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United States National Student Association Collection

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: BCA 0208 HC 33

Scope and Contents

Records  in the collection  include: materials pertaining to several  student and youth organizations; information on NSA political meetings (such as the NSA Constitutional Convention and the first and second United States National Student Association Congresses); and organizational  and  program  materials  (including specific information  relating to schedules,  reports, statements,  and notes of the NSA). The collection also contains records pertaining to: international travel and education; personal and general correspondence from Bill Welsh and the NSA; publications such as the NSA NEWS, the Wallpaper, and Survey Graphic; newspaper clippings and articles; and photographs of students involved in NSA activities. Some records in the collections focus on the C.I.A. involvement with the NSA.

Dates

  • created: 1946 - 1983
  • Other: Majority of material found in 1946-1953

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Records can be accessed through the Reading Room, Berea College Special Collections and Archives, Hutchins Library, Berea College.

Conditions Governing Use

There are no restrictions on the use of this collection other than federal copyright regulations.

Biographical or Historical Information

Biographical Note on Bill Welsh: William (Bill) Brownlee Welsh was born in Munfordville, Kentucky, on September 18, 1924. Welsh grew up around Berea (Kentucky) and eventually attended Berea College.  Both his parents graduated from and worked at Berea College.  Welsh’s father, Ben Welsh, was the assistant dean of labor, and his mother, Mary Cocks Welsh, supervised the boarding halls. His great aunt also served as a Dean of Women at the College.  Welsh split time during his childhood between Kentucky and Boothbay Harbor, Maine, where his grandfather worked on a dairy farm.

Welsh served in World War II for three or four years. As a junior at Berea College, Welsh was elected president of the United States National Student Association (NSA) in 1947.  After working for a year in Madison to establish the NSA, Welsh returned to finish his degree at Berea.  Welsh would later join the staff of Senator Herman Lehman (New York, 1950-1957) as his assistant. After Lehman’s retirement, Welsh took over for Phil Stern as the research director for the Democratic National Committee. He also served as Administrative Assistant to Phil Hart. Welsh eventually went on to be the assistant to Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

Note written by

Extent

3.00 ms_boxes

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The United States National Student Association (NSA), a confederation of American college and university student governments, was founded in 1947 at a conference at the University of Wisconsin. The NSA established its first headquarters in Madison, not far from the U. of Wisconsin campus. NSA was led by officers elected at its annual National Student Congress.  This collection follows the progression and programs of the National Student Association (NSA) and includes correspondence and notes of William (Bill) Welsh, the association's first president (1947-1948). A student at Berea College, Bill Welsh was an early member of national student groups.  In 1947, Welsh left Berea during his junior year after being named the first president of NSA at its Constitutional Convention at the University of Wisconsin.  After a year of working in Madison to establish the NSA, Welsh would return to Berea to complete his degree. The idea behind creating a national student association was addressed at a conference in December, 1946.  A group of students, having returned from the World Student Congress in Prague, Czechoslovakia the previous summer, realized there was not a national group for students in the United States.  Some of the original goals of the NSA included:  improving student governments, promoting higher quality education, encouraging international relations, and recognition of student responsibilities.  From the early 1950s until 1967, its international program and some of its domestic activities were underwritten by clandestine support from the Central Intelligence Agency. In 1978 NSA merged with the National Student Lobby (NSL), to form the United States Student Association (USSA).

Arrangement Note

Arrangement of the collection is by series:  National Student Association, Political Meetings, Organizational Records, Program Materials, Correspondence, Newspaper Clippings/Articles, CIA Involvement, and Photographs.

Other Descriptive Information

Collection Number: BCA 0208 HC 33

Processing Information

This finding aid was updated in February 2014 from an earlier version.

Title
United States National Student Association Collection Finding Aid
Status
Completed
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
eng

Revision Statements

  • 2023-05: Revised finding aid

Repository Details

Part of the Berea College Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
Hutchins Library
100 Campus Drive
Berea Kentucky 40404 US
859.985.3262