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<ead> 
<!--The following section is header information that describes the finding aid-->
  <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0"> 
  	<eadid countrycode="us" encodinganalog="identifier" mainagencycode="waps" identifier="80444/xv445037" url="https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv445037">NTE2mssm_055.xml</eadid> 
	 <filedesc> 
		<titlestmt> 
			<titleproper encodinganalog="title">Preliminary Guide to the Leynse Family Papers
				<date encodinganalog="date" calendar="gregorian" era="ce" certainty="approximate" normal="1920/1979">circa 1920s-1970s</date></titleproper>
		  
			<titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">Leynse Family Papers</titleproper>
		  
			<author encodinganalog="creator">Finding aid prepared by Cheryl Gunselman and Gayle O’Hara. Updated by Will Gregg.</author>
		</titlestmt> 
		<publicationstmt> 
		  
			<publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Washington State University Libraries Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections
			</publisher>
		  
			<date calendar="gregorian" encodinganalog="date" normal="2022">© 2025</date> 
		 
		</publicationstmt> 
	 </filedesc> 
	 <profiledesc> 
		<creation>Finding aid encoded by Suzanne James-Bacon.
			<date normal="2021" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">2022</date></creation>
		
		<langusage>Finding aid written in English.
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage> <descrules>Finding aid based
		on DACS 2nd Edition ( 
		<title render="italic">Describing Archives: A Content
		  Standard</title>).</descrules> 
	 </profiledesc> 
  </eadheader> 
	
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	<!--                         COLLECTION-LEVEL DESCRIPTION BEGINS HERE             -->
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  <archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21"> 
	 <did id="a1"> 
		<repository> 
			<corpname encodinganalog="852$a">Washington State University Libraries, Manuscripts, Archives and Special Collections</corpname>
		  
		   </repository> 
		<unitid encodinganalog="099" countrycode="us" repositorycode="waps" type="collection">MSSM.055</unitid>
		
		<origination> 
			<famname encodinganalog="100" role="creator" rules="rda">Leynse family</famname> </origination> 
	 	<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary Guide to the Leynse Family Papers</unittitle>
		
	 	<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" datechar="" certainty="approximate" normal="1920/1979">circa 1920s-1970s</unitdate>
		
		<physdesc> <extent encodinganalog="300$a">18.44 Linear feet of shelf space</extent>
		  <extent encodinganalog="300$a">17 Boxes + loose oversized materials</extent>
		</physdesc>
			<abstract encodinganalog="5203_">This collection consists of materials related to
				filmmaker and educator Humphrey Leynse, his father, missionary James P. Leynse,
				Francina Leynse Gaylord, and other members of the Leynse family.</abstract> 
			<physloc>(MASC STAFF USE) MS.1985.45: 2-5-29-6; MS.2013.06: 2-9-6-4; MS.2013.10:
				2-9-6-5; MS.2015.03: 2-9-6-6; MS.2016.08: 2-9-4-7; MS.2019.14: 2-9-5-7; MS.2023.01:
				2:7:21:1; MS.2025.11: 2-9-5-7. </physloc> 
		<langmaterial>Collection materials are in <language encodinganalog="546" langcode="eng">English</language></langmaterial>
	 </did>
  	
