Leo Koch Papers, 1943-1972


Summary Information
Title: Leo Koch Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1943-1972

Creator:
  • Koch, Leo, 1916-
Call Number: Mss 782

Quantity: 5.4 c.f. (14 archives boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Papers, mainly 1956-1970, of Leo Koch, a biologist and activist who participated in the anti-war, civil liberties, civil rights, and counterculture movements of the 1960s. Concerning his controversial dismissal from the faculty of the University of Illinois in 1960 for publicly condoning premarital sex are correspondence, reports, clippings, and hearing transcripts. Also included are correspondence, minutes, clippings, and press releases documenting many organizations with which he was involved such as the American Humanists Association, the Liberal Party (New York), New York League for Sexual Freedom, Rockland County (NY) Committee to End the War in Vietnam, the School of Living (Brookville, Ohio), and Veterans for Peace. Also included is personal correspondence, newsclippings, a diary and World War II service records, information concerning experiments with LSD, and draft and printed copies of writings on scientific and general topics.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00782
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Biography/History

Leo Francis Koch was born in Dickinson, North Dakota on February 8, 1916, the third of nine children born to German farmers Valentine and Barbara Koch. In 1929 the family moved to Petaluma, California where he graduated from Petaluma High School. After attending Santa Rosa Junior College, Koch transferred to the University of California-Berkeley where he earned a B.S. in botany in 1941.

After college, Koch worked for a year in the California defense industry. In 1943 he enlisted in the Navy and served as an officer aboard an infantry landing craft in the Pacific Ocean. In 1946 Koch was discharged but retained a commission in the Naval Reserves. He resigned from the Reserves in 1958, however, after a national security investigation of military personnel alleged that he had participated in subversive activities as a college student.

Leo Koch married Edna Brown in 1940, but they soon separated. In 1944 Koch obtained a divorce and married his second wife, Shirley Jane Miller. They had three children; Toni, Terry, and Ted, who were born in 1944, 1947, and 1949, respectively.

Under the G.I. Bill Koch entered graduate school at the University of Michigan in 1947. He received a master's degree in genetics in 1948 and two years later completed a Ph.D. in biology. From 1951 to 1955 he taught, first at Bakersfield College (Bakersfield, California) and then at Tulane University in New Orleans. In 1955 he joined the faculty of the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana as an assistant professor of biology.

During his tenure at the University of Illinois, Koch became active in the American Humanist Association, an organization he first joined in 1953. From 1957 to 1960, he held several posts including secretary of the Committee on Humanist Programs and Intergroup Cooperation, chairman of the Humanist Student Committee, assistant editor of Free Mind, and member of the board of directors. He also lectured and wrote extensively about the philosophy of humanism and was instrumental in organizing new chapters in New Orleans, Denver, and Illinois.

In 1958, Koch joined the School of Living, a nonprofit adult educational organization of approximately 1500 members based in Brookville, Ohio. The school offered its members solutions to the “fourteen major problems of living” and promoted an organic, as opposed to mechanistic, philosophy of life. The school also espoused alternative life styles such as homesteading, communes, and intentional communities. It had no set curriculum or formal classrooms, and it functioned through publications, meetings, and an annual Congress on Balanced Living. Koch served as president of the school, and in 1965 was elected president of the board of trustees. He also edited and contributed to its journal, A Way Out.

In April 1960, Koch was fired from his job at the University of Illinois because of a letter he wrote to the student newspaper condoning sexual intercourse among unmarried college students. The American Association of University Professors and the University Faculty Committee on Academic Freedom urged Koch's reinstatement, but the University trustees supported President D.D. Henry's action. During the ensuing legal debate colleagues and friends formed the Committee for Leo Koch to raise funds for appeals and provide living expenses. The entire incident caught the attention of the national media and Koch undertook a cross-country tour, lecturing extensively about the case and his views on academic freedom and sexual morality. Although the Koch Case came before the U.S. Supreme Court in October 1963, it was not accepted for review, and the Illinois Supreme Court's decision denying Koch's petition for reinstatement was allowed to stand.

