John D. Spencer Peace Corps correspondence and memorabilia
Scope and Contents
This collection contains correspondence and memorabilia from John Spencer’s time as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Mysore, India from 1966 to 1968, mostly in the form of his letters home to his family in Vestal, New York. Spencer was assigned to the project designated India 26, which focused on the development of poultry programs in Mysore state. Specifically, the India 26 volunteers were charged with promoting extension work, egg marketing, and feed development. Spencer's work was concentrated in the villages of Jamkhandi and Bijapur.
The collection also includes various letters received by Spencer from fellow Peace Corps volunteers and others he met while in India, as well as material related to the artistic career of Vijay Sindhur, an artist Spencer met as a Peace Corps volunteer. Sindhur lived in the village of Jamkhandi, where Spencer was based; he asked for good oil paints and Spencer's mother purchased a Grumbacher paint set and shipped it to India for Sindhur's use. Sindhur painted two portraits of John Spencer during his residence in India: the first won an award for the State of Maharashtra, and the second painting won the All India prize for 1967.
Two DVDs of photographs document visits in 1995 and 2012 between Spencer and the Ram Tikotekar family in India and the United States. In 1995 Spencer and his father visited India to attend family weddings, and were honored by having the building which houses the Ram Tikotekar family business named the Spencer Complex.
Dates
- Creation: 1966 - 2011
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1966 - 1968
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use and has no known restrictions.
Biographical Note
John D. Spencer (born 1943) is the proprietor of Riverow Bookshop in Owego, New York. He received an A.A.S. degree from Broome Technical Community College in 1963, and an A.B. from Harpur College (SUNY Binghamton) in 1966. He served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Mysore, India from 1966 to 1968.
Spencer writes "Upon returning, I became a registered representative with a stock brokerage firm. After the crash of 1970, I owned a local Charles Chip franchise. After Hurricane Agnes wiped out the potato crop and [the price of] cooking oil quadupled, I began my bookselling career." He opened Riverow Bookshop in 1976, and was elected a member of the Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America in 1980.
He has traveled back to India five times for special occasions over the years, and writes that he "still feels like I am in the Peace Corps in my community," having been involved with numerous improvement efforts in Owego, including the purchase of Hiawatha Island for a wildlife refuge and education center; construction of a senior center, skate park, indoor swimming pool; and restoration of the historic railroad station. Spencer is also an active Owego Rotarian.
Extent
3.5 Linear Feet (One .5-linear foot box; one map case drawer; one extra-oversize item (framed).)
Language of Materials
English
Kannada
Abstract
This collection contains correspondence and memorabilia from John Spencer’s time as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Mysore, India from 1966 to 1968, mostly in the form of his letters home to his family in Vestal, New York. The collection also includes various letters received by Spencer from fellow Peace Corps volunteers and others he met while in India, as well as material related to the artistic career of Vijay Sindhur, an artist Spencer met as a Peace Corps volunteer.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift of John D. Spencer, October 2023, given in memory of Dorothy L. Spencer.
Subject
- Sindhūra, Vijaya, 1940- (Person)
- Title
- Guide to the John D. Spencer Peace Corps correspondence and memorabilia.
- Author
- Jeremy B. Dibbell
- Date
- 2025-06-06
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Binghamton University Libraries Special Collections Repository