1 oversize box

eng,

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SNAC Resource ID: 6659841

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

University of California, Los Angeles

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61g4fv2 (corporateBody)

Biography Cox was born Jan. 5, 1926 in Fresno, CA; BA, political science, Stanford, 1949; associate for Bill P. Wreden, antiquarian book dealer, San Francisco; MLS, UC Berkeley, 1954; began working at the UCLA library in 1954, serving in gifts and exchange, as head of the Geology Library, and head of circulation (1960-77); compiled and donated Albright library bibliography; Acting Assoc. University Librarian for Public Services, UCLA, 1977-79...

Titus, Charles Hickman, 1896-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6104rb7 (person)

Titus was born in Topeka, KS, in 1896; received BA (1920), MA (1921), and Ph. D (1927) at Stanford; taught at Whitman College and Stanford before coming to teach at UCLA in 1927; was an expert on American political theory and studied US voting habits; achieved fame as a teacher through unorthodox views and challenging students to re-evaluate basic tenets; served as a lieutenant colonel in the US Signal Corps in New Guinea and Australia during WWII; retired from teaching at UCLA in 1963; died of ...