1881-1969
Guide to the Collection
Restrictions on Access
The bulk of the Ellery Sedgwick papers (except photocopies and oversize) is stored offsite and must be requested at least two business days in advance via Portal1791. Researchers needing more than six items from offsite storage should provide additional advance notice. If you have questions about requesting materials from offsite storage, please contact the reference desk at 617-646-0532 or reference@sdtlsw.com.
Abstract
This collection contains papers documenting Ellery Sedgwick's professional career as editor of the Atlantic Monthly magazine, 1908-1938, and his personal and varied associations. The bulk of the papers consists of correspondence with contributing authors and poets, notes, and manuscripts in various forms.
Biographical Sketch
Ellery Sedgwick was born 17 Feb. 1872 in New York City to Henry Dwight Sedgwick and Henrietta (Ellery) Sedgwick. Sedgwick's ancestors, a leading family of Stockbridge, Mass., established a tradition of literary achievement and included authors Catharine Maria Sedgwick and Henry Dwight Sedgwick.
Sedgwick attended the Groton School of Massachusetts, from which he graduated in 1890, and Harvard University. Upon graduation as part of Harvard's Class of 1894, Sedgwick returned to Groton to teach classics for two years. He left the school in 1896 to accept a position as assistant editor at Youth's Companion. In 1900, Sedgwick took over editorship of Leslie's Monthly Magazine, a position he held for four years. He later worked for one year at McClure's Magazine and in 1908 for D. Appleton and Company.
Sedgwick began his career with the Atlantic Monthly in 1908, when he purchased the magazine from Houghton Mifflin. At that time, monthly circulation was 15,000, and the magazine ran an annual deficit of $5,000. Sedgwick worked to reverse the trend, and by 1928, he had increased circulation to 137,000. He has been credited with discovering many writers and with being the first American publisher to print the works of Ernest Hemingway. Sedgwick resigned as editor in 1938 and sold the magazine in 1939. He was recognized for his editorial skills by three academic institutions. Tufts University and Dartmouth College awarded Sedgwick the Litt.D. in 1920 and 1921, and he received the LhD. from Syracuse University.
In 1946, Sedgwick wrote his memoirs, The Happy Profession, and in 1947 published a compilation of his favorite pieces from the Atlantic Monthly, titled Atlantic Harvest. He also edited Novel and Story: A Book of Modern Readings with Harry A. Domincovich, which was published in 1939.
His professional activities were not limited to editing. In 1918, he became vice president and part-owner of Rumford Press, an affiliation he maintained through the 1940s. He also maintained ties to Groton and Harvard as a trustee and served as trustee of the Boston Public Library.
Sedgwick married Mabel Cabot in 1904. They had four children: Ellery, Cabot, Theodora, and Henrietta. Mabel Sedgwick died in 1937. Around that time, Sedgwick also had troubles with his own health. He was bed-ridden with sciatica for a few months in 1938-1939, and he suffered from arthritis. He remarried in 1939 [Isabel] Marjorie Russell, from England. He died 21 Apr. 1960 in Washington, D.C.
Collection Description
The Ellery Sedgwick papers document Sedgwick's career as editor of the Atlantic Monthly magazine from 1908 through his retirement in 1938, as well as other personal and professional activities and relationships during this time and until his death in 1960. Correspondents include relatives, literary figures, politicians, and fellow Harvard alumni.
Papers documenting Sedgwick's editorship of the Atlantic Monthly consist mainly of correspondence, office files on authors, notes, manuscripts in various forms (notes, drafts, proofs, and reprints), royalty statements, stockholders' records, Sedgwick's (and his staff's) carbon letters and replies, clippings, and printed materials. These papers make up more than half of the collection. Included is material related to the writings of Wilma Francis Minor and Opal Whiteley; Al Smith's candidacy for the presidential nomination; and Sedgwick's writings on the Spanish Civil War and his trip to Spain in 1938.
This guide contains two indexes to the correspondence in Series II-V: a Select Correspondent Index and a Select Institutional Affiliation Index.
Arrangement Note
The organization of this collection is based loosely on what is assumed to be Ellery Sedgwick's original working arrangement. The collection has been moved several times and material has been integrated, so original order was impossible to maintain.
The papers are arranged in seven series: Atlantic Monthly general files, Atlantic Monthly special subject files, personal files, professional affiliations, publications, oversize papers, and photocopies.
Acquisition Information
The first donation of Ellery Sedgwick papers to the Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS) was made by Mrs. Marjorie (Russell) Sedgwick in 1967 and consisted of some Atlantic Monthly files, the Spanish Civil War papers, and Sedgwick's records as an overseer of Harvard University. Family letters and more general papers were donated by Mrs. Sedgwick in 1968, but the bulk of the approximately 1,940 letters written to Sedgwick during his editorship were acquired by the MHS. The Atlantic Monthly Press added a box to the collection in 1987, with the remainder of the material coming in small parcels between 1969 and 1989, the last after the death of Sedgwick’s successor, Edward Weeks.
The Atlantic Monthly general files were initially processed as the Ellery Sedgwick papers, a distinct collection. The additions were processed as Ellery Sedgwick papers II, III, IV, V, Mrs. Sedgwick papers, and Additions. All of these collections have now been integrated into one collection.
Restrictions on Access
The bulk of the Ellery Sedgwick papers (except photocopies and oversize) is stored offsite and must be requested at least two business days in advance via Portal1791. Researchers needing more than six items from offsite storage should provide additional advance notice. If you have questions about requesting materials from offsite storage, please contact the reference desk at 617-646-0532 or reference@sdtlsw.com.
Detailed Description of the Collection
The description of Series II-V below includes box and folder numbers used prior to the transfer of the collection to record cartons for offsite storage. These old box and folder numbers have been retained because the Select Correspondent Index and Select Institutional Affiliation Index refer to them. Researchers should use carton and barcode numbers to request materials for retrieval.
I. Atlantic Monthly general files, 1908-1960
Arranged alphabetically.
This series comprises the bulk of the Ellery Sedgwick papers and consists primarily of correspondence, 1908-1960, particularly during the 1920s and 1930s. In addition to correspondence between Sedgwick and authors, agents, and publishers, the files include pamphlets, article reprints, and newspaper clippings, as well as correspondence of Atlantic Monthly staff. Staff members include Mark A. DeWolfe Howe, Edward A. Weeks, Teresa S. Fitzpatrick, MacGregor Jenkins, and Theodore Morrison. (These individuals are not indexed for this series because they worked in an official capacity for the magazine.) This series also contains carbon copies of outgoing correspondence, mostly generated by Sedgwick (which have also not been indexed). A significant portion of the collection consists of correspondence from Atlantic Monthly readers, called "Comments." These are interspersed throughout the files, but are separated from author's correspondence and arranged at the end of each file.
The primarily subject of the correspondence is the publication of articles in the Atlantic Monthly. Many folders contain only a few letters presenting manuscripts. However, there were many authors with whom Sedgwick developed personal relationships and/or whose works were frequently printed in the magazine. Among the authors with whom Sedgwick had extensive correspondence were James Truslow Adams, Mary Antin, L. Adams Beck, Godfrey Rathbone Benson (Lord Charnwood), Gamaliel Bradford, William H. Chamberlin, John Jay Chapman, W. Hans Coudenhove, Mazo de la Roche, Walter D. Edmonds, Felix Frankfurter, Robert Dean Frisbie, John Galsworthy, James Norman Hall, Charles Boardman Hawes, Hudson Hoagland, Albert Kinross, Walter Lippmann, Amy Lowell, William McFee, Margaret Prescott Montague, Samuel Eliot Morison, Edward A. Newton, Albert J. Nock, Charles Nordhoff, Nora Waln Osland-Hill, Arthur Pound, Agnes Repplier, Hilda Rose, Harrison W. Smith, Logan Pearsall Smith, Henry Williamson, Owen Wister, and Hans Zinsser.
Other significant correspondents include Pearl S. Buck, Winston S. Churchill, John Foster Dulles, Rudyard Kipling, Henry Cabot Lodge, Archibald MacLeish, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Carl Sandburg, George Santayana, William H. Taft, Rabindranath Tagore, Wendell L. Wilkie, and Virginia Woolf.
Some of the correspondence in this series has been photocopied for use by researchers and stored onsite at Ms. N-854. See the List of Photocopied Correspondence below.
Adamic, Louis
Adams, Brooks
Adams, James Truslow
Correspondence, undated, 1920-1926
Correspondence, 1927-1954
Comments, undated, 1934-1943, 1966
Addams, Jane
Agassiz, George R.
Aiken, Conrad
Aldrich, Mildred
Alger, George W.
Allen, Annie Winslow
Angell, Norman
Anger, Henry
Antin, Mary
Arliss, George
Arnold, Julian
Asgwith, Hon. H. H.
Atlantic Monthly Almanac
Aydelotte, Frank
Ayer, Fred
Ayscough, John
B., C. C.
Baker, Newton D.
Baldenspage, Fernand
Balfour, Earl Arthur James
Barbour, Thomas
Barrie, James M.
Barry, William Canon D. D.
Baruch, Bernard M.
Bates, H. E.
Beaverbrook, Lord
Beck, L. Adams
Beebe, William
Benit, William Rose
Bennett, Arnold
Benson, Robert Hugh
Bernard, J. H.
Bigelow, John
Bingham, Robert W.
Binyon, Lawrence
Bland, J. O. P.
Bok, E. W.
Bonsal, Stephen
Borah, William E.
Bordeaux, Henry
Boutroux, Em[ile]
Bowen, Catherine Drinker
Bradford, Gamaliel E.
Brent, Charles H. (Bishop)
Bridge, Ann
British Library of Information
Bromfield, Louis
Brookfield, A. M.
Brooks, Van Wyck
Brown, W. G.
Brownell, W. C.
Bryce, James
Buchan, John
Buck, Pearl S.
Bundy, Harvey H.
Burman, Ben Lucien
Burnett Smith, Mrs.
Burroughs, John
Butler, Elias Parker
Bynner, Witter
Byrd, Richard E.
Cabot, Richard C.
Campbell, Cyril
Campbell, Sir John
Canby, Henry S.
Carpenter, W. Boyd
Casson, Stanley
Cather, Willa
Cawein, Madison
Cecil, Lord David
Chamberlin, William Henry
Correspondence, 1924-1944
Comments, A-Z
Chapman, John Jay
Chapman, R. W.
Charnwood, Lord (Godfrey Rathbone Benson)
Chase, Mary Ellen
Cherodame, Andre
Churchill, Winston S.
Clarke, John M.
Clarke, Joseph I. D.
Clay, Lucius D.
Cloud, Dudley H.
Collins, Charles A.
Colum, Padrai
Conant, James Bryant
Connolly, Cyril
Conrad, Joseph
Constable & Co. Ltd.
Conway family
Coolidge, Calvin
Copeland, C. T.
Coppard, A. E.
Cortissoz, Royal
Cotting, Joseph P.
Coudenhove, Hans
Coulerain, Pierre de
Cowden, Roy W.
Cox, Harold
Cozzens, James Gould
Cram, R. A.