		<bioghist encodinganalog="5450_" id="a2">
			<!--Enter ENCODINGANALOG value of 5450_ for biog. or 5451_ for historical note, or use <head> element-->
			<p>Biography of Humphrey Leynse, from the guide to Cage 438: </p>
			<p>Humphrey W. Leynse was born on June 22, 1921 in Peking, China. His parents, Reverend
				James and Anna Groenendyk Leynse, were Dutch Reformed Church Missionaries at the
				Presbyterian Mission in Peking. As a child, Leynse attended the Peking American
				School, where he first learned to speak English; previously he spoke only Dutch and
				Mandarin Chinese, and he remained fluent in these languages throughout his life. He
				also studied French and Indonesian. </p>
			<p>Peking was Leynse's home until age twenty, when he came to the United States to study
				at Pomona College in Pomona, California. World War II interrupted his education. He
				served in the U.S. Army and from 1943 to 1945 as a special agent in the Counter
				Intelligence Corps (CIC) in the Philippines and New Guinea. His duties included
				teaching the Chinese language, formulating an English-Indonesian dictionary, and
				engaging in combat duty as an Agent Investigator. During his time as an Agent
				Investigator then Sergeant Leynse investigated foreign political groups in the
				Manila area and helped to establish an informant network. The Army awarded him the
				Bronze Star in 1945. </p>
			<p>At the end of the war, Leynse returned to Pomona to complete his studies for a
				bachelor's degree in liberal arts. From 1949 through 1951 Leynse served as an
				educational advisor for the United States Department of the Army and as
				superintendent of an Educational Center in Karlsruhle, Germany. In 1951, Leynse
				returned to the Pacific (the Marshall Islands) as an administrator of the Department
				of the Interior. From 1954 to 1957 he again worked for the State Department,
				investigating those Chinese visa applicants in Hong Kong who sought to emigrate to
				the United States under the Refugee Relief Act. </p>
			<p>Leynse's career in filmmaking began in 1957 as a Motion Picture Officer for the
				United States Information Service (USIS), first in Djakarta, Indonesia, and later in
				Seoul, Korea. He made more than fifty documentary films with USIS. It was during his
				time in Seoul that he met and married Judith L. Light, a journalist who was assigned
				to Seoul as a Motion Picture Officer. </p>
			<p>Despite his successful career with USIS, Leynse tired of governmental bureaucracy and
				desired to produce his own full-length feature film. In 1966 he resigned his Foreign
				Service position and began the odyssey that led him, with Judith and their baby son,
				to the remote island of Ullung-Do, Korea, some 180 miles east of the mainland in the
				Sea of Japan. For two years he recorded the harsh life of the fishermen and their
				families on Ullung-Do. His film, Out There, a Lone Island, won Leynse several awards
				and was featured in various New York venues, including the Whitney Museum of
				American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the American Film Festival, and the
				Ethnological Film Festival at the Museum of Natural History. Leynse made this film
				and many others under the auspices of Oceania Productions, a company he created in
				1951 to produce educational and theatrical films concerning the Far East. </p>
			<p>In 1970 Leynse came to Washington State University as an Assistant Professor of
				Communications. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1975. Throughout his
				tenure at Washington State Leynse played an important part developing cinema
				instruction as part of the Washington State University's mass media curriculum. In
				addition to his classes on film criticism, scripting, and documentary film, he
				taught the very popular "Masters of Cinema" course, which grew from an enrollment of
				thirty-seven students in the fall of 1970 to seven hundred in the spring of 1977.
				His film experience was also combined with his Asian interests in a course on Asian
				society as revealed through Asian films. Leynse also helped to produce one of the
				area's most popular radio programs, "Moviegoers," which was written by students in
				his film criticism classes. </p>
			<p>Leynse became ill in April of 1977. Despite this he was able to complete teaching all
				of his classes and missed only two weeks of the semester; when at one point he
				dropped in on one of his classes to see how things were going, he was given a
				spontaneous standing ovation by the students. Following surgery for a brain tumor,
				Leynse died on August 20, 1977, at the age of fifty-six. </p>
			<p>Biography of James P. Leynse, from the guide to Cage 444: </p>
			<p>James P. Leynse was born in Middleburg, Holland, on March 20, 1890. At an early age
				Leynse showed a talent for rhetoric and had ambitions as a stage actor. His
				Dutch-Calvanist father challenged him to do more with his life and this eventually
				led him to the University of Leiden to study for the ministry in the Dutch Reformed
				Church. </p>
			<p>As soon as he was ordained, Leynse elected to serve as a missionary in China. His
				church did not have any missions in China at that time; but this stopped him only
				momentarily. He decided to seek affiliation with the Presbyterian Board of Foreign
				Missions in the United States. The American officials, however, were not satisfied
				with his education and required him to study for two more years at Princeton
				University and be ordained once again. </p>
			<p>Shortly after he completed his additional studies, his Dutch fiancee, Anna Marie
				Groenendyk, came to America and they were married on June 21, 1920. They sailed for
				China in December 1920 and for the next 29 years their home was the Presbyterian
				Mission in Peking. It was there that their two sons, Humphrey and Waldo, were born. </p>
			<p>Leynse's first three years in China were spent learning to read and speak Mandarin
				Chinese at the College of Chinese studies. At this time Peking was noted for its
				poverty, beggars, and disease. One of Leynse's first jobs was the organization of
				kitchens which served free millet porridge to thousands of the hungry. Leynse soon
				realized, however, that he was only treating a symptom of the problem. Therefore, he
				wrote to Holland and asked his sister Francina Leynse for help. She arrived in 1930
				and for 15 years helped to establish and run an industrial center where homeless
				women and children could learn a skill. </p>
			<p>With the Japanese invasion and subsequent occupation of China, larger problems loomed
				for the Leynses. At first the Japanese permitted Leynse to continue the Peking Poor
				Relief Committee. Even though other foreigners were being evacuated the Leynses
				stayed on in the hopes that the Japanese would continue to overlook them. Late in
				1941, they travelled to Japan in order to secure passage to America for their
				younger son, Waldo. While in Japan they were placed under house arrest and confined
				for a year and a half. With the aid of Japanese friends they were released and
				returned to China only to be recaptured and held at the British Embassy in Peking
				for the remainder of World War II. </p>
			<p>During his captivity, Leynse was considerably weakened by bouts with typhoid fever
				and "sprue" (a disease of the liver and intestines brought on by malnutrition).
				Despite this ill health he stayed on in China after the Japanese surrender to
				reorganize and reopen the mission kitchens and hospital. </p>
			<p>In 1946 "sprue" attacked him again and he became almost bedridden. Owing to his long
				service and poor health the mission retired him in 1949. Upon his retirement, Leynse
				settled in Claremont, California where he began to write. </p>
		</bioghist> 
	 <scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_" id="a3"> 
			<p>This collection consists of materials related to filmmaker and educator Humphrey
				Leynse, his father, missionary James P. Leynse, Francina Leynse Gaylord, and other
				members of the Leynse family.</p> 
	 </scopecontent> 
	 <arrangement encodinganalog="351" id="a4"> 
			<p>This is an unprocessed collection. Any arrangement reflects either a pre-existing
				order from the records' creators or previous custodians, or preliminary sorting
				performed by staff.</p>
	 </arrangement> 
	 <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14"> 
	 	<p>This collection is open and available for research use.</p>
	 </accessrestrict> 
	 <userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15"> 
	 	<p>Copyright restrictions apply.</p>
	 </userestrict> 
	 <prefercite encodinganalog="524" id="a18"> 
	 	<p>[Item description] </p>
	 	<p>Preliminary Guide to the Leynse Family Papers, circa 1920s-1970s (MSSM.055) </p>
	 	<p>Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.</p> 
	 </prefercite> 
	 <acqinfo encodinganalog="541" id="a19"> 
			<p>The family of Humphrey Leynse donated the majority of this collection to the
				Washington State University Libraries in multiple installments, beginning in 2013
				(MS.2013.06, MS.2013.10, MS.2015.03, MS.2016.08, MS.2019.14, and MS.2023.01). One
				installment was transferred from the WSU Foreign Language Department in 1985
				(MS.1985.45). Another was donated by Linda Pyche (MS.2025.11).</p>
	 </acqinfo> 
	 <accruals encodinganalog="584" id="a10"> 
	 	<p>The repository expects to receive additions to this collection.</p> 
	 </accruals> 
	 <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="5441_" id="a6"> 
	 	<p>Humphrey W. Leynse Films and Papers, 1916-1977 <extref href="https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv99166">(Cage 438)</extref> </p>
	 	<p>James P. Leynse Papers, circa 1960s <extref href="https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv11630">(Cage 444)</extref></p>
	 </relatedmaterial> 
 
