Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History & Culture

Four founders, dressed in suits, stand talking with their hands clasped Founders of the Bakhmeteff Archive

The Boris A. Bakhmeteff Archive documents the Russian and East European émigré experience within the general context of Columbia University’s academic programs. The archive became part of the Columbia University Libraries in 1951. By 1986, it had grown to become the second largest depository of Russian émigré holdings in the world after the Hoover Institution.

Ranging in subject matter from art history and literature to organizational history and politics, the approximately 1,500 discrete collections that comprise the Bakhmeteff Archive document little known aspects of pre-Soviet and émigré life. The Archive’s holdings have four main focal areas, each consisting of material of both personal and institutional origin. Particular strengths include manuscript, visual materials, and memoirs relating to prominent figures in politics, literature, art, and religion from all four waves of Russian immigration (1880-until present).

A catalog of the holdings, Russia in the Twentieth Century: The Catalog of the Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University, was published in 1987 by G. K. Hall.

Boris Bakhmeteff sitting at his desk in his office

Boris Alexandrovich Bakhmeteff (1880-1951) was an engineer and a scientist, who, as fate would have it, became a diplomat. He was born in Tiflis (Russia) and graduated from the St. Petersburg School of Civil Engineering and Transportation.

His ties with the United States took root with his post-graduate studies: he spent almost a year studying hydraulics in the U.S. After returning to Russia, he taught theoretical mechanics, as well as general and advanced hydraulics at a number of universities and institutes.

In 1915-1916, Boris Bakhmeteff served as a Chief Plenipotentiary of the Central War Industrial Committee to the U.S. After the February Revolution, he became a deputy minister of industry and trade of the Provisional Government. In April 1917, he was appointed as head of the Extraordinary Russian Commission to the U.S. and Russian Ambassador representing the Provisional Government. Bakhmeteff arrived in the United States in June of 1917, and, as it turned out later, remained for the rest of his life.

In 1922, he had to abandon his diplomatic position. Soon after, he established the Lion's Match Factory, channeling much of his income through the Humanities Fund into supporting Russian émigré educational and charitable endeavors.

Bakhmeteff became a professor at Columbia University and published a number of scientific works on hydraulics and hydraulic engineering in English. He was one of the founders of the "mechanics of fluid" theory in the United States. In 1934, he claimed American citizenship and subsequently became active in the Republican Party. In 1945, Bakhmeteff was elected chairman of the Engineering Foundation, which grew largely by his efforts. It supported research projects in the related fields.

Boris Bakhmeteff was among those, who helped to establish the Archive of Russian History and Culture at Columbia University. Shortly after Bakhmeteff's death, the archive was included within the budget of the Columbia University Libraries and received a substantial portion of its operating costs from the Humanities Fund. In 1973, after the remainder of the Humanities Fund had been transferred to Columbia University, the archive was named in honor of Bakhmeteff.

Prominent Literary Figures of the Russian Emigration

Author Nadezhda Teffi stands at the center of a group of people outside in coats Nadezhda Teffi et al

The first area contains materials from, or pertaining to, prominent literary figures of the Russian emigration such as Bunin, Aldanov, Remizov, Tsvetaeva, Khodasevich, Zaitsev, Teffi, Don Aminado. Included in this group are the archives of scholars - the historians Georgii Vernadskii and Mikhail Florinskii, the philosophers Semion Frank and Vasilii Zenkovskii, as well as the papers of literary critics and journalists, such as Vladimir Weidle and Alexander Bacherac. There are also some scattered materials pertaining to pre-revolutionary writers. Of great interest is the correspondence of Alexander I. Herzen, Russian writer and socialist, with Tatiana Astrakova.

 

Institutions and Organizations

1946-47 Membership card from the Soiuz Russkix shoferov in France Membership card of the Union of Russian Drivers

The second area in the collection consists of the records of institutions and organizations. Most of them are émigré benevolent and professional organizations, mainly from France, such as Union of Writers and Journalists, associations of members of military units, the Committee for the Education of Russian Youth in Exile, the Union of Russian Drivers, the YMCA records in Paris and the like. This category also includes the papers of church organizations and political parties of pre-Revolutionary and Revolutionary Russia. The most significant are the papers of Grigorii Aleksinskii, a pre-Revolutionary Russian Social Democrat. Aleksinskii, the Bolshevik member of the Second Duma, assembled an extensive collection of party documents and private papers related to the early history of the RSDRP, with special emphasis on the activities of the Bolshevicks in the pre-1914 years.

 

Historical Holdings

A line of soldiers with Alexander Kerensky shaking hands with a soldier in the middle Alexander Kerensky visits frontline

The archive extensively documents the major historical events that were at the origin of the Russian emigration, that is, the last phase of imperial Russia, the years of revolution, and the civil war. The historical holdings of the archive are as significant as the literary ones. Numerous memoirs of participants and witnesses deal with the main political and social developments in Russia in the twentieth century.

The Bakhmeteff Archive also holds a unique collection of so-called commissioned memoirs - reminiscences, written by Russian émigrés for a modest compensation. This "memoir initiative" started in the early fifties in France and covered an extremely wide variety of topics, including: the imperial family, the First State Duma, World War I, the Russian Red Cross, the Provisional Government, the Bolshevik takeover in 1917 and the Civil War, the Russian Army and Navy, Russian immigration in Austraila, military and civil institutions and major political parties.