Crane, Winthrop Murray
Cromer, Lord
Crosby, Caresse
Crothers, S. M.
Crowninshield, Frank
Curley, James M.
Curtis, Charles P., Jr.
Cushing, Harvey
Daniels, Josephus
Danielson, Richard E.
Dartmouth College
Daudet, Ernest
Davis, John W.
De La Mare, Walter
Deland, Margaret
De La Roche, Mazo
Delbruck, Hans
DeMadariaja, Salvador
Denison, T.
De Selincourt, Ann
DeVoto, Bernard
Dewey, John
Dewey, Stoddard
Dexter, Philip
Dickinson, G. Lowes
Dillon, John
Dillon, Mary
Dimnet, Ernest (M. l'Abbe)
Donald, Malcolm
Douglas, Lloyd
Dowden, Edward
Draper, Ruth
Dreiser, Theodore
Drinkwater, John
Dukes, Jane
Dulles, John Foster
Duncan, Norman
Dunsany, Lord B. (Plunkett, Edward John Moreton Drax)
Durant, Will
Dwight, H. G.
E[cageberg ?], Raphael
Edmonds, Walter D.
Eliot, Charles W.
Ellis, Havelock
Ely, John
Emery, Brooks
Emery, Charles F., Jr.
Ernst, Morris L.
Eucken, Rudolph
Evans, B. Ifor
[F?]
Fabyan, George
Faik, Joseph W.
Ferrero, Frances L.
Ferrero, Gugliemo
Fields, Annie
Finley, John
Fisher, A.
Fisher, Dorothy Canfield
Fitzpatrick, Teresa S.
Flexner, Abraham
Forbes, Waldo
Forster, E. M.
Frankfurter, Felix
Freeman, Douglas S.
Freeman, Lewis
Frisbie, Robert Dean
Frost, Robert
Fuess, Claude
Galsworthy, John
Garland, Hamlin
Garnett, Edward
George, Lloyd
Gibbes, A. Hamilton
Graham, Stephen
Great Britain. Sovereigns. George V
Grew, Joseph
Grey, Viscount of Falladoon
Griffin, Wilfred
Guerard, Albert
Guild, Curtis, Jr.
Haggard, Henry Rider
Haines, William Wister
Haldane, Viscount
Hall, James Norman
Correspondence, 1915-1931
Correspondence, 1932-1939
Correspondence, 1940-1952
Correspondence, 1962-1963, microfilming of
Re: Bounty Collection, Phillips Exeter Academy
Comments, 1921-1942
Hamilton, Edith
Hand, Judge Learned
Harcourt, Alfred
Hardy, Thomas
Hart, B. H. Liddell
Hassam, Childe
Hawes, Charles Boardman
Hayes, Roland
Herbert, A. P.
Herrick, Myron T.
Herter, Christian A.
Heywood, DuBose
Higginson, Henry L.
Higginson, T. W.
Hillyer, Robert
Hilton, James
Hoagland, Hudson
Correspondence, 1924-1927
"Science and the Medium," 1924
Hobhouse, L. T.
Hodges, George
Holman, Alfred
Hoover, Herbert
Hopkins, Gerard
Hotson, Leslie
Houghton Mifflin Co.
House, Edward M.
Household, Geoffrey
Houseman, A. E.
Howard, E.
Howe, E. W.
Howe, Mark Anthony DeWolfe
Howells, William Dean
Hull, Cordell
Husland, Joseph
Huxley, Julian
Inge, W. R.
Jacks, L. P.
James, Henry
James, William
Jenkins, MacGregor "Mac"
Jewett, [Miles?]
Johnston, Mary
Kaneko, Baron K.
Kanton, Mackinlay
Keable, Robert
Keller, Helen
Kennedy, C. R.
Kenyon, L. R.
Key, Ellen
[Kimball, Richard B.?]
King, McKenzie
Kinross, Albert
Kipling, Rudyard
Kittredge, George Lyman
Knox, Frank
Komatsu, Takashi
Konoye, F.
Koszue, Andre
Krock, Arthur
L., T. W.
LaFarge, Christopher
LaFarge, Oliver
LaGallienne, Richard
Lamont, Thomas
Landon, Alf M.
Landon, Walter Savage
Lattimore, Owen and Eleanor
Laughlin, Henry A.
Lavin, Mary
Leacock, Stephen
Lewis, Edward
Lewis, Sinclair
Lewis, W. S.
Lindsay, Nicholas Vachel
Lippmann, Walter
Lockwood, Sally
Lodge, Henry Cabot, Sr.
Lodge, Henry Cabot
Lodge, Oliver
London, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Lothian [Phillip Henry Kerr]
Lowell, Abbott Lawrence
Lowell, Amy
Lucas, E. V.
Ludindorff
Lyautey
Lynd, Robert
L[?], Charles W.
M., E. J.
Macauley, Rose
MacKenzie, Jean K.
McCord, David
McFee, William
McIntyre, Alfred R.
MacLeish, Archibald
[McReynolds, James Clark]
Mansbridge, Albert
Marie, Grand Duchess of Russia
Mariett, Paul
Marshall, Thomas R.
Martin, Edward S.
[Martinenzo?], E.
Masefield, John
Master, Edgar L.
Maurice, F.
Maurois, Andre
Maxim, H.
Mayo, Charles H.
Merrick, Leonard
Merriman, Roger B.
Merton, Thomas James
Meynell, Mrs. Wilfred T.
Miller, Alice Doer
Millis, Olga
Mirman, Leon
Mitchell, S. Weir
Montague, C. E.
Montague, Margaret Prescott
Moore, Merrill
Morgan, Edwin
Morganthau, Henry
Morison, Samuel Eliot
Morlae, E.
Morley, Christopher
Morley, Felix
Morley, Frank V.
Morley, John
Morse, Bernard
Muir, John
Munsterberg, Hugo
Murchie, Guy, Jr.
Murfree, Mary N.
Murray, Gilbert
Nash, Paul
Nathan, Robert
Nevinson, Henry
Nicholson, Meredith
Newbolt, Henry
A. E. Newton Collection of Louis E. Kahn
Newton, A. Edward
Correspondence, 1913-1923
Correspondence, 1924-1933
Correspondence, 1934-1940
Comments, 1920-1931
Comments, 1932-1940
Portion of ms. "Tourist in Spite"
Printed material
Newton, E. Swift (re: A. E. Newton)
Correspondence, 1940-1962
Miscellaneous
Niebuhr, Reinhold
Nock, Albert J.
Correspondence, 1914-1943
Comments, 1930-1936
Pro-German Inquiry Petition (ms.)
"Quest of the Missing Link" (ms.)
"Thoughts of Utopia" (ms.)
"Free Speech and..." (ms.)
"Imposter Terms" (ms.)
"Isaiah's Job" (ms.)
"A Letter from the Tropics" (ms.)
"Bright Isle" (ms.)
"The Oxometer" (ms.)
"A Little Conservative" (ms.)
"If Only--" (ms.)
Nock, Samuel A.
Nordhoff, Charles B.
Northcliffe, Viscount (Harmsworth, Alfred Charles William)
Norton, C. E.
Norton, Eliot
Norton, Richard
Noyes, Alfred
[N]oyen, V.
O'Connor, Frank
Oelwant, Alfred
O'Faolain, Sean
O'Malley, Mary
O'Neill, Eugene
Osland-Hill, Nora Waln
Page, Arthur
Page, Walter
Palmer, Frederick
Palmer, George Herbert
Peabody, Endicott
Pennell, Elizabeth R.
Pennell, Joseph
Perkins, Maxwell
Perry, Bliss
Perry, E.
Pershing, John
Pertain
Phelps, William Lyon
Phillippe, Louis
Phillips, Stephen
Plunkett, Sir Horace
Post, Chandler R.
Pound, Arthur
Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur
Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan
Redfield, William C.
Redlich, Josef
Reinsch, Paul S.
Repplier, Agnes
Rhodes, James
Rich, Everett
Richard, Laura
Riis, Jacob A.
Ripley, William Z.
Ritchie, Anne
Roberts, Kenneth L.
Robertson, J. F.
Robinson, Edward Arlington
Rockefeller, John D., Jr.
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Theodore
Root, Elihu
Rose, Hilda
Royce, Josiah
Royden, A. Maude
Russell, Bertrand
Russell, George "A. E."
Saito, H.
Salmen, Stanley
Saltonstall, Leverett
Salvemini, Gaetano
Sandburg, Carl
Santayana, George
Sargent, C. S.
Saturday Club
Sauter, Viola and Rudolph
Scott, J. R.
Sedgwick, Ellery
Correspondence with professional staff
Miscellaneous correspondence
Miscellaneous notes
Shapley, Harlow
Sharp, Dallas Lore
Sharp, Margery
Shaw, B.
Sheean, Vincent
Sherman, Stuart
Sherwood, Robert
Shute, Henry A.
Sidebithaer, [H.?]
Siegfried, Andre
Simon, Andre L.
Sitwell, Osbert
Skinner, Otis
Smith, Alfred
Smith, Betty
Smith, Harrison W.
Smith, Logan Pearsall
Smith, J. C.
Snowden
Sokolsky, George E.
Southern, Julia M.
Spencer, Theodore
Stettinius, Edward R., Jr.
Storey, Moorfield
Strachey, Lytton
Sullivan, Anne (Macy)
Sullivan, Mark
Sutherland, Lucy
Swing, Raymond
Swope, Herbert Bayard
Symons, Arthur
Taft, John B.
Taft, William H.
Tagore, Rabindranath
Takeda, H.
Tarkington, Booth
Taylor, Francis Henry
Taylor, Henry Osborn
Tennyson, Charles
Terhune, Albert Payson
Thayer, William R.
Thomas, Norman
Thompson, Dorothy (Mrs. Sinclair Lewis)
Thompson, Homer A.
Thompson, W. G.
Torrey, Bradford
Toynbee, Arnold J.
Trevelyan, George Macaulay
Tucker, W. J.
Tweedsmuir
Tyrell, W.
Vail, T. N.
[Vanderbilt?]
Van Doren, Carl and Irita
Van Horne, Sir William
VanderGoltz, Peggy
Wald, L. D.
Wallace, D.
Wallace, Henry A.
Wallas, Graham
Walpole, Hugh
[Warren, Mrs. Fiske]
Washington, Booker T.
Watterson, Henry
Webb, Mary
Webb, Sidney
Weeks, Edward
Wells, H. G.
Wendell, R.
West, Rebecca
Wharton, Edith
White, William Allen
Whitehead, Alfred North
Wilder, Thornton
Williams, Ben Ames
Williams, John Sharp
Williams, R.
Williamson, Henry
Wilkie, Wendell L.
Wilson, Robert Cade
Wilson, Woodrow
Wire, Mary Jerrine [Rupert]
Wister, Owen
Woodberry, G. E.
Woolf, Virginia
Woolcott, Alexander
Woolley, Robert W.
Zangwell, Israel
Zinsser, Hans
Unidentified items
II. Atlantic Monthly special subject files, 1915-1966
Arranged by subject.