  	<!-- ooooooooooooooooooo     ACCESS POINTS     oooooooooooooooooooo -->
  	
	 <controlaccess id="a12"> 
		<p>This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online
		  catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or
		  places should search the catalog using these headings.</p> 
		<controlaccess> 
			<persname encodinganalog="600" role="subject" source="lcsh" rules="rda">Leynse, Humphrey W. (Humphrey William), 1921-1977 -- Archives</persname>		  
			<persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" rules="rda">Leynse, James P. -- Archives</persname>		
			<persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" rules="rda">Gaylord, Francina Leynse -- Archives</persname>	
			<persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" rules="rda">Leynse, Humphrey W. (Humphrey William), 1921-1977</persname>
			<persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" rules="rda">Leynse, James P.</persname>
			<persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" rules="rda">Gaylord, Francina Leynse</persname>
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
			<famname role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Leynse family -- Archives</famname>
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651" rules="lcsh">China -- 20th century -- Photographs</geogname>		  
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
			<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Motion picture producers and directors -- Archives</subject>		  
			<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Missionaries -- China -- Archives</subject>
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Missionaries</subject> 
		  <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Performing Arts</subject>		  
		</controlaccess> 
	 </controlaccess> 
  	<!--A finding aid without a series or container list may end here.-->
  	