After his dismissal from the University of Illinois, Koch tried unsuccessfully to find employment as a college professor, and between 1961 and 1964 he moved several times and held a series of positions. In 1961 he worked as a research technician for a Santa Cruz, California mushroom grower. The following year he served as science consultant to Presidio Hill, a private high school in San Francisco. During the summer of 1963 he was hired to teach at Summerlane Camp, a libertarian, free school near Rosman, North Carolina. This employment ended when white residents of Rosman burned the integrated camp. Koch then moved to New York City, where he completed a manuscript on sex education for youth. Despite strenuous efforts, he was unable to publish the book.

Following his departure from the University of Illinois Leo Koch developed a new set of interests and affiliations. While he continued to serve as president of the School of Living, he withdrew from the AHA, due in part to its failure to support his case against the University of Illinois. In 1962 he formed a liberal discussion group called Active Liberals of Santa Cruz in response to anti-Communist newspaper ads placed by conservatives. In 1963 Koch joined the New York City League for Sexual Freedom, an educational and reform organization concerned with obscenity and censorship, and served on its advisory committee. A year later, Koch founded the New York State Committee for the Adoption of a Revised Penal Code to support legislation abolishing criminal penalties for adultery, homosexuality, and other sexual behavior. Koch also participated in a civil rights demonstration sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) at the 1964 New York World's Fair.

Leo and Shirley Koch divorced in 1964 and Koch married his third wife, Mary Berman. Together with Mary's daughter from a previous marriage, the Kochs settled in Rockland County, New York. There Koch became director of Collaberg School, a progressive school modelled after Summerhill in England.

In 1964 Koch joined the Rockland County chapter of CORE, initially serving on its executive and publicity committees and later chairing the Committee on Peace. After 1964 Koch's interests and activities shifted from sexual education and reform to opposition to the War in Vietnam. In 1965 he became chairman of the Rockland County Committee to End the War in Vietnam (RCCEWV), and in 1966 he formed Rockland County Veterans for Peace. Koch also spoke at anti-war teach ins on college campuses in 1965 and 1970. In 1967 he organized a contingent of protesters for the March on Washington. Koch also resigned from his post at Collaberg School in that year in order to work as coordinator for Vietnam Summer, a national anti-war canvassing project. In addition, Koch represented RCCEWV and Veterans for Peace in coalitions of peace and veterans groups throughout New York.

Koch believed that opposition to the war in Vietnam should be carried into electoral politics. Because he felt the Democratic Party was insufficiently committed to ending U.S. involvement in the war he joined the Liberal Party of New York. In 1965 he formed a branch in Stony Point and the following year became chairman of the county organization. In 1965 Koch ran for Liberal Party delegate to the New York State Constitutional Convention and in 1968 he ran for a seat in the New York Assembly, but he was unsuccessful in both races. In 1969, Koch served as the Liberal Party representative on Rockland County's Charter and Reapportionment Commission, a body responsible for remapping districts and reorganizing county government.

Throughout the 1960s, Koch participated in activities associated with the youth counterculture. He experimented scientifically with hallucinogenic drugs and took LSD as an aid to psychotherapy at Timothy Leary's International Institute for Advanced Study. At various times he lived in communes and cooperatives. He also visited nudist resorts and wrote numerous articles about nudism. In 1969 he attended the Woodstock Music Festival where his wife Mary operated a concession stand.

In 1970 Koch retired from political activism and moved his family to a 113-acre homestead near Boles, Arkansas.