This series contains four subseries related to significant incidents during Sedgwick's editorship at the Atlantic Monthly. Wilma Frances Minor and Opal Whiteley submitted unusual material for publication in the magazine, the former regarding love letters of Abraham Lincoln and the latter a childhood diary. Sedgwick supported their stories, despite the controversies they caused. Another controversy raised in the magazine was the Spanish Civil War. Sedgwick's politics and stories he submitted made the Atlantic a forum for debate on the merits of the war. This series also contains papers related to Alfred E. Smith's candidacy for nomination to the U.S. presidency.
Correspondents in this series are listed in the Select Correspondent Index and Select Institutional Affiliation Index below.
A. Wilma Frances Minor, 1928-1960
Arranged chronologically.
In 1928, Wilma Frances Minor, a television interviewer and writer from California, presented Sedgwick with the opportunity to publish the story of a love affair between Abraham Lincoln and Ann Rutledge, based on "original" love letters. Minor entrusted Sedgwick with the letters, from which she planned to write a book serialized in the Atlantic Monthly. Upon publication of the first installment, Lincoln experts questioned the authenticity of the letters. Work on the novel continued while Sedgwick contracted with California detective J. B. Armstrong to research the case. Teresa S. Fitzpatrick of the Atlantic Monthly staff was responsible for supervising the investigation. The letters were proven by experts to be forgeries, and in June 1929, Minor and her mother confessed to having created them. Minor claimed her mother was a psychic and that the spirits of Lincoln and Rutledge had urged her to make their story known.
This subseries is divided into three sections. Carton 13 contains Minor's correspondence with Sedgwick and his staff, as well as their correspondence with others regarding the authenticity of the letters. Sedgwick retained the forgeries, which are filed in Carton 13, along with drafts of Minor's manuscript. Correspondence and reports filed by Armstrong, the detective, and correspondence with Paul Angle, president of the Lincoln Centennial Association, are also located in Carton 13. Cartons 13 and 14 contain comments and inquiries about the story and Sedgwick's research on the letters.
Correspondents of note include Worthington Ford, Wayland A. Morrison, Ida Tarbell, Charles T. and William A. White. Also included is correspondence with representatives from Rumford Press and Little, Brown & Co. regarding publication of Minor's book.
General correspondence, 1928-1929
Misc. materials, misc. ms. notes
Lincoln forgeries, manuscripts, clippings
Detective's reports, comments, 1928-1929 (A-G)
Comments, 1928-1929 (H-Z)-1960
B. Alfred E. Smith / Charles C. Marshall, 1926-1929
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains letters, newspaper clippings, and comments on an open-letter debate between Alfred E. Smith and Charles C. Marshall printed in the Atlantic Monthly in 1927. Included are six parts: general correspondence, Charles C. Marshall correspondence, Alfred E. Smith correspondence, miscellaneous, publicity, and comments.
Charles C. Marshall, a New York attorney, wrote to Smith in 1927 challenging Smith's candidacy as a Democratic nominee for president of the United States. Marshall charged that Smith, a Catholic, would have a conflict of interest which would impede his ability to fulfill the oath of office. Marshall's letter was printed by the Atlantic Monthly, which then became a forum for the controversy raised over a Roman Catholic running for president. Notable correspondents on this issue included Bernard M. Baruch, Felix Frankfurter, Edmund F. Gibbons (the Bishop of Albany), Christian A. Herter, Judge Joseph M. Proskauer, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Lillian D. Wald.
Correspondence, 1926-1929
Publicity materials; comments, 1927-1928
C. Spanish Civil War, 1938-1940
Arranged chronologically by subject.
This subseries consists of one carton of materials related to Sedgwick's interest in the Spanish Civil War, his trip to meet with General Francisco Franco in 1937, and articles written on the war. The correspondence is divided into seven parts, with separate files for Juan de Cardenas, the Spanish Consul; Winthrop Carter, whose son was missing in Spain in 1938; and the Marquis del Moral. Included is general correspondence and material related to trip arrangements. Comments about Sedgwick's politics and his articles were divided into pros and cons. Correspondents include J. Roscoe Drummond, John H. Finley, J. D. M. Ford, W. Cameron Forbes, John A. Gade, and Sumner Welles.
Correspondence, 1938-1940
Letters pro-ES articles,1938-1939
Pamphlets, clippings
D. Opal Whiteley, 1915-1966; bulk, 1918-1929
Arranged chronologically and by subject.
This subseries consists of material related to the publication of Opal Whiteley's book, The Story of Opal, which was serialized in the Atlantic Monthly from March to August 1920 and published later that year by G. P. Putnam's Sons. The story appealed to many people, but provoked questions about the diary's authenticity. Whiteley claimed to be the daughter of Prince Henri D'Orleans, allegedly raised by foster parents in an Oregon lumber camp. Belief in her story was widespread, and she was recognized by her late father's mother, the Duchess de Chartres. Whiteley adopted the family name, calling herself Francoise d'Orleans. She toured India as a princess of that country (where she had lived as a small child with her "real" parents) and was an honored guest of that country's noble families.
Sedgwick spent years corresponding with people who knew Whiteley to verify her story, but never renounced its authenticity. His most extensive correspondence was with Whiteley and Elbert Bede, publisher of Oregon's Cottage Grove Sentinel. Bede was his primary research associate on the project.
Sedgwick's correspondence with Whiteley, Bede, and others about Whiteley's unusual childhood is located in Carton 16. Cartons 16 and 17 contain comments from Atlantic Monthly readers. Other materials in Carton 17 include correspondence between Sedgwick and Barbara Ward of The Economist about a fund established to aid Whiteley, who spent her last years in a mental institution; correspondence with G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1920-1921; correspondence with lawyers of Vanity Fair in 1920; drafts of The Story of Opal; miscellaneous notes regarding the manuscript; notes on Whiteley's biography; and assorted printed materials, including newspaper clippings.
Correspondence, 1918-1945
Comments, 1920-1929
Comments, 1930-1959
Opal Whiteley Fund
G. P. Putnam's Sons
Vanity Fair, 1920
Article, Cottage Grove Sentinel, 5 May 1915
Meeting with Sir Edward Grey
Miscellaneous materials
Miscellaneous printed materials
Miscellaneous biographical materials
Corrections for manuscript, undated
"The Story of Opal" (drafts)
Materials regarding her story
Clippings
III. Personal files, 1881-1969
Arranged alphabetically by individual, institution, or subject.
This series contains personal correspondence of Ellery Sedgwick, primarily dating from his later years at the Atlantic Monthly (1930s) and the first decade of his retirement (1940s), documenting his interests and activities outside of the magazine. Because he established personal relationships with many professional associates, the distinction between personal and professional correspondence is blurred. Papers of individuals for whom there were Atlantic Monthly files were moved to that series, unless the letters were purely personal, in which case they are located here.
The bulk of the correspondence, filed in Cartons 17 and 18, relates to political, literary or personal issues. Sedgwick's professional advice on various topics was sought by many individuals. Also included is correspondence with colleagues regarding membership in various men's clubs. Among Sedgwick's correspondents regarding candidacy to the Century Association were Henry James, Pierre Jay, and Edward Forbes. Sedgwick's own candidacy to England's Athenaeum was supported by nominating letters from John Buchan, William Galsworthy, Elizabeth Haldane, Lord Dunsany, and Henry Newbolt. Sedgwick was also a member of Boston's Wednesday Evening Club.
The series also contains letters of Catharine Maria Sedgwick (1820s) and from C. F. Sedgwick (1879-1880), as well as subject files documenting Ellery Sedgwick's intervention on behalf of foreigners seeking assistance in leaving war-torn Europe. Included in the file "Czechoslovakia" are letters of introduction used by Sedgwick for a 1937 trip to that country, as well as correspondence regarding P. Dobias, a student who sought asylum in the U.S. in 1939. The Harding/Hanfstaengl file contains correspondence about the financial support of Egon Hanfstaengl, a German student at Harvard. Hanfstaengl, a distant cousin of Sedgwick's, was the son of Hitler supporter Ernst Hanfstaengl, who spent World War II incarcerated in various concentration camps in England and Canada.
Also included in this series is correspondence with gardeners, book dealers, wine and cigar dealers, and fund-raisers, as well as invitations to social events. None of these correspondents has been indexed. The series also contains condolences sent to Mrs. Sedgwick after Ellery Sedgwick's death in 1960. Letters of condolence from people for whom Atlantic Monthly files existed were moved to those files.
Carton 19 contains an assortment of materials, including essays written by Sedgwick about countries he visited, such as Greece, Portugal, Sicily, and Spain, as well as his handwritten journals (travel diaries) of trips to Japan and South America between 1918 and 1936. The diaries include addresses of contacts, daily activities, and impressions. These diaries formed the basis for articles Sedgwick later submitted to the Atlantic Monthly. Additional miscellaneous materials in Carton 19 include drafts of a manuscript history of the Field family of Stockbridge, Mass. and notes on word ciphers labeled "William Shakespeare."
Correspondents in this series are listed in the Select Correspondent Index and Select Institutional Affiliation Index below.
A. Correspondence
Adams -- Fuller
Garden Month-by-Month -- G. P. Putnam's Sons
Rand -- Sedgwick
Shattuck -- Y
Quotations
Sedgwick, Ellery, "The American Conundrum"
Greece, writings, 1951
Miscellaneous notes
Portugal, writings, undated, 1950-1954
"The Provencal Adventures of the Aunts of Jesus"
Sicily
Spain
Japan journals, 1930
South America journals, handwritten, typescript, 1923
Travel diaries: 1918, 1934, Japan, 1936
Miscellaneous notebooks
B. Miscellaneous personal files
Field family
William Shakespeare
IV. Professional affiliations, 1898-1959
Arranged by individual institution.
Sedgwick's professional life was not limited to literary associations. As an influential figure in Boston, he served on numerous boards. He was a trustee of the Groton School in Groton, Mass. and the Boston Public Library, as well as an overseer of Harvard University. His wife was appointed by Harvard's Board of Overseers to a special committee to oversee management of the Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain, Mass. Ellery Sedgwick was also a part-owner and vice president of Rumford Press, which printed the Reader's Digest, among other publications. Also included in this series are files from his days as an associate editor at Youth's Companion.
Correspondents in this series are listed in the Select Correspondent Index and Select Institutional Affiliation Index below.
A. Arnold Arboretum, 1949-1959
This subseries includes correspondence, notes, reports, and committee resolutions, apparently kept by Marjorie Russell Sedgwick, who was appointed to the Committee to Visit the Arnold Arboretum by the Harvard Board of Overseers. The Arboretum, established in Jamaica Plain, Mass. in 1880 as a 500-acre park, became Harvard's botanical gardens. The park is administered by Harvard University and the Boston Department of Parks and Recreation.
Mrs. Sedgwick served during a tense period. In 1953, the corporation which had been founded to raise money for the arboretum challenged Harvard University for control. Included are letters from Mrs. Sedgwick and her husband, as well as "A Survey of the Controversy," by Professor Karl Sax.
B. Boston Public Library, 1936-1942
Arranged by correspondent or subject.
