Richard D. “Dick” Tropp was a core member of Peoples Temple’s inner circle and is widely considered to be the organization’s official scribe and in-house historian.
As a Temple member in California, Tropp directed letter-writing campaigns and wrote and edited the group’s newspaper, Peoples Forum. He also began gathering oral histories of Temple members for a planned biography of Jones and the movement, work he continued to do even after his emigration to Guyana in October 1977.
While in Jonestown, Tropp was a main contributor to at least two unpublished books on the perceived conspiracies against the organization — one the 52-page Target: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple and the nearly 500-plus Conspiracy Book. This distinguishes his role from Jonestown resident Edith Roller, whose extensive journals were not written for an audience.
Tropp’s writings paint him as an introspective, serious man moved by intensity and injustice. Focused and determined, he was known to seldom laugh but to be an understanding teacher. Having been a professor at Santa Rosa Junior College, he later plied his skills by teaching at Jonestown’s school.
Tropp’s letters also show he was a man in conflict with himself. He encouraged intellectuals and elites (of which he considered himself) to be watched, and suggested they should be executed once they’d served the cause’s purpose. In another letter, written after a White Night in May 1978, he politely but adamantly advocates for Jones to make Jonestown more transparent to the public and to start planning the settlement’s future.
A witness recalls him arguing with Jones against the idea of poisoning the community on Nov. 18, but just hours later, he wrote Jonestown’s last words, as ever with an eye for history, by instructing responders to “collect all the tapes, all the writing.”
Tropp and his younger sister, Harriet Sarah Tropp, died in Jonestown.
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The individual writings below include RYMUR citations, and should open with the FBI’s official designation of these records, which is “RYMUR 89-4286.” Each RYMUR page has a unique number. Tropp’s dramatic reading on pages EE-1-T-64 – EE-1-T-65, for example, should be cited as RYMUR 89-4286-EE-1-T-64 – RYMUR 89-4286-EE-1-T-65.
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Citations of pages |
Date | Description | Text | |
| Jan-March 78 | Target: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple | |||
|
EE-2-s-4 |
May 78 | Richard Tropp Letter on Intellectuals | ||
| EE-1-T-64 – EE-1-T-65 | May 78 | Dick Tropp Dissent | ||
|
X-4 |
1978 | The Conspiracy Book | ||
| EE-1-T-57 – EE-1-T-63 | Oct 78 | Dick Tropp Dramatic Reading | ||
|
AA-1-x-1 |
Nov 1978 | Richard Tropp Memo on Ryan Visit to Jonestown | Text | |
| X-1-a-54 | 11/18/78 | Richard Tropp’s last letter, November 18, 1978 | ||
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1977-78 | Other Writings of Richard Tropp |
Statements of members for book on history of Peoples Temple
| Date | Description | Page ID | Citation of pages | |
| Circa 1970 | A History by Esther Mueller | 18647, 18686 | RYMUR 89-4286-HH-6-A-38 | |
| Circa 1970 | Untitled statement by Carol Stahl | 18647, 18688 | RYMUR 89-4286-FF-1-96a – FF-1-96c | |
| Early 1970s | A History by Maurice Kleineibst | 18647, 18683 | RYMUR 89-4286-HH-6-A-39 | |
| Early 1970s | A History by Rheaviana Beam | 18647, 18680 | RYMUR 89-4286-HH-6-A-22 | |
| 1975 | Rick Cordell on Jim Jones | 18647, 94428 | RYMUR 89-4286-HH-6-A pp. 2-16 | |
| 1975 | Marceline Jones’ interviews on Jim Jones | 18647, 18692, 13157 | RYMUR 89-4286-FF-1-95a – FF-1-95f; RYMUR 89-4286-BB-18-Z-62 – BB-18-Z-68 | |
| Sept. 1977 | Jim Jones’ autobiographical sketches | 13142, 13143 | RYMUR 89-4286-O-1-A1-a – O-1-A1-h; RYMUR 89-4286-O-1-B-1 – O-1-B-19 | |
Remembrances of Richard David Tropp
- Dick Tropp: The Frog in the Pot?, by Rich Weiner (August 2025)
- Jonestown’s Writer, by David Chiu (2018)
- The Dick Tropp Poems, by Dorothy Field (2015)
- As We Remember,by Mike Cartmell (2013)
- Remembering Dick Tropp, by Dorothy Field (2011)
- Remembering Dick Tropp, by Kathy (Tropp) Barbour (2010)
- What have we learned in 32 years?, by Kathy (Tropp) Barbour (2010)
The Dick Tropp Poems, a collection of creative work by Dick’s friend Dorothy Field that extends over a period of 40 years.
The page above was created by Cole Waterman, who also transcribed several of the above entries. The page also had the assistance of Dylan Dreizen, Lulu Feeney, David Guo, Zoe Lewis, and Alexandra Prince. The editors of this site are deeply indebted for everyone for their contributions.