Title: Schamp-Levin Collection, circa 1923-1998
ID: 01/01/MSS00057
Primary Creator: Levin, Eli (1938-)
Extent: 1.5 Cubic Feet
Arrangement:
This small collection consists of five sections:
1. Notebooks (Box 1; Box 3)
2. Documents (Box 1)
3. Correspondence (Box 1)
4. Manuscripts (Box 1; Box 2)
5. Photographs (Box 2)
Subjects: Spain -- History -- Civil War, 1936-1939, Spanish Civil War Collections (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library)
Languages: English, Spanish;Castilian
Mable E. Schamp (1912-1950) was born in Mathis, Texas to Harvey and Belle Schamp. When her mother died of sleeping sickness in 1923, Mable helped her widowed father raise her younger siblings, but intellect and perseverance made her the youngest graduate of her high school class in 1927, when she was 15. She received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Chicago in 1931 and a Ph.D. in 1936. She married Murray Foy in December 1932, a fellow student who died of typhoid fever shortly after the marriage.
Remarrying to Jewish activist and author Meyer Levin in 1935, Mable relocated to Spain and assisted the Loyalist cause during the Spanish Civil War. Mable served with the International Brigades, and she was placed in charge of a laboratory in a hospital to care for wounded soldiers. Returning to the United States, Mable remarried Irving Jacoby in 1944. She continued working in chemistry in both the District of Columbia and Honolulu and briefly oversaw on the development of contraceptives. Mable was the first woman appointed to the faculty of the Chemistry Department at the City College of New York, teaching there as an instructor from 1947-1948 and in 1950.
After Mable developed schizophrenia, she underwent treatment, but chronic depression resulted in a fatal overdose in 1950. Jo Basiste’s memories of his mother are located in the memoir “Mable,” Box 2 Folder 8.
Meyer Levin (1905-1981) was an American journalist and novelist who wrote for the Chicago Daily News and, from 1933-1939, Esquire. Born in Chicago, Levin developed an interest in Jewish history and literature, and much of his novels reflect this passion. Levin acted as a war correspondent during the Spanish Civil War and World War II, and he wrote books such as My Father’s House (1947), a story about Jewish people driven from Poland. He later directed a film adaptation of this book, the first Palestinian feature film, in 1945. Other works include Compulsion (1956), which recounts the Leopold-Loeb murder case, and a stage adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank from a Jewish perspective. Levin died in Jerusalem in 1981.
Spain -- History -- Civil War, 1936-1939
Spanish Civil War Collections (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library)
Repository: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Access Restrictions: Open to researchers.
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Acquisition Source: Jo Basiste
Processing Information: https://wiki.cites.uiuc.edu/wiki/display/librare/Home
URL: https://files.archon.library.illinois.edu/rbmlsfa/MSS00057%20_Schamp_Levin_Collection.pdf
PDF finding aid for Schamp-Levin Collection (01/01/MSS00057)