This subseries documents Ellery Sedgwick's tenure as trustee of the Boston Public Library. Cartons 20 and 21 contain correspondence and library reports from Milton E. Lord, director of the library. Other significant correspondents include Frank W. Buxton; Wallace B. Donham, dean of the Harvard Business School; Cardinal William O'Connell; John J. Hall, Esquire; and Louis E. Kirstein of Filene's. The subseries also contains reports of the library's Examining Committee, comptroller's reports, budget estimates, personnel reports and staff exams, reports of the Board of Director's meetings, and accountants' reports from the estate of Josiah H. Benton, one of the library's benefactors.
General correspondence, undated, 1938-1942
Benton Bequest, undated, 1937-1941
Boston Library Club
Donham, Dean Wallace
Examinations
Mayor of Boston
Staff (A-R)
Trustees, meetings, memoranda
Buxton, Frank W.
Hall, John L.
Kirstein, Louis E.
O'Connell, William, Cardinal
Papers concerning Milton E. Lord
Undated, 1936-1938
1939-1940
C. Harvard University, 1927-1944
This subseries contains correspondence and reports during Sedgwick's tenure on Harvard University's Board of Overseers and as a member of the Committee on the Classics. Sedgwick was also involved in the university's tercentenary celebration, the reunion of the Class of 1894, and the 1938 Nieman Fellowship awards. The bulk of the correspondence is with other members of the board and the Committee on the Classics, including Philip R. Allen, John Nicholas Brown, W. S. Ferguson, Jerome D. Green, Fred B. Lund, Lewis Perry, W. K. Richardson, George S. Stevenson, Winthrop H. Wade, James P. Warburg, and Charles Warren.
Carton 21 contains Board of Overseers records, general correspondence, and anniversary materials. Cartons 21 and 22 contain correspondence regarding classics at Harvard and class reunions. Carton 22 also contains fellowship awards papers and printed materials.
General correspondence, 1937-1943
Tercentenary
Board of Overseers
1929-1939
1940-1942
Class of 1894, 1944 Reunion
Committee on the Classics
1927-1939
1940-1943
Nieman Fellowships, 1938
Printed materials, 1936-1940
D. Rumford Press, 1933-1945
This subseries consists of correspondence, sales earnings reports, financial statements, and reports for stockholders for Rumford Press of New Hampshire. Sedgwick joined the board of directors in 1918 and was the company's first vice president. He became particularly active in the management of the company, which printed Reader's Digest and the Atlantic Monthly, after his retirement in 1939. Important topics of correspondence include the death of R. P. Weston, company president; the hiring of John G. Gerken as his replacement; and subsequent management problems. His primary correspondents were company presidents John G. Gerken and R. P. Weston and New Hampshire Senator George H. Moses.
Carton 22 contains chronological correspondence files for Gerken, Weston, and Moses. Carton 23 contains general correspondence, correspondence/financial statements, sales and earnings/balance sheets, and prospects (potential printing jobs). Carton 23 also contains correspondence and reports concerning stockholders.
Gerken, John G., 1943-1945
Moses, George H., 1943-1945
Weston, R. P., 1942-1943
General correspondence
Correspondence/financial statements, 1936-1941
Sales & earnings/balance sheets, 1937-1944
Prospects, 1933-1939
Stockholders
1941
1942-1945
E. Groton School, 1944
This subseries contains miscellaneous papers related to trustees and alumni of the Groton School of Groton, Mass., of which Sedgwick was both. He graduated from Groton in 1890, taught there from 1895-1896, and served as trustee from 1909 to 1940. This file contains correspondence from 1944 only. Correspondents include John Crocker and Pierre Jay.
F. Youth's Companion, 1898-1900
This subseries consists of manuscripts submitted to Sedgwick as an assistant editor at the Youth's Companion, where he worked from 1896 to 1900. Correspondents include Eben C. Lamson and George S. Boutwell.
V. Publications, 1946-1947
Arranged chronologically and alphabetically by correspondent.
This series contains materials related to the publication of Sedgwick's two books: The Happy Profession (1946) and Atlantic Harvest (1947). Papers concerning Sedgwick's autobiography, The Happy Profession, located in Carton 24, include the publication contract and correspondence from 1946 to 1948. Correspondence consists mainly of responses to The Happy Profession from people with whom Sedgwick had corresponded during his editorship. Included are letters from George Alger, Henry S. Canby, W. Cameron Forbes, E. M. Forster, Felix Frankfurter, James Norman Hall, Henry James, Thomas Lamont, William McFee, Margaret Prescott Montague, Leverett Saltonstall, and Edward A. Sumner.
Carton 24 also contains miscellaneous correspondence and notes for Atlantic Harvest, a compilation of Sedgwick's favorite articles printed in the Atlantic Monthly. Included are brief biographical sketches Sedgwick wrote about each author represented in his compilation.
Correspondents in this series are listed in the Select Correspondent Index and Select Institutional Affiliation Index below.
Contract for The Happy Profession
Unidentified letters
Comments (A-Z)
Atlantic Harvest, misc. correspondence and notes
Introductory notes
Notes (A-Z)
VI. Oversize papers
STORED ONSITE at Ms. N-854 (oversize).Scrapbook, 1946-1947
This scrapbook contains newspaper clippings about The Happy Profession (1946) and Atlantic Harvest (1947) from a wide variety of major American and English newspapers.
Oversize materials
Included are newspaper clippings about Sedgwick's publications, oversized magazine articles and graphics, and galley proofs removed from the Atlantic Monthly general files.
VII. Photocopies
The final part of this collection consists of five boxes of photocopies (stored onsite) of some of the correspondence in the Atlantic Monthly general files. These photocopies were made prior to the integration of the Ellery Sedgwick papers in the spring of 1989. See the List of Photocopied Correspondence below.
Select Correspondent Index
The following index contains select individuals who corresponded with Ellery Sedgwick, organized by name. See the Select Institutional Affiliation Index below for this information organized by affiliation. The names were taken from Series II-V of the collection and include individuals with whom Sedgwick exchanged a significant amount of correspondence or who had significant institutional affiliations. All members of the Sedgwick family are included. Individuals for whom files exist in Series I (Atlantic Monthly general files) are designated with an asterisk (*) after their names.
This index refers to box and folder numbers used prior to the transfer of the collection to record cartons for offsite storage. Users should refer to the carton and barcode numbers in the Detailed Description above for retrieval.
Name | Institutional Affiliation | Location(s) |
Abbott, Katherine | Boston Public Library | 50.6 |
Adams, Charles Francis* | 42.1 52.11,12 |
|
Adams, Samuel Hopkins | 61.3 | |
Agassiz, George R.* | 52.8,9 | |
Agassiz, Mabel | 42.1 | |
Albee, George | 38 .1 | |
Alden, John | 53.8 | |
Aldrich, William T. | Boston Archdiocese | 61.3 |
Alger, George W.* | 42.13 61.3 |
|
Allen, Francis | 61.3 | |
Allen, Frederick | Harper's Magazine | 61.3 |
Allen, George | 42.1 | |
Allen, Philip R. | Harvard University | 42.1 54.11-13 55.2, 7 |
Allison, Gordon | H. V. Allison and Co. | 42.1 |
Alperin, Ralph | 61.3 | |
Angle, Paul | Lincoln Centennial Association | 34.9-11 |
Appleton, William Sumner | SPNEA | 42.2 |
Armstrong, J. B. | 34.1-7 | |
Ashburn, Frank | Brooks School | 42.2 |
Ashe, James | 34.12 | |
Aswell, Mary Lou (SEE Chamberlain, Mary Lou) | ||
Atkinson, Henry R. | Boston Public Library | 49.9 |
Auchincloss, Hugh | 61.3 | |
Aydelotte, Frank | 55.4 | |
Bacon, Paul V. | Allyn and Bacon | 54.3 |
Badt, Kurt | 42.4 | |
Baker, G. Evert | 39.8, 9 | |
Bangs, Ruth | Stockbridge Library | 45.2 |
Barbour, Thomas* | Wintersnight Club | 45.10 |
Barker, Leslie | 42.4 | |
Barlow, Charles Lowell | 61.4 | |
