Federal Executive Institute and University of Virginia courses, 1974-1975
Content Description
This collection of papers originated from the career and personal life of Donald Nuechterlein (1925-2022), who was originally from Saginaw, Michigan, served in World War II and became an American diplomat and a professor of International Relations. He was a University of Virginia adjunct professor, and international foreign relations analyst from the 1960’s to the 1990’s. He lived in Charlottesville and wrote a regular political opinion column in the local paper, The Daily Progress. He frequently wrote for other Virginia newspapers and was the author of a dozen books on the United States and world politics. Even though he retired in the 1990’s, he was still writing until his death at age 97.
In 1968 he co-founded (with Frank Sherwood who was appointed by former president of the United States, Lyndon F. Johnson) the Federal Executive Institute on Emmet Street which is still in operation today. At the Institute, he taught top government officials from the CIA, the State Department, and many similar national agency directors about foreign policy and leadership. He also led workshops on team building and facilitated support groups that showed empathy and understanding to its participants.
The collection is mostly correspondence and lectures of Donald Nuechterlein. (Lectures can be found in the correspondence and in a separate category). Included is correspondence from speakers, faculty, and attendees of the Federal Executive Institute including George H. Bush, Sr., William Colby (CIA),Karl Rove, Alexander Haig (Nixon’s administration), Warren Christopher, Henry Kissinger, John D. Erhlickman, Lawrence Eagleburger, Ben Bradlee (head of The Washington Post during Watergate), and many heads of State and well known (and secret) political operatives.
There are also parts of his manuscript which was titled "A Tale of Four Cities" and was published as "A Cold War Odyssey."
The papers give an inside look into the Federal Executive Institute and its 4 week sessions. There are also newspaper columns written by Donald Nuechterlein that are informative regarding the political history of the United States and its engagement on the world stage. This collection is an addition to the Donald Nuechterlein papers. Previous additions are mentioned under related materials.
Dates
- Creation: 1974-1975
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use except for restricted materials (grades) due to FERPA.
Extent
From the Collection: 4.5 Cubic Feet (10 document boxes)
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Repository Details
Part of the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library Repository
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library
P.O. Box 400110
University of Virginia
Charlottesville Virginia 22904-4110 United States