American writer
Dorothea Chambers Seelye Franck (June 8, 1917 – October 27, 1988) was an American writer, editor, and Middle East specialist.
Early life
Dorothea Seelye was born in Chatham, New Jersey , the daughter of college professors Laurens Hickok Seelye and Kate Ethel Chambers Seelye,[ 1] and the great-granddaughter of politician and college president Julius Hawley Seelye .[ 2] Her mother completed a doctorate at Columbia University in 1919, two years after Dorothea was born.[ 3] She was raised in Lebanon, where her parents taught at the American University of Beirut .[ 4] Her sister Mary-Averett Seelye had a career in dance,[ 5] and her brother Talcott Williams Seelye was a diplomat.[ 6]
Seelye attended Bryn Mawr College and graduated from St. Lawrence University .[ 2] She earned a master's degree from American University .[ 7]
Career
Seelye worked in Egypt during World War II , translating for the Allies at the Office of Strategic Services . Later she worked in Washington, D.C. , at the State Department ,[ 8] and for the American Friends of the Middle East .[ 9] She edited the Americans for Justice in the Middle East (AJME) News . She founded the Turkish-American Women's Group when she lived in Istanbul from 1956 to 1965.[ 7] [ 10] She lived in Beirut again in the 1980s,[ 11] and on her parents' farm in Plainfield, Massachusetts ,[ 12] and in Syracuse, New York .[ 6]
Publications
Dorothea Seelye Franck was a writer and editor, usually on topics concerning the Middle East and education, in publications including The Middle East Journal ,[ 13] [ 14] Foreign Service Journal ,[ 15] and The Christian Science Monitor .[ 16] She also wrote a book about finger crochet , and two children's books.[ 17]
"In the Minds of Men" (1946, pamphlet)[ 18]
"Cultural and Scientific Cooperation in the Near East" (1946, a three-part series)[ 19]
"The Middle East Economy in 1949" (1950, with Peter G. Franck)[ 14]
"The Interchange of Government Experts" (1950)[ 20]
"Implementation of Technical Assistance: United Nations Programs in Haiti" (1951, with Marian Neal and Peter G. Franck)
Islam in the Modern World (1951, edited by Franck)
"Pakhtunistan - Disputed Disposition of a Tribal Land" (1952)[ 13]
"The American School at Tangier" (1953)[ 15]
The Cat Who Loved Bach (children's book)
"Tales" (1958, with Aziz Nesin)[ 21]
"Turkish Women in Engineering" (1961)[ 16]
Mother Kaz (1963, children's book, with Selma Emiroǧlu Aykan̄)
"Missionaries Send Bas Reliefs to the United States" (1980)[ 22]
Finger Crochet (1984, with Susan Williamson)
Personal life
Seelye married German-born economist and professor Peter Goswyn Franck in 1940. They had two daughters, Karen[ 23] and Marianne. Dorothea Seelye Franck died from cancer in 1988, aged 71 years.[ 2] [ 17] The Williams-Chambers-Seelye-Franck Papers at Amherst College contain some of her papers.[ 6] Journalist Kate Seelye is her niece.
References
^ "Miss Chambers is MInister's Bride" . The New York Times . 1915-10-05. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-09-15 – via Newspapers.com.
^ a b c "Dorothea S. Franck" . Daily Hampshire Gazette . 1988-11-01. p. 4. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "Mrs. Seelye Dies; Was Prof in Turkey" . The Post-Standard . 1973-06-01. p. 7. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "Dr. L. H. Seelye, 71, Former University Head, Dies Here" . The North Adams Transcript . 1960-08-22. p. 3. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "A Dancer in the Family: Mary-Averett Seelye" . The Consecrated Eminence . 2017-01-06. Retrieved 2022-09-14 .
^ a b c "The Williams-Chambers-Seelye-Franck Papers ("The Franck Papers")" . Amherst College - ArchivesSpace . Retrieved 2022-09-13 .
^ a b "Franck Family Keeps Turkish Customs Alive in Syracuse" . The Post-Standard . 1967-01-20. p. 13. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ US Department of State, "Turkish Graduate at Chicago Hospital" The Record 11(April 1946): 32.
^ Walhout, M. D. (2020-10-01). Arab Intellectuals and American Power: Edward Said, Charles Malik, and the US in the Middle East . Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7556-3416-3 .
^ "Saturday Club to Hear of Holy Land" . The Troy Record . 1969-12-10. p. 24. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ Friedman, Josh (1984-03-01). "Clinging to Beirut Amid Chaos and Fear" . Newsday . p. 173. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ Potter, Mary (1987-10-20). "Sharing Knowledge, Preserving Skills" . The Berkshire Eagle . p. 9. Retrieved 2022-09-14 – via Newspapers.com.
^ a b Franck, Dorothea Seelye (1952). "Pakhtunistan: Disputed Disposition of a Tribal Land" . Middle East Journal . 6 (1): 49– 68. ISSN 0026-3141 . JSTOR 4322356 .
^ a b Franck, Dorothea Seelye; Franck, Peter G. (1949). "The Middle East Economy in 1948" . Middle East Journal . 3 (2): 201– 210. ISSN 0026-3141 . JSTOR 4322065 .
^ a b Franck, Dorothea Seelye (January 1953). "The American School at Tangier" (PDF) . Foreign Service Journal . 30 (1): 25– 26.
^ a b Franck, Dorothea Seelye. "Turkish Women in Engineering" Christian Science Monitor (July 29, 1961): 5. via Internet Archive
^ a b Killgore, Andrew I. (April 1989). "In Memoriam: Dorothea Seelye Franck" . WRMEA . Retrieved 2022-09-14 .
^ Franck, Dorothea Seelye (1946). In the Minds of Men . U.S. Government Printing Office.
^ Franck, Dorothea Seelye (January 1946). "Cultural and Scientific Cooperation in the Near East" . The Record . 11 (1): 2.
^ Franck, Dorothea Seelye (1950). "The Interchange of Government Experts" . Middle East Journal . 4 (4): 410– 426. ISSN 0026-3141 . JSTOR 4322219 .
^ Nesin, Aziz; Franck, Dorothea Seelye (1958). "Tales" . The Phylon Quarterly . 19 (4): 388– 396. doi :10.2307/273102 . ISSN 0885-6826 . JSTOR 273102 .
^ Crawford, Vaughn Emerson; Harper, Prudence Oliver; Pittman, Holly (1980). Assyrian Reliefs and Ivories in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: Palace Reliefs of Assurnasirpal II and Ivory Carvings from Nimrud . Metropolitan Museum of Art. pp. 40– 48. ISBN 978-0-87099-260-5 .
^ "Karen A. Franck" . Environmental Psychology at The Graduate Center . Retrieved 2022-09-15 .
External links
International National Other