Barr, Mark | Athenaeum; Century Club | 42.3, 4 |
Barrett, Oliver R. | 34.13 | |
Barton, William E. | 32.8-10 34.15 |
|
Baruch, Bernard M.* | 36.10 | |
Bates, D. M. | 61.4 | |
Bates, Tia | 42.4 | |
Battenberg, M. H. Van H. | 34.16 | |
Baxter, James Phinney | Williams College | 42.4 |
Beach, Thomas, Sir William | 42.5 | |
Bede, Elbert* | Cottage Grove Sentinel | 39.5-35 41.23 61.4 |
Bell, Oliver L. | Rumford Press | 58.5, 6, 9 59.8, 12 |
Bennett, Katherine (Mrs. John) | 42.5 | |
Benson, John Howard | 42.11 | |
Best, Nolan R. | 36.10 | |
Bigelow, Albert F. | 52.12 | |
Bird, Charles Sumner | 42.5 | |
Blake, Harold H. | 58.5-7, 9-10, 16 59.1-9, 13 |
|
Bolton, Charles K. | 42.5 61.4 |
|
Bond, R. T. | Dodd, Mead, and Co. | 42.21 |
Boutwell, George S. | 60.2 | |
Bowra, C. M. | 54.9 | |
Boyden, Albert | 42.6 | |
Bradford, Edith Fiske | 42.6 | |
Bradley, Eleanor C. | 44.25 | |
Bridges, Styles | U.S. Senator (N.H.) | 44.25 |
Brown, John Nicholas | Harvard University | 54.5, 9-10, 19 55.6, 8 |
Brown, Kenneth | 43.6 | |
Brown, Philip | 37.8-9 | |
Bryan, John Stewart | Richmond Newspapers, Inc. | 42.9 |
Buchan, John* | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Bullock, Chandler | 53.8 | |
Burke, W. F. | Bureau of Internal Revenue | 59.11 |
Burlingham, Charles C. | 42.9 | |
Burnett, Earle M. | 42.9 | |
Burr, Allston | 42.9 52.9 54.3, 5 |
|
Buxton, F. W. | Boston Herald; Boston Public Library | 49.15-17 |
Cabot, Frederick P. | 36.11 | |
Cabot, Godfrey | 48.5 | |
Cabot, Henry B. | 39.7-8, 19 | |
Cabot, Philip | 42.10 | |
Cabot, Richard C.* | 39.26, 29-30, 32 40.6 |
|
Cabot, Samuel | General Thomas Club | 37.10 42.10 55.3 |
Cabot, Stephen P. | 42.10 | |
Canby, Henry S.* | 36.11 61.5 |
|
Canfield, Cass | Century Association | 42.12 |
Canfil, Lloyd E. | 42.11 | |
Cardinas, Juan F. de | Spanish Consulate | 37.1-2 |
Carey, Arthur Graham | 42.11 | |
Carlson, Frank | U.S. Congress (KS) | 57.1 |
Carson, Bishop Harry Roberts | 42.11 | |
Carter, John F. | 43.5-6 | |
Carter, Winthrop | 37.3 | |
Castle, W. R. | 52.21 | |
Chamberlain, Mary Lou (Mrs. Thomas Doremus; Mrs. Aswell) | Atlantic Monthly staff | 42.2, 13-14 |
Chase, Adele (Mrs. Lewis Chase) | 42.15 | |
Chase, George H. | Harvard University | 55.8 |
Cheever, David | 61.5 | |
Child, Henrietta | 61.5 | |
Choate, Mabel | 42.15 61.5 |
|
Claflin, William H. | 52.15 53.5 54.19 55.4 |
|
Claflin, Fanny Dwight | Arnold Arboretum | 48.2-3 |
Clark, Grenville | 42.16 48.6-8 |
|
Clark, Henry C. | 52.19 53.7 |
|
Clifford, Robert | 42.16 | |
Cloud, Dudley H.* | 52.18 53.1 |
|
Cole, A. L. | Reader's Digest | 59.9-10 |
Conant, James B.* | Harvard University | 52.2, 4-5, 9, 13, 19, 21 53.1-5, 11 54.11, 15-16 |
Conklin, Edmund S. | University of Oregon | 39.5, 8 |
Connick, Charles | 42.17 | |
Constable, Giles | 44.24 | |
Constable, W. G. | Museum of Fine Arts | 42.17 |
Converse, Florence | 42.17 61.5 |
|
Conway, Martin | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Coolidge, Charles A. | Wintersnight Club | 45.10 |
Cram, Ralph W.* | The Democrat | 45.10 |
Crane, Charles H. | 61.5 | |
Crane, Charles R. | 42.17 | |
Crane, Clinton H. | 53.8 61.5 |
|
Crocker, John | 60.1 | |
Crowninshield, Frank* | 61.5 | |
Cummings, Charles K. | 48.5 | |
Curley, James Michael* | 36.24 | |
Curtis, Charles P.* | 42.18 | |
Curtis, Edith Roelker | 42.18 | |
Curtis, Gladys M. | 42.18 | |
Curtis, Lionel | 42.18 | |
Cutler, Robert | 42.18 61.5 |
|
Daniel Hawthorne | Natural History Magazine | 57.16-17 |
Davis, Fred W. | Rumford Press | 58.2, 5 59.7, 14 |
Davis, Lincoln | 42.20 53.8 |
|
Davis, Orlando C. | Boston Public Library | 49.8-9 |
Denison, Pearl | 42.20 | |
Derby, Richard | 42.20 | |
Dix, John A. | Trinity Church, New York City | 42.20 |
Dixon, James P. | 43.18 | |
Dobias, P. | 42.19 | |
Dodd, Edward H., Jr. | Dodd, Mead, and Co. | 42.21 |
Dodge, Alice R. (Bowditch) | 42.21 | |
Dodge, Robert G. | 48.6 | |
Domincovich, H. A.* | Flying Moose Lodge | 42.21 61.6 |
Donham, Wallace B. | Harvard Business School | 49.6, 9 |
Donnelly, H. | 42.21 | |
Douglas, Lloyd* | 61.6 | |
Douglas, Peggy | 42.21 | |
Dow, Sterling | 55.9-10 | |
Drummond, J. Roscoe | Christian Science Monitor | 37.14 |
Duce, Angel | 42.21 61.1 |
|
Dunsany, Lord* (Edward John Morton Drax Plunkett) | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
d'Utassey, George | 59.3 | |
Dwight, Margaret C. (Mrs. H. W.) | Stockbridge Library | 42.21 45.2 |
Dyer, Henry C. | 53.8 | |
Dyson, Edward | 42.21 | |
Eaton, Walter Pritchard | 61.7 | |
Edgell, G. Harold | Museum of Fine Arts | 42.22 52.10 |
Edwards, Raymond D. | Rumford Press | 58.2-5, 5-6, 8, 11-13 |
Ellery, William | 42.22 | |
Elliott, Ellen | British Workshop | 42.6 |
Embree, Edwin | 42.22 | |
Endicott, William C. | 40.8 | |
Fairbank, Mrs. Kellogg | 42.23 | |
Fales, DeCoursey | 55.5 | |
Farley, J. W. | Arnold Arboretum | 48.2-4 |
Fay, Charles Norman | Harvard '69 | 42.23 |
Feather, William | 42.23 61.8 |
|
Ferguson, W. S. | Harvard University | 52.19 54.18-19 |
Ferry, Ronald M. | Harvard University | 42.23 |
Field, Henriette (Mrs. Edwin T. Rice) | Harvard University | 42.23 |
Finley, John H.* | New York Times | 42.23 |
Finley, John H., Jr. | 52.3, 18 54.1 13, 16-19 55.1-4, 6-7, 9-10 |
|
Fitz, Reginald | 52.3, 13 53.2, 5 |
|
Fitzpatrick, Teresa S.* | 32.12 35.29 |
|
Flanders, Ralph E. | U.S. Senate (VT) | 42.23 |
Foerster, Dr. F. W. | 42.24 | |
Forbes, Allan | United War Fund | 42.24 |
Forbes, Allyn K. | Massachusetts Historical Society | 42.24 43.15 |
Forbes, Amelia | 42.24 | |
Forbes, Edward W. | Century Association; Fogg Museum of Art | 42.1, 12, 24 |
Forbes, Miss Hoima | 42.24 | |
Forbes, Murray | 61.8 | |
Forbes, W. Cameron | 37.9, 11, 14 42.25 61.8 |
|
Forbes, W. Stuart | Rumford Press | 42.25 |
Ford, J. D. M. | 37.13-14, 16 42.26 |
|
Ford, Worthington | 34.24 | |
Forster, E. M.* | 61.8 | |
Foster, Sara E. | New York Herald Tribune | 61.8 |
Frankfurter, Felix* | 36.13, 25 54.11-12 61.8 |
|
Frothingham, Robert | 42.26 | |
Fry, Margery (Mrs. Davis E. Burr) | 42.26 | |
Fukumoto, Fukuichi | 42.26 | |
Gade, John A. | 37.18-19 | |
Gallien, A. Gurnee | Groton School | 58.9 |
Galsworthy, John* | 61.9 | |
Galsworthy, William | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Gardiner, Robert Hallowell | 43.1 | |
Gardner, G. Peabody, Jr. | 52.15 | |
Gerken, John G. | Rumford Press | 56.1-6 59.16 |
Gerte, Albert | 43.1 | |
Gibbons, Bishop Edmund F. | 36.14 | |
Gifford, Mrs. Augustus | 43.2 | |
Gildea, Miss W. B. | 43.2 | |
Goodman, H. Nelson | Goodman-Walker Fine Arts | 43.2 |
Green Robert M. | 54.7 | |
Greene, E. B. | 43.3 | |
Greene, Henry Copley | 36.25 | |
Greene, Jerome D. | Century Association | 42.12 52.2, 8, 12-16, 18-19 53.2-7 54.3-4, 12, 16 55.1, 11-13 |
Greene, Warren | Rumford Press | 58.1 59.4, 7 |
Greenslet, Ferris | Houghton Mifflin | 39.12 61.9 |
Gregory, Ernst | Rumford Press | 57.15-17 58.2-3, 9-11, 13, 16 59.1, 3-5, 7-8, 10-11 |
Grey, Hm. | 44.25 | |
Groot, Roy de | 42.20 | |
Grouitch, Mabel S. | 61.9 | |
Guerrier, Edith | Massachusetts Library Association | 49.9 |
Hackett, Francis | 43.4 61.10 |
|
Haldane, Elizabeth | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Hale, Worth | Harvard Medical School | 43.1 |
Hall, James Norman* | 61.10 | |
Hall, John L. | Boston Public Library | 43.4 49.18 |
Hambuechen, J. W. | 54.8 | |
Hamlen, E. P. | 43.4 | |
Hammond, Mason | 43.4 55.2, 8-9 |
|
Hanc, Josef | Czechoslovakian Consul | 42.19 |
Hand, Augustus N. | 54.13 | |
Hand, Learned* | 52.8 | |
Hanfstaengl, Egon H. | 43.6 | |
Hanfstaengl, Ernst | 43.5-6 | |
Haraszti, Zoltan | Boston Public Library | 49.10 61.10 |
Hard, William | 43.4 | |
Harding, Francis A. | 43.5-6 55.2 |
|
Harris, John G. | 55.10 | |
Hart, Merwin K. | 37.10-12 | |
Haskell, H. J. | 43.7 | |
Hatch, Francis Whiting | 43.7 | |
Hawthorne, John | 43.7 | |
Hawthorne, John J. | 55.3, 8 | |
Hay, Logan | Lincoln Centennial Association | 34.11 |
Hayward, Nathan | 52.7 | |
Heeley, Allan V. | Lawrenceville School | 42.1 |
Hemenway, Harriett L. | 61.10 | |
Henderson, Gerald | Republican Finance Committee | 43.7 |
Hendrick, Burton J. | 61.10 | |
Hensley, Richard G. | Boston Public Library | 43.7 49.11 |
Herter, Christian A.* | 36.16, 25 | |
Higginson, F. L. (Peter) | 43.7 | |