  	<!-- ooooooooooooooooooooooooo BEGIN CONTAINER LIST (Optional) oooooooooooooooo -->
   	<!--Be sure to choose the appropriate TYPE attribute for this collection-->
	 <dsc type="combined" id="a23"> 
	 	<!--At each <c0x> level, be certain that you have chosen the appropriate LEVEL attribute!-->
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.1985.45</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-5-29-6</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Humphrey Leynse papers. Includes rolled
							oversized items (Korean art gallery poster, Korea map, art print circa
							1960s); a mimeographed synopsis and information to accompany a screening
							of "Out There, A Lone Island."</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2013.06</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-9-6-4</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Photograph albums (4 volumes), loose
							mounted photographs (production stills, probably from Island Doctor, 15
							items), and one notebook, "1965 motion pictures USIS."</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2013.10</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>This collection consists primarily of papers of Humphrey Leynse, including
						records of Oceania Productions, with a small amount of material related to
						his father, James Leynse. </p>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-9-6-5</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">1</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">"Masters of the Cinema" book files; WSU
							collection files; "Out There" files; a small amount of Oceania
							Productions financial records; H.L. resumes; film treatments,
							miscellaneous files; James Leynse documents (circa 1930s).</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">2</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">James P. Leynse "China Tales" files;
							incoming correspondence to the Leynse family at Ulleung-do, Korea;
							unsorted/unlabeled materials.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">3</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">H.L. passports and other official
							documents; Oceania address/contact notebooks; audio recording (sound
							effects); Oceania Productions account books (includes "Out There"
							expense record); 2-volume China project by H.L. (circa
							1940?).</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">4</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Rolled photographs (enlargements from
							"Opium" film project).</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2015.03</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>Papers, primarily photograph albums, of the James P. Leynse family. Most of
						the material relates to the family's time in China, circa 1920s-1940s. </p>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-9-6-6</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Studio photograph of [Humphrey Leynse?],
							undated.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Photograph album of Francina Gaylord,
							sister of James P. Leynse, from the time when she lived with the Leynse
							family in China. Circa 1920s-1940s.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Leynse family photograph album (China),
							circa 1930s.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Leynse family photograph album (China),
							with Dutch-language captions, circa 1920s.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Leynse family scrapbook, including
							newspaper clippings, and loose insertions (mainly photographs), circa
							1930-1970s.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">James Leynse manuscripts ("What the
							Pilgrims Saw," with associated documentation, and "Talks on Writing"),
							undated.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2016.08</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>hotograph albums (3 volumes) of the James Leynse family during their years as
						missionaries in China, circa 1920s-1930s. </p>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-9-4-7</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">1</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Albums 1 and 2. Album 1 contains captioned
							reproductions of Chinese works of art, and photographs of scenes in
							China (temples, palaces, landscapes, street scenes). Album 2 contains
							Leynse family photographs taken in China, Europe, and the Philippines,
							and photographs of scenes and people in China, as well as a pastel
							portrait of Humphrey Leynse. Few of the items are captioned.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">2</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Album 3. Contains photographs of mission
							work in China: churches and congregations, Bible study groups, schools,
							etc. Also photographs of the Imperial court, street scenes, weddings and
							other events, and reproductions of works of art.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2019.14</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>Undated black and white photographs, and a bound volume of Humbphrey Leynse's
						account of film production for "Out There, a lone island", 1963-1969. </p>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2-9-5-7</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">1</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Black box of black and white photographs,
							most mounted on heavy duty cardboard, approximately 8"x11" size,
							undated, most with yellow post-it notes on back identifying who and
							where photograph taken.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">1</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Black box of black and white photographs,
							approximately 8"x11" size, undated, most mounted on heavy duty
							cardboard, note in box states that most are duplicates from item
							1.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">2</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Blue and yellow box of black and white
							photographs, approximately 8"x11" size, undated, most mounted on heavy
							duty cardboard, includes one sheet of photographs on both sides of
							paper, in plastic, of Humphrey Leynse in 1945 in the Philippines and
							Japan.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<container type="box">2</container>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Green cloth bound volume of Humphrey
							Leynse's handwritten account of travels for and film production of "Out
							There, a lone island". Six letters from Humphrey Leynse to his wife and
							a paper with stapled handwritten quotes from "critiques" of the film are
							in the back of this volume.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01> 
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2023.01</unittitle>
				</did>
				<scopecontent>
					<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2:7:21:1</p>
				</scopecontent>
				<c02 level="file">
					<did>
						<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">This accession consists of 15 photograph
							albums, letters, newspaper clippings, and other materials collected by
							Humphrey W. Leynse and his family during their travels and time living
							in Hawaii, Hong Kong, Korea, Indonesia, and Micronesia from 1950-1963.
							It also includes materials related to James Leynse’s autobiography,
							“China Tales”. </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
	 	<c01 level="series">
	 		<did>
	 			<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Preliminary inventory, MS.2025.11</unittitle>
	 		</did>
	 		<scopecontent>
	 			<p>(MASC STAFF USE) 2:9:5:7 (shares box with box 2 of MS.2019.14)</p>
	 		</scopecontent>
	 		<c02 level="file">
	 			<did>
	 				<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Illustrated, typewritten stories by James and Anna Marie Leynse including "A song in the night," The mission of the elders," "The meeting-lady" (2 copies), and "The home in the Sweet Rain Street."</unittitle>
	 			</did>
	 		</c02>
	 	</c01>
	 </dsc> 
  </archdesc> </ead>

