Heinz Ellersieck Oral History Interview
Interviewed by Shirley K. Cohen
Interview Sessions from 2004
- February 25, 2004
Abstract
A February 25, 2004, interview with Heinz E. Ellersieck, associate
professor of history, emeritus, in the Division of Humanities and Social
Sciences. Dr. Ellersieck received his undergraduate and graduate
education at UCLA (AB 1942, MA 1948, PhD 1955). His father was German
violinmaker Hellmuth Ellersieck, who emigrated to Denmark before the
outbreak of World War I, where he met and married Dr. Ellersieck’s
mother. In 1914, to avoid extradition to Germany to serve in the
Kaiser’s army, he and his wife moved to Norway, where their children
were born. In 1926 the family emigrated to Los Angeles. Dr. Ellersieck
attended Alta Loma Elementary School and Los Angeles High School. After
his graduation from UCLA in 1942, he joined the army, spending almost a
year in the infantry in Fort Meade, Md., before joining the ASTP [Army
Specialized Training Program] and studying Russian at Cornell. He
attended intelligence school at Fort Meade and in 1945 was sent to
England, to the air force intelligence branch. He was discharged in the
summer of 1946 and returned to UCLA, where he studied Russian history
with Waldemar Westergaard and Raymond H. Fisher. After receiving his MA,
Dr. Ellersieck spent fourteen months in European archives gathering
material for his dissertation on the 17th century czars Alexei
Mikhailovich and Feodor Alexeevich. In 1950, he was recruited as an
instructor in Caltech’s Humanities Division by Professor Rodman W. Paul
and the division’s new chairman, Hallett Smith, and he discusses their
efforts to turn it from a teaching division into a division emphasizing
research and scholarship, on a par with the institute’s science
divisions.
He also recalls joining, soon after his arrival, Caltech’s Project
Vista, which the air force had asked the institute to undertake in
preparation for a possible Soviet invasion of Western Europe.
(Ellersieck was recruited because of his military and intelligence
experience and his knowledge of Russian history and language.) He
comments on the report that resulted and the air force’s unhappiness
with its recommendations against the use of tactical atomic weapons. He
comments on his further studies of the Soviet Union during the years of
the cold war. His retirement in 1988 coincided with the end of that
war.
He also discusses his continuing interest in Pasadena civic affairs,
especially his involvement with Pasadena preservationists and with
police community relations.
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Access a PDF version of the transcript [0.27 MB]
Heinz Ellersieck Oral History Interview, interviewed by Shirley K. Cohen, Caltech Archives Oral History Project, February 25, 2004, http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Ellersieck_H.