Higginson, F. W. | 43.7 | |
Hill, Edwin C. | CBS | 41.5 |
Hodapp, William C. | Indiana University | 57.19 |
Hodgman, Burns P. | Rumford Press | 57.2, 15-17, 19 |
Hofer, Philip | Harvard University | 43.8 52.4 53.5 55.7 |
Hoffman, Paul | 43.8 | |
Holmes, Henry W. | 52.2, 10, 11 | |
Hopkins, Ernest M. | Dartmouth College | 59.16 |
Hopkinson, Charles | 61.10 | |
Household, Geoffrey* | 61.10 | |
Howe, Mark A. DeWolfe* | Atlantic Monthly staff | 35.2 52.10 61.10 |
Howe, Quincy | 43.8 61.10 |
|
Howe, Wallis E. | 61.10 | |
Howe, William Scott | 43.8 | |
Hudec, Karel | 42.19 | |
Hume, Alison | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | 43.8 |
Huntington, James | 43.8 | |
Jackman, J. R. | Rumford Press | 58.1, 15-16 59.1-6, 9-10, 13-16 |
Jackson, C. N. | 54.4-8, 10-19 55.1-8 |
|
Jackson, Charles | 61.11 | |
Jackson, William A. | 53.8 61.11 |
|
Jaeger, Werner | 55.2, 3, 8 | |
James, Alice | 61.11 | |
James, Frederika | 44.25 | |
James, Henry* | Century Association | 42.12 61.11 |
James, William* | 61.11 | |
Jaros, Ernest S. | 43.9 | |
Jay, N. D. | 43.3 | |
Jay, Pierre | Century Association | 42.12 60.1 |
Jenkins, Herbert L. | Little, Brown and Co. | 35.5 |
Jerreld, William J. | 59.4 | |
Johnson, Alvin | 42.9 | |
Johnson, Owen | 36.26 | |
Johnson, Walter | 43.9 | |
Judkins, Esther | 43.9 | |
Kabayama, Ayske | Japanese Consulate General | 43.10 |
Kawakami, K. K. | 43.10 | |
Keller, Carl T. | 43.11 53.8 |
|
Kellogg, Frederic B. | 43.11 | |
Kelly, John Eoghan | 37.11-12 | |
Kenney, James W. | Boston Public Library | 49.12 |
Kent, H. W. | 44.5 | |
Kerr, Chester | Office of War Information | 43.11 |
Kimball, Fiske | Philadelphia Museum of Art | 43.11 |
King, William MacKenzie | 61.14 | |
Kirstein, Louis E. | Boston Public Library; Filene's Sons Co. | 42.23 49.19 |
Kittredge, G. L. | 55.3 | |
Krock, Arthur* | New York Times | 61.12 |
Kroda, Kiyoshi | 43.11 | |
Krumbhaar, E. B. | 43.11 | |
Kudner, Arthur | 59.3, 4 | |
Kuhn-Leitz, Elsie | 43.11 | |
Lally, Joseph M. | 44.25 | |
Lamont, Thomas* | 52.5 61.12 scrapbook |
|
Lamson, Eben C. | 60.2 | |
Lane, Robert E. | 52.2 | |
Langley, James M. | Concord Daily Monitor | 58.2, 9 |
Lee, George C. | 61.12 | |
Lee, Joseph | 36.17 | |
Lewis, John E. | Rumford Press | 58.2, 3 |
Lewis, Marvin McCord | Reader's Digest | 58.2 |
Lewis, Wilmarth Sheldon "Lefty" | 43.12 44.24 |
|
Lewisohn, Sam A. | 43.12 | |
Lippmann, Walter* | New York Herald Tribune | 52.19 55.11, 12 61.13 |
Littell, Robert | Century Association | 42.12 |
Livingstone, Sir Richard | Corpus Christi College, Oxford | 43.13 54.9, 18 |
Lockwood, John | 44.24 | |
Lockwood, Mrs. John E.; "Netta" (Henrietta Sedgwick) | 43.13 | |
Lockwood, Sally | 43.13 61.13 |
|
Lord, Milton E. | Boston Public Library | 49.8-9,14 50.2-15 51.1-14 |
Lord, Robert H. | 51.5-6 | |
Loring, Charles G. | 43.13 | |
Lowes, Marvin McCord | Reader's Digest | 43.13 |
Luce, Stephen B. | 54.5, 6, 18 | |
Lund, Fred B. | Harvard University | 54.6, 10 55.1, 2 |
Lyman, Theodore | Wintersnight Club | 45.10 |
Lyon, Cecil | 61.13 | |
Lyon, G. | American Embassy, Chile | 43.13 |
MacGregor, Charles D. | 59.6 | |
Mack, Julian W. | 52.8 | |
MacMillan, William | 43.14 | |
Makewell, Lee W. | Youth Today | 58.7 |
Marquand, Christine | 43.14 61.14 |
|
Marquand, John | 44.24 | |
Marsters, A. A. "Buzz" | 61.14 | |
Martin, Edward S.* | 40.14 | |
Martin, George W. | 54.13 61.14 |
|
Marvin, Langdon P. | 53.5 | |
Mathews, William R. | Arizona Daily Star | 43.16 |
Maurice, Sir Frederick | 43.17 | |
Mayer, A. Hyatt | Metropolitan Museum of Art | 43.17 |
McAloney, S. Holt | Story | 57.19 |
McCord, David | 52.2 | |
McCormick, Ada | Letter from America | 43.17 |
McFee, William* | 61.14 | |
McIntyre, Alfred R. | Little, Brown and Co. | 32.13 35.5 39.2 61.14 |
McNamara, John F. | House Beautiful | 32.5 |
McSweeney, Edward | 59.4, 5 | |
Meiklejohn, Peter | Boston City Hospital | 42.5 |
Mencken, Henry L. | 61.15 | |
Merriman, Roger B.* | 52.10 53.1 |
|
Merryweather, George | 43.17 | |
Merz, Charles | Century Association | 42.12 |
Metaxa, Countess Ina | 43.17 | |
Metcalf, K. D. | Harvard University | 52.3, 5 |
Minor, Wilma Frances | 32.1-16 | |
Minot, James | 43.18 44. 24 |
|
Montague, Gilbert H. | 43.18 | |
Montague, Margaret Prescott* | 61.15 62.6 |
|
Moore, Charles | 52.3 | |
Moral, Marquis del | 37.4-5, 14 | |
Morgan, Arthur | 43.18 | |
Morgan, Henry S. | 43.18 52.10-11 |
|
Morrison, Wayland A. | 35.8 | |
Morton, J. M. | 52.9 | |
Moses, George H. | Rumford Press; U.S. Senator (NH) | 56.7-12 58.1-2, 4-12, 16 59.1 |
Murchic, Guy | 61.15 | |
Murray, Mary | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Neill, Esther W. (Mrs. Charles P.) | 61.16 | |
Newbolt, Henry* | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Newton, Caroline | 43.19 | |
Newton, E. Swift | 62.7 | |
Niemeyer, Helen | 43.6 | |
Nock, Arthur | 55.10 | |
Nordhoff, Charles* | 61.22 | |
O'Brien, Robert | 43.19 61.17 |
|
O'Connell, William (Cardinal) | Boston Archdiocese | 49.20 |
Ogilby, R. B. | Trinity College | 54.14 |
Osland-Hill, Nora Waln | 42.19 | |
Owen-Porter, Marion | 43.19 | |
Owens, Olga | Boston Sunday Post | 61.17 |
Page, Arthur | 61.18 | |
Paine, Richard C. | Century Association | 42.12 43.20 |
Paine, Robert Treat II | 43.20 | |
Palmer, Paul | Reader's Digest | 61.18 |
Palmer, Walter W. | Century Association | 42.12 |
Park, Charles F. | First Church in Boston | 43.21 44.24 |
Parkhurst, Lewis | 43.21 | |
Parkman, Francis | St. Mark's School | 43.21 52.11 54.6 |
Parkman, Henry, Jr. | Boston Public Library | 49.8 50.12 |
Patterson, G. A. | Rumford Press | 35.16 |
Patterson, Mary Bonner | 43.22 | |
Peabody, Elizabeth R. | Groton School | 61.18 |
Peabody, Endicott* | 43.22 | |
Peabody, N.J. | Atlantic Publications | 32.6, 8, 11, 14 34.3, 4 |
Peabody, W. Rodman | 55.3 | |
Peare, R. S. | 58.10 | |
Pearson, Thomas | 61.18 | |
Pease, Arthur Stanley | 54.7-8 55.2, 8 |
|
Peattie, Roderick | 43.23 | |
Penick, Margaret H. D. | 43.23 | |
Perkins, John F. | 43.23 | |
Ferry, Bliss* | 43.23 52.10 61.18 |
|
Ferry, James deW. | 52.10 | |
Perry, Lewis | Phillips Exeter Academy | 43.24 44.24 54.5, 10, 17 55.2, 8 61.18 |
Petchey, Arthur J. | Wednesday Evening Club | 45.8 |
Peterson, Carl C. | 36.19 | |
Phillips, Caroline | 43.24 61.18 |
|
Phillips, William | 43.24 | |
Pier, Arthur S. | Saint Paul's School | 43.24 61.18 |
Pierce, Evelyn | 43.25 | |
Plunkett, Edward John Moreton Drax (SEE Dunsany, Lord) | ||
Polk, Frank L. | 43.25 | |
Pound, Arthur | 61.18 | |
Prescott, Kate H. (Mrs. William H.) | 61.18 | |
Price, Lucien | Boston Globe | 43.25 61.18 |
Pringle, Henry F. | 43.6 | |
Proskauer, Joseph M. | 36.19, 27 43.25 |
|
Prouty, Lewis I. | 43.25 | |
Purvis, Donn | Deputy of State, Washington | 61.18 |
Pusey, Nathan | 43.25 48.6 |
|
Putnam, George Haven | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Rand, E. Ken | Harvard University | 44.1 52.2, 5, 9, 18 53.1,6,8 54 .3, 5-9, 11,16-19 55.1-4, 6-9 |
Ratcliffe, S. K. | 61.19 | |
Read, Herbert | 44.1 | |
Reilly, Walter S. | Atlantic Publications | 32.14, 15 |
Richards, Dorothea (Mrs. Ivor) | 44.25 | |
Richards, Henry H. | 61.19 | |
Richards, Ivor A. | Harvard University | 44.2-4, 25 52.4 61.19 |
Richardson, W. K. | Harvard University | 44.5 54.6, 10, 13, 15, 17 55.1, 2, 5, 8 |
Rogers, Alan S. | 44.25 | |
Roosevelt, Franklin D.* | 36.20 | |
Rorimer, James J. | Metropolitan Museum of Art | 44.5, 24 |
Rossitor, W. S. | Rumford Press | 35.16 36.20 |
Rublee, George | 44.3 52.20 61 .19 |
|
Rublee, Juliet Barrett | 44.5 | |
Rublee, Mary Lowell (Mrs. George) | 40.17 | |
Rundlet, Charles T. | Rumford Press | 58.1, 3, 6-11, 16 59.3, 5, 11 |
Russell, Elizabeth | 44.24 | |
Russell, Pamela | 44.6-9A | |
Ryan, James H. | Catholic University | 36.20 |
Sachs, Paul J. | Fogg Art Museum | 52.11 |
Sagendorph, Robb | Yankee | 57.19 |
Saltonstall, Leverett | 52.3, 20 61.20 |
|
Sarton, George | 44.10 | |
Sarton, May | 44.10, 24 | |
Scaife, Roger L. | Little, Brown and Co. | 44.11 57.19 61.20 |
Sedgwick, Alexander C. "Shan" | 44.13, 24, 25 61.20 |
|
Sedgwick, C. F. | 44.14 | |
Sedgwick, Cabot | 44.15 | |
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria | 44.16 | |
Sedgwick, Ellery | 44.17-19 61.20 62.1 |
|
