Scope and Content Note
The Howard Pyle Collection contains correspondence, memoranda, minutes, diaries, scrapbooks, notebooks, printed matter, and artifacts. Although the collection dates from 1883 to 1987, the bulk of the material is derived from Pyle's political, professional, and personal activities from 1935 to 1987. The collection has been divided into two series.
Series I: Original File Series dates from 1930 to 1987 and is divided into five sub-series. Sub-Series A: Correspondence contains personal correspondence with acquaintances and charitable and community service organizations as well as correspondence and other documents concerning employment requests, investigations, and political intelligence pursuits. Sub-Series B: Subject Files includes correspondence, speech and broadcast scripts, and background material showing politics, the Grand Canyon, and the Eisenhower White House. Box 21, Folders 1-1D hold materials from the Republican National Convention Speech of 1952. Sub-Series C: Speeches and Articles dates from the gubernatorial period (1951-1953) and the National Safety Council presidency (1951-1959). Box 35, Folder 1 contains the convention speech What is Right for America.
Sub-Series D: Poetry houses material from the KTAR radio program Poetry Exchange, which was aired from 1940 to 1950. Sub-Series E: News Clippings includes Pyle's Tempe Daily News column Howard Pyle Writes ...
(1974-1987) and the items provided by a clipping service in 1948 to 1949.
Series II: Archivist's File Series dates from 1883 to 1987 with the bulk of the material falling between 1950 and 1987. It contains correspondence, minutes, reports, scrapbooks, diaries, notebooks, printed matter, and artifacts. It is divided into six sub-series.
Sub-Series A: Correspondence houses letters received from personal and professional contacts made during Pyle's terms as Governor, National Safety Council President, and Central Arizona Water Conservation District Director. Sub-Series B: Subject Files dates from 1959 to 1987 and concerns safety, water, and community service activities. Box 110, Folder 7, however, contains a gubernatorial press release of 1954 describing the Short Creek operation and its rationale.
Sub-Series C: Scrapbooks (1953-1984) houses news clippings from Pyle's second term as Governor of Arizona (1953-1955) and clippings about the White House staff (1955-1961). Sub-Series D: Calendars, Diaries and Notebooks describe Pyle's activities as Governor.
Sub-Series E: Printed Matter, much of which is undated, contains various certificates, gubernatorial and legislative resolutions, musical scores, news clippings, and ephemera from all periods in Pyle's career. Sub-Series F: Artifacts includes artwork for publications as well as mementos and official gifts. Sub-Series G: Audio Transcription Disks contas brief interviews and news stories hosted by Pyle primarily regarding actions of the United States military in the Philippines during World War II.
Dates
- Creation: 1883-1987
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1935-1987
Language of Materials
Material in English
Access Restrictions
To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.
Copyright
Arizona State University does not own the copyright to this collection. We recognize that it is incumbent upon the researcher to procure permission to publish information from this collection from the owner of the copyright.
Biographical Note
John Howard Pyle, ninth governor of Arizona, was born at Sheridan, Wyoming on March 25, 1906. He was the son of the Reverend Thomas Miller Pyle and Marie (Anderson) Pyle. On August 9, 1930, he married Lucile Hanna at Tempe, Arizona. Their two daughters were named Mary Lou and Virginia Ann. He held honorary doctoral degrees in Laws from the University of Redlands (1950) and in Humane Letters from Chapman College (1953).
After graduation from high school at Columbus, Nebraska in 1924, Pyle found employment as a radio singer at Lincoln, Nebraska until his family moved to Tempe. In 1930, following periods of activity as a railway timekeeper, a realtor, and an advertising writer with the Arizona Republican newspaper, Pyle was named program manager and vice president of the Phoenix area affiliate of the National Broadcasting Corporation, KTAR radio. In 1935 he organized the annual Grand Canyon Easter Sunrise broadcast. In the 1930's, he also began radio narrations of the Flagstaff (Arizona) All Indian Pow Wows.
Pyle was an NBC correspondent in the Pacific Theater of Operations in the Second World War, where he prepared a radio program comprising interviews with Arizonans in the military services in various combat zones. He also reported the Japanese surrender, the American occupation of Japan, and the World Security Conference at San Francisco.