Scope and Content Note

The papers offer a detailed and comprehensive account of Leo Koch's career, philosophy, personal life, organizational affiliations, and political activities, including his military service and scientific research; his personal battle in behalf of free speech; his interest in humanism and alternative education; and his activities on behalf of peace, civil liberties, sexual reform, and civil rights. The papers span the period from his military service in World War II to his move to Arkansas to begin farming but are best for the period from 1956 to 1970. The largest part of the collection concerns his controversial dismissal from the University of Illinois. Much of the remainder of the collection also relates indirectly to the case because of the dramatic impact on his career which the case had. The collection also contains a great deal of information for researchers on the 1960s because of the wide variety of issues with which Koch was involved. These range from detailed scientific information on his LSD experiments and the concession stand his wife operated at Woodstock to his organization of one of the leading chapters of Vets for Peace and his work on behalf of alternative education.

The papers consist of personal correspondence, clippings, a diary and biographical material, files on his dismissal from the University of Illinois, drafts and reprints of articles and speeches, and records of various organizations with which he was involved. They are organized as BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL, CORRESPONDENCE, KOCH CASE FILES, ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES, and SPEECHES AND WRITINGS. Photographs received with the papers are filed in the Name File in the Visual Materials Archive.

The BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL primarily documents Koch's life prior to 1960. Included are several resumes and a lengthy autobiographical sketch containing details of his childhood and personal life which was prepared as part of an LSD experiment. Documenting Koch's military career are a 201 file, a diary, and records of the national security investigation which led to his resignation from the Reserves in 1958. The clippings filed here concern Koch's family, teaching jobs, and activities prior to his departure from the University of Illinois. A few clippings concerning his life in Arkansas, the only material in the collection concerning his interest in agriculture, are also included.

The CORRESPONDENCE files contain chronologically-arranged incoming and outgoing letters from 1952 to 1969. The content is largely personal, including exchanges with Koch's family and wide circle of colleagues, friends, and acquaintances.

The KOCH CASE FILES exhaustively recount the events surrounding his dismissal from the University of Illinois, the legal appeals, and the public reaction to the case. The alphabetically-arranged files also document the involvement of the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Association of University Professors. There are also materials on the Committee for Leo Koch, reports and a complete transcript of his final hearing before the trustees, and numerous clippings concerning the case and his subsequent lecture tour.

The ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES files trace Koch's role in such groups as the American Humanist Association, the School of Living, New York City League for Sexual Freedom, Rockland County Committee to End the War in Vietnam, the Liberal Party, and Veterans for Peace. There are smaller files on other interesting activities such as Summerlane Camp, LSD, and Woodstock. The organizational files typically contain correspondence, clippings, minutes, membership lists, press releases, printed material, and scattered financial records. Files of organizational newsletters (for which Koch frequently served as editor) have been separated to the SHSW Library.

The majority of Koch's writings are organized as SPEECHES AND WRITINGS. These files have been divided into works on bryophytes (mosses) and writings on general topics; within each category the files are arranged chronologically. A list of Koch's bryological publications precedes that section. Topics in the general section include humanism, religion, philosophy of science, educational theory, academic freedom, civil rights, nudism, sex education (a draft of his unpublished book for teenagers is included), sexual morality, drugs, politics, and the war in Vietnam. Correspondence concerning his writing is largely filed in this series, although the general correspondence series contains some material concerning his relationship with sex reformer/publisher Rey Anthony.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by Leo F. Koch, Boles, Arkansas, 1970 1972. Accession Number: M70-070, M70-109, M70-125, M70-139, M70-157, M70-174, M70-179, M70-187, M70-199, M70-206, M70-230, M70-239, M72-405


Processing Information

Processed by Cindy Knight (1989 Intern) and Carolyn J. Mattern, 1990.