Sedgwick, H. D. | 61.20 | |
Sedgwick, Harold | 61.20 | |
Sedgwick, Helen (Mrs. R. Minturn) | 61.20 | |
Sedgwick, Henrietta "Net" | 44.20, 25 | |
Sedgwick, Henry D. | 44.21 | |
Sedgwick, Hubert M. | 44.23 | |
Sedgwick, Marjorie | 44.24 | |
Sedgwick, R. Minturn | 44.26 57.15 59.16 61.20 |
|
Sedgwick, Sally (Mrs. W. Ellery) | 44.27 61.20 |
|
Sedgwick, Theodore | 44.28 | |
Sedgwick, Theodore, Jr. | 61.20 | |
Sedgwick, W. Ellery | 44.29 | |
Sedgwick, William Ellery | 44.30 | |
Shattuck, George C. | 45.1 | |
Shaw, G. Howland | Century Association | 42.12 |
Shaw, Thomas S. | 45.1 | |
Sheldon, William | 44.24 | |
Shepard, Brooks | 61.20 | |
Shurcliff, Margaret H. (Mrs. Arthur) | Boston Public Library | 51.18 |
Simpson, Gordon | 32.15 34.2, 7 |
|
Smith, Glanville | 61.21 | |
Snyder, D. B. | Atlantic Publications | 45.1 |
Sprague, Albert A. | 52.11 | |
Sprague, Oliver | 53.8 | |
Stearns, Foster | House of Representatives (NH) | 59.2-3, 10, 12-13 |
Steed, William | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Stevenson, George S. | Harvard University | 45.2 54.11, 17 55.2, 8 |
Stokes, Anson Phelps | 36.21 | |
Stone, Marshall H. | 52.20 | |
Stratton, Samuel S. | Middlebury College | 61.21 |
Strong, F. R. | Rumford Press | 57.15, 16 58.2, 3, 11 |
Strong, Mrs. Nelson Edward | 61.21 | |
Sullivan, Mark* | 36.21 53.7 61.21 |
|
Sumner, Edward A. | 45.2, 3 61.21 |
|
Sureto, Henry C. | Century Association | 42.12 |
Swan, Joseph R. | 45.3 61.21 |
|
Swope, Gerard | 61.21 | |
Takaishi, Shingoro | Japanese Embassy | 45.4 |
Takase, Tsuto | Japan Board of Tourist Industry | 45.4 |
Tarbell, Ida | 35.20 | |
Thoby-Marcelin, Philippe | 45.5 | |
Tomita, Kojiro | Museum of Fine Arts | 45.5 |
Tremaine, Morris S. | New York State Comptroller | 36.18 |
Trevelyan, S. M. | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Udal, N. R. | Athenaeum | 42.3 |
Urrutia, Fernando | 37.10 | |
Van Doren, Irita | New York Herald Tribune | 43.7 |
Verduin, Arnold R. | 42.19 | |
Wade, Winthrop | Harvard University | 52.8-10, 12, 13 54 .3 |
Wadsworth, Eliot | Boston Public Library | 50.10 |
Wald, Lillian D.* | 36.1 | |
Walker, Roosevelt | 45.6 | |
Wallace, Dewitt | Reader's Digest | 45.6 59.9 61.23 |
Walsh, Mary R. | 45.6 | |
Wand, Lady Jean | 44.25 | |
Warburg, James P. | Harvard University | 54.11, 15, 17 55.1, 2, 5, 8 |
Ward, Barbara | The Economist | 41.24 |
Warren, Charles | Harvard University | 52.2, 3, 11, 12, 16 53.1 |
Warren, Joseph | 45.6 | |
Washburn, Brad | 44.24 48.7 |
|
Washburn, Henry B. | 44.25 | |
Washburn, Reginald | Rumford Press | 53.8 58.1 59.10 61.23 |
Washburn, Robert | 45.7 | |
Wayman, Dorothy F. | 45.7 | |
Webb, Van | 45.7 | |
Weeks, Edward A. | 32.4 | |
Weeks, Edward A. | 48.2, 3 | |
Welch, Mrs. Richard E. | 44.25 | |
Welles, Sumner | 37.13 | |
Westcott, Marian | 43.2 | |
Weston, R. P. | Rumford Press | 56.13-16 57.6 58.2-4, 6-16 |
Whatmough, Joshua | 55.9 | |
Wheeler, John N. | 37.13, 14 | |
Whicher, George F. | 45.9 | |
White, Eva W. | 49.8 | |
White, William A. | Emporia Gazette | 35.27 |
White, William L. | Gazette | 61.23 |
Whittemore, Lawrence F. | Boston and Maine RR | 59.11-12, 16 |
Whittemore, Louis | 45.9 | |
Whittier, John M. | 52.2 | |
Wigglesworth, Richard B. | 45.5 | |
Williams, Lewis B. | 43.4 | |
Williams, Sydney M. | Harvard University | 52.1-3 |
Wilson, Kenneth | Reader's Digest | 61.23 |
Wilson, Robert Cade | 58.9 61.23 |
|
Windolph, F. Lyman | 45.9 61.23 |
|
Wolcott, Oliver | 48.1, 5 | |
Walcott, Samuel H. | 52.11 | |
Woodworth, Herbert G. | 54.5, 10 | |
Wortham, H. E. | Athenaeum | 45.12 61.23 |
Wyzanski, Charles E., Jr. | 44.24 45.12 |
|
Yamaguchi, H. S. K. | 45.12 | |
Yardley, Arthur W. | 59.2, 4, 10, 12-13 | |
Zuber, Osborn | 55.18 |
Select Institutional Affiliation Index
The following index contains select individuals who corresponded with Ellery Sedgwick, organized by institutional affiliation. See the Select Correspondent Index above for this information organized by name. The names were taken from Series II-V of the collection and include individuals with whom Sedgwick exchanged a significant amount of correspondence or who had significant institutional affiliations. All members of the Sedgwick family are included. Individuals for whom files exist in Series I (Atlantic Monthly general files) are designated with an asterisk (*) after their names.
This index refers to box and folder numbers used prior to the transfer of the collection to record cartons for offsite storage. Users should refer to the carton and barcode numbers in the Detailed Description above for retrieval.
Institutional Affiliation | Name | Location(s) |
Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. | 43.11 | |
Allyn and Bacon | Bacon, Paul V. | 54.3 |
American Embassy, Chile | Lyon, G. | 43.13 |
American Library in Paris (SEE Sumner, Edward A.) | ||
Arizona Daily Star | Mathews, Williams R. | 43.16 |
Arnold Arboretum | Clark, Fanny Dwight (Mrs. Grenville Clark) | 48.2, 3 |
Farley, J. W. | 48.2-4 | |
Athenaeum | 42.3 | |
Barr, Mark | 42.3-4 | |
Buchan, John* | 42.3 | |
Conway, Martin | 42.3 | |
Dunsany, Lord* (Edward John Moeton Drax Plunkett) | 42.3 | |
Galsworthy, William | 42.3 | |
Haldane, Elizabeth | 42.3 | |
Murray, Mary | 42.3 | |
Newbolt, Henry* | 42.3 | |
Putnam, George Haven | 42.3 | |
Steed, William | 42.3 | |
Trevelyan, S. M. | 42.3 | |
Udal, N. R. | 42.3 | |
Wortham, H. E. | 45.12 61.23 |
|
Atlantic Monthly staff | Chamberlain, Mary Lou (Mrs. Thomas Doremus; Mrs. Aswell) | 42.2, 13-14 |
Howe, Mark A. DeWolfe* | 35.2 52.10 61.10 |
|
Atlantic Publications | Peabody, N. J. | 32.6, 8, 11, 14 34.3-4 |
Reilly, Walter S. | 32.14-15 | |
Snyder, D. B. | 45.1 | |
Boston and Maine Railroad | Whittemore, Lawrence F. | 59.11-12, 16 |
Boston Archdiocese | Aldrich, William T. | 61.3 |
O'Connell, William (Cardinal) | 49.20 | |
Boston City Hospital | Meiklejohn, Peter | 42.5 |
Boston Globe | Price, Lucien | 43.25 61.18 |
Boston Herald | Buxton, F. W. | 49.15-17 |
Boston Public Library | Abbott, Katharine | 50.6 |
Atkinson, Henry R. | 49.9 | |
Buxton, F. W. | 49.15-17 | |
Davis, Orlando C. | 49.8-9 | |
Hall, John L. | 43.4 49.18 |
|
Haraszti, Zoltan | 49.10 61.10 |
|
Hensley, Richard G. | 437 49.11 |
|
Kenney, James W. | 49.12 | |
Kirstein, Louis E. | 42.23 49.19 |
|
Lord, Milton E. | 49.8-9, 14 50.2-15 51.1-14 |
|
Parkman, Henry, Jr. | 49.8 50.12 |
|
Shurcliff, Margaret H. (Mrs. Arthur) | 51.15 | |
Wadsworth, Eliot | 50.10 | |
Boston Sunday Post | Owens, Olga | 61.17 |
British Broadcasting Corporation | 42.6 | |
British Workshop | 42.6 | |
Elliott, Ellen | 42.6 | |
Brooks School | Ashburn, Frank | 42.2 |
Brown Brother and Co. (stockbroker) | 42.7-8 | |
Bureau of Internal Revenue | Burke, W. F. | 59.11 |
Catholic University | Ryan, James H. | 36.20 |
CBS | Hill, Edwin C. | 41.5 |
Century Association | 42.12 | |
Barr, Mark | 42.3-4 | |
Canfield, Cass | 42.12 | |
Forbes, Edward W. | 42.1, 12, 24 | |
Greene, Jerome D. | 42.12 52.2, 8, 12-16, 18-19 53.2-7 54.3-4, 12, 16 55.1, 11-13 |
|
James, Henry* | 42.12 61.11 |
|
Jay, Pierre | 42.12 60.1 |
|
Littell, Robert | 42.12 | |
Merz, Charles | 42.12 | |
Paine, Richard C. | 42.12 43.20 |
|
Palmer, Walter W. | 42.12 | |
Shaw, G. Howland | 42.12 | |
Sureto, Henry C. | 42.12 | |
Christian Science Monitor | Drummond, J. Roscoe | 37.14 |
Concord Daily Monitor | Langley, James M. | 58.2, 9 |
Corpus Christi College, Oxford | Livingstone, Sir Richard | 43.13 54.9, 18 |
Cottage Grove Sentinel | Bede, Elbert* | 39.5-35 41.23 61.4 |
Czechoslovakian Consul | Hanc, Josef | 42.19 |
Dartmouth College | Hopkins, Ernest M. | 59.16 |
Democrat, The | Cram, Ralph W.* | 40.6 |
Deputy of State, Washington | Purvis, Donn | 61.18 |
Dodd, Mead and Co. | Bond, R. T. | 42.21 |
Dodd, Edward H., Jr. | 42.21 | |
Doubleday (SEE Theodore Sedgwick) | 42.21 | |
Economist, The | Ward, Barbara | 41.24 |
Emporia Gazette | White, William A. | 35.27 |
Filene's Sons Co. (SEE Kirstein, Louis E.) | ||
First Church in Boston | Park, Charles E. | 43.21 44.24 |
Flying Moose Lodge | Domincovich, H. A.* | 42.21 61.6 |
Fogg Art Museum | Sachs, Paul J. | 52.11 |
Fogg Museum of Art | Forbes, Edward W. | 42.1, 12, 24 |
Forever Amber | 42.26 | |
Forness and Morgan | 42.26 | |
