Baillie, John, 1886-1960 (Scottish theologian and ecumenical leader)
Found in 47 Collections and/or Records:
Official Delegation to the Nazi leaders, 1936
Official Delegation to the Nazi leaders consists of:
- conference papers & reports
- copy of Zwei Jahre Arbeit an der Reichsautobahn (Two years' work on the Reich's motorway)
- newspapers
- notes and ephemera
On being appointed Moderator Designate, 1942
Letters, airgraphs and telegrams of congratualtions, with copies of replies and press cuttings relating to John Baillie's nomination as the next Moderator of the Church of Scotland.
Personal file, France 1940, 1940
Correspondence and related items received by John Baillie while he was in France with the YMCA, from friends, colleagues in others in (mostly) Britain, the United States and Canada and including the solicitors handling Richard Fowler's estate, his cousin Elizabeth Catherine (Elsa) Gallant, his brother Donald Macpherson Baillie, his cousin Ian Anderson, Reinhold Niebuhr, George Freeland Barbour and various publishers.
Reports of activities, 1909-1960
Files of items relating to John Baillie, compiled by Florence Jewel Baillie and/or other members of the Baillie family, to indicate periods in John Baillie's life. Includes items relating to awards achieved, lectures given and events attended.
Taken or sent home from America, summer 1945, 1945
Correspondence, press cuttings and related items for the period of and around John Baillie's visit to the United States immediately at the end of the Second World War and including letters from his wife Florence Jewel Baillie, his brother Donald Macpherson Baillie, publishers, Reinhold Niebuhr and Mathew Willard Lampe (State University of Iowa).
Toronto file, 1927-1930
letters, notes, press cuttings, calendars and related material
Trip to Australia, New Zealand and the United States, 1947-1948
Correspondence, addresses, invitations, itineraries, leaflets, brochures, travel documentation, press cuttings and other items relating to the trip taken by John Baillie and his wife to Australia, New Zealand and the United States in 1948. Includes material relating to the Presbyterian Church of New Zealand and letters from John McIntyre, St Andrews College, Sydney.