Contents List
Series: Biographical Material
Box   1
Folder   1
Autobiographical sketches and resumes, 1960-1966
Box   1
Folder   2
Clippings, 1951-1959, 1972
Box   1
Folder   3
Diary, 1943-1947
Box   1
Folder   4-5
Military service records, 1943-1958
Series: Correspondence
Box   1
Folder   6-8
1952-1961, July
Box   2
1961, August-1964, June
Box   3
1964, June-1966
Box   4
Folder   1-4
1967-1970
Box   4
Folder   5
Letters to the editor, 1956-1966
Series: Koch Case Files
Box   4
Folder   6
American Association of University Professors, 1960-1967
Box   4
Folder   7
American Civil Liberties Union, 1960-1964
Clippings
Box   4
Folder   8
Champaign-Urbana Courier
Box   4
Folder   9
Champaign-Urbana News Gazette
Box   4
Folder   10
Chicago American
Box   4
Folder   11
Chicago Sun-Times
Box   4
Folder   12
Chicago Tribune
Box   4
Folder   13
Daily Illini
Box   5
Folder   1-2
General, 1960-1961
Box   5
Folder   3
Committee for Leo Koch, 1961
Box   5
Folder   4
Correspondence, 1960-1964
Box   5
Folder   5
Court documents, 1961-1963
Box   5
Folder   6
Lecture tour clippings, 1960-1964
University of Illinois
Box   5
Folder   7
Correspondence and reports, 1960
Box   6
Box   1
Hearing transcripts
Series: Organizations and Activities
Box   6
Folder   5
Active Liberals of Santa Cruz, 1962
American Humanist Association
Box   6
Folder   4
Clippings, 1957-1959
Box   6
Folder   3
General, 1957-1959
Box   6
Folder   2
Anti-war teach-ins, 1965, 1970
Box   6
Folder   6
Collaberg School, 1964-1967
Box   6
Folder   7
International Foundation for Advanced Studies (LSD experience), 1963
Liberal Party
Box   6
Folder   8
Administration, 1965-1967
Box   6
Folder   9-13
Clippings, 1965-1970
Correspondence
Box   6
Folder   14
1965
Box   7
Folder   1-6
1966-1970
Box   7
Folder   7-9
Minutes, agendas, etc., 1965-1970, undated
Press releases and announcements
Box   7
Folder   10-11
1965-1967
Box   8
Folder   1
1969-1970
Box   8
Box   2
Questionnaires, 1967-1968
Box   8
Folder   3
State party material, 1965-1967
Box   8
Folder   4
March on Washington, 1967
Box   9
Folder   1-2
New York City League for Sexual Freedom, 1963-1967
Box   9
Folder   3
New York State Committee for the Adoption of a Revised Penal Code, 1964-1965
Box   9
Folder   4
Rockland Coordinating Council for Peace in Vietnam, 1967
Box   9
Box   5
Rockland County Charter and Reapportionment Committee, 1969
Rockland County Committee to End the War in Vietnam
Box   9
Folder   6
Announcements and press releases, 1965-1969
Box   9
Folder   7-8
Clippings, 1965-1969
Correspondence
Box   9
Folder   9-11
1965-1967
Box   10
Folder   1
1968
Box   10
Folder   2
Minutes and lists, 1965-1968
Box   10
Folder   3-4
Rockland County CORE, 1964-1968
School of Living
Box   10
Box   5-9
1962-1966
Box   11
Folder   1-2
1966-1968
Box   11
Folder   3
Summerlane Camp, 1962-1964
Box   11
Folder   4-8
Veterans for Peace, 1966-1968
Box   11
Folder   9
Vietnam Summer, 1967
Box   12
Folder   1
Rockland County, 1967
Box   12
Folder   2
Woodstock concession stand, 1969
Series: Speeches and Writings
Box   12
Folder   3-5
Correspondence, 1957-1965
Writings on general topics
Box   12
Folder   6-9
1954-1962
Box   13
Folder   1-6
1963-1968, undated
Writings on scientific topics
Box   13
Folder   7
List of publications
Box   13
Folder   8
1949-1960
Box   14
Folder   1-2
1949-1960, continued
Box   14
Folder   3
Science course outlines, circa 1959
Box   14
Folder   4
Correspondence, 1949-1956