In 1948, Pyle circulated nominating petitions for the office of Governor of Arizona but withdrew his candidacy before the primary election. In 1950, however, his campaign was successful. He was re-elected in 1952. As a part of his campaign of that year, he delivered the address What is Right for America at the Republican National Convention at Chicago, Illinois. Pyle was defeated in the gubernatorial race by former senator Ernest W. McFarland in 1954. Some analysts subsequently attributed his defeat to a raid conducted by state police, in that year, on a community of polygamists at Short Creek, Arizona. While Governor, Pyle was a de facto member of the Arizona Board of Regents of the University and State Colleges. He was also a Trustee of the University of Redlands.
A month after leaving the Governor's Office, Pyle was appointed an administrative assistant to President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the area of intergovernmental relations. He was soon promoted to deputy assistant for federal state relations. Among his duties were the publishing of an Administration newsletter among departmental and party leaders and planning for the President's committee on traffic safety.
Pyle left the White House in 1959 to assume the presidency of the National Safety Council. He described the Council's life saving accomplishments during his tenure as the most rewarding of experiences
. He remained president until his retirement in 1973 and thereafter continued his appointment as a Director. In connection with his safety related activities, Pyle also became Chairman of the OSHA National Advisory Committee upon the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.
In 1980, Pyle was elected a director of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District, which was established by the same election to administer the distribution of waters brought to Arizona by the Central Arizona Project canal network. He remained in this directorship until his death at Tempe in 1987.
In addition to his official and professional posts, Governor Pyle was active in civic affairs and occupied numerous chairmanships and directorships in community service and philanthropic organizations, including the Western Governors' Conference, the Tempe Historical Society, the Tempe St. Luke's Hospital, the Arizona Boys' Ranch, Tempe's Chamber of Commerce and United States Bicentennial Committee, and the Phoenix Stock Show.
Full extent
143 Box(es)
Full extent
70.5 Linear Feet
Abstract
The Howard Pyle Collection contains correspondence, memoranda, minutes, diaries, scrapbooks, notebooks, printed matter, and artifacts. Although the collection dates from 1883 to 1987, the bulk of the material is derived from Pyle's political, professional, and personal activities from 1935 to 1987. The collection has been divided into two series.
Arrangement
This collection consists of one hundred and forty-one boxes divided into two series:
- Series I: Original File Series
- Series II: Archivist's File Series
Provenance
The Howard Pyle Collection was received from Lucile Pyle in 1988 (Accession #1988-00115).
Processing Note
The Howard Pyle Collection displayed no original order at the time of receipt. About one third of the collection was received in file folders, but the majority of the collection consisted of boxes of loose papers, printed matter, and photographs. The archivist attempted to reconstruct Pyle's file series by identifying similarities in the file folder labeling, content, and date ranges. Each group of files identified in this manner represents a sub-series of the Original File Series.
The loose papers were included in the Archivist's File Series
and were sorted into broad subject or form oriented sub-series. As a result, a subject like National Safety Council
may be represented by materials in more than one sub-series in the collection.
Subject
- Arizona Safety Association (Organization)
- Central Arizona Water Conservation District (Ariz.) (Organization)
- Freedoms Heritage, Inc. (Organization)
- National Safety Council (Organization)
- Republican National Convention (25th : 1952 : Chicago, Ill.) (Organization)
- Rio Salado Development District (Ariz.) (Organization)
- United States. National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety and Health (Organization)
- United States. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Organization)
- Title
- Howard Pyle Collection
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Processed by Lane Crawford Cromby and Robert P. Spindler in November of 1991; machine-readable finding guide created by Michael Lotstein in July of 2004; audio transcription disks added by Elizabeth Dunham in April of 2025.
- Date
- 2012
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- Finding guide encoded in English.
Repository details
Part of the Greater Arizona Collection Repository
Contact
Arizona State UniversityP.O. Box 871006
Tempe AZ 85287-1006 United States
(480) 965-4932
archives@asu.edu