J. Kenneth Kreider Papers, 1955-2025
| Earl H. and Anita F. Hess Archives and Special Collections
Administrative/Biographical History
Dr. J. [John] Kenneth Kreider (April 7, 1934 - October 19, 2025), Professor of History Emeritus, taught at Elizabethtown College for 35 years, retiring in 1999. He focused on Russian and European history, and many of his publications draw on his Brethren upbringing.
Raised in Buck, Lancaster County, Kreider grew up in the Church of the Brethren. After graduating from Southern Lancaster County Joint High School, Kreider was a conscientious objector and served in alternative service for three years. He primarily worked with Heifer Project International on post-World-War-II reconstruction in Germany and Austria.
Back in the U.S., Kreider obtained an A.B. degree from Elizabethtown College (history major, political science minor, 1961) and later M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the Pennsylvania State University. He spent his teaching career at Elizabethtown College, where he served as History Department Chair, Personnel Council Chair, and a member of the Library Committee. During the Vietnam War, he actively participated in anti-war demonstrations on campus and in the community. His wife, Carroll Kreider, also taught at the College, retiring as a Professor of Business in 1999. Both were popular teachers. In 2013 Dr. Thomas Conner (a 1972 graduate of Elizabethtown College and a current professor at Hillside College) funded the Kreider Prize endowment in their honor. The Kreider Prize for Excellence in Teaching honors both Kreiders “for their inspirational service to countless students at Elizabethtown College.”
In retirement, Kreider published the book A Cup of Cold Water: The Story of Brethren Service (Brethren Press, 2001), the autobiography From the Buck to E-town: An Awesome Journey (Brethren Press, 2010), and several articles including one in Chicken Soup for the Grandma’s Soul (Canfield, Hanser, Theiman, 2005). He frequently delivered speeches and sermons throughout his life.
For the complete autobiography from which this biographical note is taken, see box 2 folder 91. His full autobiography, From the Buck to Etown, is located in the High Library, Hess Archives, and Young Center, and details his travels to all seven continents (106 foreign countries and all 50 of the United States).