 

Materials pertaining to Eastern Europe

King Alexander I, Prince Arsen, and Prince Pavel posed dressed in military uniforms with swords House of Karadjordjevic - King Alexander I, Prince Arsen, and Prince Pavel

The fourth area of the archive's strength is made up of materials pertaining to Eastern Europe. Polish literary materials are to be found in the collection of former Columbia University professor Manfred Kridl, and Radio Liberty materials are held in the papers of the Ukrainian journalist Liubov Drazhevska. Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia are represented by materials stemming from the papers of political figures, such as Jaromir Smutny and Prince Paul. Materials on the theory of literary translation are in the Vera Blackwell Collection and in the Mirra Ginsburg Papers. Most of the materials in the Bakhmeteff Archive are in Russian, followed, in approximate order, by English, Ukrainian, French, Hungarian, Serbo-Croatian, Polish and Czech.

Since the archive is a living institution, its holdings are constantly growing in an effort to record and preserve a full memory of the past. A few examples of major collections which have arrived in the last ten years are the papers of Boris Moiseevich Sapir, the New York Group, Charles Richard Crane, Vera Blackwell, Mark Popovskii, Sergei Vodov, and YMCA Records in Paris. Please contact the curator for additional information.

For more information about what we collect, please see the Slavic and Eastern European History Collection Development Policy.

The Hoover Institution Library and Archives, in Stanford, CA, founded in 1919, is the oldest American repository of archival materials related to Russia and Eastern Europe. The Library's founder, Herbert Hoover, saw the need to collect documents relating to World War I which were in danger of perishing in its aftermath. Hoover and his American Relief Administration staff, while engaged in famine relief in Soviet Russia in 1921-1923, took the opportunity to collect published and unpublished materials, including ephemera, particularly that which related to the contemporary situation. In the years that followed, exiles from tsarist Russia and émigrés belonging to groups which lost out to the Bolsheviks in the Civil War continued to donate materials to the Archives. As a result, the depth of the collections permits research on many topics in Russian and East European history.

The European Reading Room of the Library of Congress, in Washington, D.C., holds volumes about Russia and the former Soviet Union in Russian, other languages of the former USSR, and in Western languages. There are also significant collections of other non-book print materials (music scores, newspapers, microforms and cartographic materials) and non-print materials (sound recordings, motions pictures, manuscripts, photographs, and posters), although statistics on these categories of holdings are less readily available.

The Slavic and Baltic Division of the New York Public Library was established as the Russian Division in 1898-99, after the Board of Trustees was petitioned by members of New York's large émigré community. For more than a century, the NYPL has been concerned with the acquisition, processing, care, and public service of many hundreds of thousands of volumes relating to Slavic and East European peoples, cultures, and languages produced in both the homelands, and in the Diaspora.

The Yale University Library, in New Haven, CT, was among the first in America to collect Slavic materials systematically. Joel Sumner Smith, its Associate Librarian in the late 19th century, was one of the very few in his profession who read Russian. The books and serials he acquired today form the core of one of the major holdings in the West. With currently over 100,000 volumes concerning Central and Southeast Europe, as well as some 500,000 volumes relating to Russia and the states of the former Soviet Union, Yale has one of the five largest collections in the United States. The Manuscript and Archives division of Sterling Memorial Library holds important archival collections related to Russia and Eastern Europe, primarily concerned with diplomatic and political history of the 19th and 20th centuries. In addition, the Beinecke Library holds an impressive collection with a particular emphasis on emigration. Among its holdings are the papers of Czeslaw Milosz, Nina Berberova, Konstantin Balmont and others.

The Houghton Library of Harvard University, in Cambridge, MA, holds a very important collection of first editions of Russian literature. Harvard alumnus Bayard L. Kilgour, Jr., gathered this collection, which is renowned not only in the United States but all over the world. The Kilgour Collections represents the works of Russian poets and novelists from Lomonosov to Blok and is specially strong in the great writers of the 19th century.

The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin holds an important collection of Russian avant-garde theater design. The Ransom Center has its major emphasis at the study of the literature and culture of the United States, Great Britain, and France. The Center's collections contain some 30 million leaves of manuscripts, over one million rare books, five million photographs, three thousand pieces of historical photographic equipment, and 100,000 works of art, in addition to major holdings in theater arts and film.

The Museum of Russian Culture in San Francisco was established in 1948 as a cultural non-profit corporation. From its inception, it has been a repository for émigré archives and cultural and historical artifacts. The Museum contains about fifteen thousand books, mostly written in Russian, published in Russia and abroad, in addition to a collection of pre-revolutionary serials and émigré newspapers and journals, with many titles available on microfilm; it also holds archives containing photographs, memoirs, correspondence, diaries, and personal papers of prominent and less known émigrés, particularly residents of the Far East and North America.

The Amherst Center for Russian Culture, in Amherst, MA, was officially opened in September 1992 in conjunction with an international symposium on Russian poet Marina Tsvetaeva, organized by Amherst College Professor of Russian Jane Taubman and Senior Lecturer Viktoria Schweitzer. The Center houses collections, which are largely concerned with Russian émigré literature. Among the manuscripts are unpublished works and correspondence of such writers as Zinaida Gippius, Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, Vasily Kandinsky, Boris Pilnyak, Ivan Bunin, Vladimir Nabokov, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and Marina Tsvetaeva. The Amherst Center for Russian Culture is also a home of a unique collection of Alexei Remizov's bound literary and art albums.

Contact Us

Tanya Chebotarev

Tanya Chebotarev

Curator, Bakhmeteff Archive

  • Rare Book & Manuscript Library

tc241@columbia.edu

(212) 854-3986
Rare Book & Manuscript Library - 6th Floor East Butler Library