distinguished alumni award
Homer L. Calkin
Service 1984
Homer L. Calkin, former deputy director
for the U.S. Department of State, began his service to his country
in 1942 as organizations and propaganda analyst in the War Division
in the Department of Justice. During World War II, he was an officer
in the Military Intelligence Service of the War Department General
Staff, and following the war he served on the National Archives for
four years.
In 1950, Mr. Calkin joined the Department of State as an
archivist on the Records Management Staff, of which division he later
became
chief. For 27 years, he worked in a multitude of capacities within
the Department, serving on the planning staff for the extension of
the Department of State building, traveling to some 50 embassies
and consulates in Europe and Asia to assist in the transfer of occupation
functions from the armed forces to the Department of State, assisting
in the development of new procedures for the issuance of visas, and
providing guidance in records management and archival problems.
Throughout
his distinguished career, Calkin, 35BA, 36MA, 39PhD in History, has
maintained his interest in historical research and writing.
His articles and books have covered a wide range of subjects, including
British-Irish relations, the American Revolution, the history of
the Methodist Church, the Irish in America, the history of Iowa, and
women
and minorities in American foreign affairs.
One of only two lifetime
honorary directors on the Friends of the Library at the University
of Iowa, Homer Calkin has not only given
the University generous financial support, but has served in many
ambassadorial roles as well. He is a life member of the Alumni Association.
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