Director of the Clements Library, 1953-1977
B.A. 1931, M.A. 1933, University of Michigan
Howard H. Peckham, second Director of the Clements Library, was an historian of colonial and revolutionary America and an authority on rare Americana. As a manuscript curator from 1935 to 1945, he organized the papers of British army commanders and cabinet ministers relating to the American Revolution that had been purchased by the Library in the 1920s and 1930s.
As Director, Peckham greatly expanded the Library's colonial and revolutionary collections, and acquired important manuscripts for the early national and antebellum periods. Continuing the work begun by his predecessor Randolph G. Adams, Peckham broadened the scope of the Library's research collections.
A skillful and prolific historian, Peckham was a founder and contributor to American Heritage, and author of numerous books and articles. His seminal book, Pontiac and the Indian uprising (1948), retold the story of the Ottawa chief's "rebellion," depicting Pontiac as a local leader caught up in a much larger movement of Native American resistance to Anglo-American expansion. Among his many contributions on the history of the American Revolution, Peckham published The Toll of Independence (1974) which counted American casualties, putting the number far higher than previously believed, 25,000 military deaths out of a population of three million.
During his directorship, Peckham served as Professor of History and wrote The Making of the University of Michigan, 1817-1967 (1967). One of the country's early professional archivists, he was a founding member of the Society of American Archivists.
The September, 1995, issue of The Quarto, the Clements Library newsletter, contained articles in honor of Mr. Peckham.
[ William L. Clements ][ Randolph G. Adams ][ Howard H. Peckham ][ John C. Dann ]
History of the Clements Library