Garden Month by Month | 43.1 | |
Gazette | White, William L. | 61.23 |
General Thomas Club | Cabot, Samuel | 37.10 42.10 55.3 |
Goodman-Walker Fine Arts | Goodman, H. Nelson | 43.2 |
Groton School | Gallien, A. Gurnee | 58.9 |
Peabody, Elizabeth R. | 61.18 | |
H. V. Allison and Co. | Allison, Gordon | 42.1 |
Harper and Brothers Publishers | 35.1 | |
Harper's Magazine | Allen, Frederick | 61.3 |
Harvard '69 | Fay, Charles Norman | 42.23 |
Harvard Business School | Donham, Wallace B. | 49.6, 9 |
Harvard Medical School | Hale, Worth | 43.1 |
Harvard University | Allen, Philip R. | 42.1 54.11-13 55.2, 7 |
Brown, John Nicholas | 54.5, 9-10, 19 55.6, 8 |
|
Chase, George H. | 55.8 | |
Conant, James B.* | 52.2, 4-5, 9, 13, 19, 21 53.1-6, 11 54.11, 15-16 |
|
Ferguson, W. S. | 52.19 54.18-19 |
|
Ferry, Ronald M. | 42.23 | |
Hofer, Philip | 43.8 52.4 53.5 55.7 |
|
Lund, Fred B. | 54.6, 10 55.1-2 |
|
Metcalf, K. D. | 52.3, 5 | |
Rand, E. Ken | 44.1 52.2, 5, 9, 18 53.1, 6, 8 54.3, 5-9, 11, 16-19 55.1-4, 6-9 |
|
Richards, Ivor A. | 44.2-4, 25 52.4 61.19 |
|
Richardson, W. K. | 44.5 54.6, 10, 13, 15, 17 55.1-2, 5, 8 |
|
Stevenson, George S. | 45.2 54.11, 17 55.2, 8 |
|
Wade, Winthrop | 52.8-10, 12-13 54.3 |
|
Warburg, James P. | 54.11, 15, 17 55.1-2, 5, 8 |
|
Warren, Charles | 52.2-3, 11-12, 16 53.1 |
|
Williams, Sydney M. | 52.1-3 | |
Houghton Mifflin | Greenslet, Ferris | 39.12 61.9 |
House Beautiful | McNamara, John F. | 32.5 |
House of Representatives (N.H.) | Stearns, Foster | 59.2-3, 10, 12-13 |
Indiana University | Hodapp, William C. | 57.19 |
Japan Board of Tourist Industry | Takase, Tsuto | 45.4 |
Japan Institute | 43.9 | |
Japanese Consulate General | Kabayama, Ayske | 43.10 |
Japanese Embassy | Takaishi, Shingoro | 45.4 |
Lawrenceville School | Heeley, Allen V. | 42.1 |
Letter from America | McCormick, Ada | 43.17 |
Lincoln Centennial Association | Angle, Paul | 34.9-11 |
Hay, Logan | 34.11 | |
Little, Brown and Co. | 35.5 43.13 |
|
Jenkins, Herbert L. | 35.5 | |
McIntyre, Alfred R. | 32.13 35.5 39.2 61.14 |
|
Scaife, Roger L. | 44.11 57.19 61.20 |
|
MacMillan Co. of Canada | 42.6 | |
Massachusetts Historical Society | Forbes, Allyn K. | 42.24 43.15 |
Massachusetts Library Association | Guerrier, Edith | 49.9 |
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | Hume, Allison | 43.8 |
Metropolitan Museum of Art | Mayer, A. Hyatt | 43.17 |
Rorimer, James J. | 44.5, 24 | |
Middlebury College | Stratton, Samuel S. | 61.21 |
Museum of Fine Arts | Constable, W. G. | 42.17 |
Edgell, G. Harold | 42.22 52.10 |
|
Tomita, Kojiro | 45.5 | |
Natural History Magazine | Daniel, Hawthorne | 57.16-17 |
New York State Comptroller | Tremaine, Morris S. | 36.18 |
New York Times | Finley, John H.* | 37.13-14 |
Krock, Arthur* | 61.12 | |
Nieman Foundation for Journalism | 43.19 | |
New York Herald Tribune | Foster, Sara E. | 52.11 |
Lippmann, Walter* | 52.19 55.11-12 61.13 |
|
Van Doren, Irita | 43.7 | |
Office of War Information | Kerr, Chester | 43.11 |
Philadelphia Museum of Art | Kimball, Fiske | 43.11 |
Phillips Exeter Academy | Perry, Lewis | 43.24 44.24 54.5, 10, 17 55.2, 8 61.18 |
Reader's Digest | Cole, A. L. | 59.9-10 |
Lewis, Marvin McCord | 58.2 | |
Lowes, Marvin McCord | 43.13 | |
Palmer, Paul | 61.18 | |
Wallace, Dewitt | 45.6 59.9 61.23 |
|
Wilson, Kenneth | 61.23 | |
Republican Finance Committee | Henderson, Gerald | 43.7 |
Richmond Newspapers, Inc. | Bryan, John Stewart | 42.9 |
Royal Institute of International Affairs | Curtis, Lionel | 42.18 |
Rumford Press | Bell, Oliver L. | 58.5-6, 9 59.8, 12 |
Davis, Fred W. | 58.2, 5 59.7, 14 |
|
Edwards, Raymond D. | 58.2-3, 5-6, 8, 11-13 | |
Forbes, W. Stuart | 42.25 | |
Gerken, John G. | 56.1-6 59.16 |
|
Greene, Warren | 58.1 59.4, 7 |
|
Gregory, Ernst | 57.15-17 58.2-3, 9-11, 13, 16 59.1, 3-5, 7-8, 10-11 |
|
Hodgman, Burns P. | 57.52, 15-17, 19 | |
Jackman, J. R. | 58.1, 15-16 59.1-6, 9-10, 13-16 |
|
Lewis, John E. | 58.2-3 | |
Moses, George H. | 56.7-12 58.1-2, 4-12, 16 |
|
Patterson, G. A. | 35.16 | |
Rossitor, W. S. | 35.16 36.20 |
|
Rundlet, Charles T. | 58.1, 3, 6-11, 16 59.3, 5, 11 |
|
Strong, F. R. | 57.15-16 58.2-3, 11 |
|
Washburn, Reginald | 53.8 58.1 59.10 31.23 |
|
Weston, R. P. | 56.13-16 57.6 58.2-4, 6-16 |
|
Saint Paul's School | Pier, Arthur S. | 43.24 61.18 |
Spanish Consulate | Cardinas, Juan F. de | 37.1-2 |
SPNEA | Appleton, William Sumner | 42.2 |
St. Mark's School | Parkman, Francis | 43.21 52.11 54.6 |
Stockbridge Library | Bangs, Ruth | 45.2 |
Dwight, Margaret C. (Mrs. H. W.) | 42.21 45.2 |
|
Story | McAloney, S. Holt | 57.19 |
Trinity Church, NYC | Dix, John A. | 42.20 |
Trinity College | Ogilby, R. B. | 54.14 |
U.S. Congress (KS) | Carlson, Frank | 57.1 |
U.S. Congress (NH) | Bridges, Styles | 57.1 |
Moses, George R. | 56.7-12 58.1-2, 4-12, 16 |
|
U.S. Senate (VT) | Flanders, Ralph E. | 42.23 |
United War Fund | Forbes, Allan | 42.24 |
University of Oregon | Conklin, Edmund S. | 39.5, 8 |
Wednesday Evening Club | 45.8 | |
Petchey, Arthur J. | 45.8 | |
Williams College | Baxter, James Phinney | 42.4 |
Wintersnight Club | 45.10-11 | |
Barbour, Thomas* | 45.10 | |
Coolidge, Charles A. | 45.10 | |
Lyman, Theodore | 45.10 | |
Yankee | Sagendorph, Robb | 57.19 |
Youth Today | Makewell, Lee W. | 58.7 |
List of Photocopied Correspondence from General Files
The following is an alphabetical list of correspondents whose letters in the Atlantic Monthly general files have been photocopied and stored onsite at Ms. N-854. Whenever possible, researchers should use the photocopies instead of the original letters. NOTE: This is a select list. These photocopies were made prior to the integration of the Ellery Sedgwick papers in the spring of 1989, so some letters by the individuals listed below may not have been photocopied. Please consult a reference librarian for more information.
Louis Adamic (Clarence Darrow) (4)
Jane Addams (1915-1931) (18)
George R. Agassiz
(1914-1922) (10)
Conrad Aiken (1915) (4)
George Arliss (1922-1923, 1930) (8)
Hon. H.
H. Asquith (1919) (1)
Earl Arthur James Balfour (1922) (1)
Thomas Barbour (1919-1945)
(12)
James M. Barrie (1932) (2)
Bernard M. Baruch (1921-1940) (31)
H. E. Bates
(1929-1945) (10)
Lord Beaverbrook (1924-1928) (3)
William Rose Benet (1915-1934)
(11)
Arnold Bennett (1916-1928) (6)
Louis Bromfield (1924) (1)
Van Wyck Brooks
(1921-1940) (21)
John Buchan (1917-1935) (22)
Pearl Buck (1922-1934) (13)
Harvey H.
Bundy (1928) (2)
Ben Lucien Burman (1926) (3)
Witter Bynner (1922-1934) (6)
Admiral
Richard E. Byrd (1938) (2)
Henry S. Canby (1914-1940) (34)
Willa Cather (1922-1932)
(18)
Lord David Cecil (1932-1938) (9)
John Jay Chapman (1914) (11)
Lord Charnwood
(1918-1941)
Mary Ellen Chase (1920-1930) (33)
Sir Winston Churchill (1914-1917)
(4)
Padraic Colum (1923; 1935-1940) (3)
James Bryant Conant (1935-1940) (6)
Cyril
Connolly (1936) (3)
C. T. Copeland (1915-1935) (8)
A. E. Coppard (1921, 1922, 1924)
(3)
James Gould Cozzens (1920-1925) (4)
Harry & Caresse Crosby (1925) (2)
S. M.
Crothers (1911) (1)
Frank Crowninshield (1915-1931) (20)
James M. Curley (1930-1934)
(4)
Charles P. Curtis, Jr. (1927) (1)
Harvey Cushing (1916-1936) (22)
Richard Ely
Danielson (1920-1922)
Walter De La Mare (1915) (1)
Salvador De Madariage
(1928)
Bernard De Voto (1926) (3)
John Dewey (1921) (2)
Ruth Draper (1932)
(3)
Theodore Dreiser (1919) (2)
John Foster Dulles (1935) (5)
Lord Dunsany
(1919-1957) (43)
Will Durant (1926) (4)
Charles W. Eliot (1915-1925) (31)
Dorothy
Canfield Fisher (1915-1937) (25)
Abraham Flexner (1914-1934) (27)
E. M. Forster (1933)
(1)
Douglas S. Freeman (1935) (5)
Felix Frankfurter (1916-1943) (70)
Robert Frost
(1915, 1916, 1927, 1936) (14)
Claude Fuess (1919-1942) (47)
John Galsworthy (1924-1931)
(12)
Edward Garnett (1914-1917) (16)
A. Hamilton Gibbs (1919-1933) (9)
Joseph Grew
(1933) (1)
Viscount Grey (1919-1920) (4)
Albert Guerard (1922-1933) (19)
Henry Rider
Haggard (1921) (1)
William Wister Haines (1934-1941) (5)
Edith Hamilton (1916-1929)
(9)
Judge Learned Hand (1930) (1)
B. H. Liddell Hart (1925-1933)
Childe Hassam
(1929, 1914) (2)
Roland Hayes (1942) (1)
A. P. Herbert (1927) (6)
Christian A.
Herter (1919-1941) (13)
Heyward DuBose (1921-1931) (12)
Robert Hillyer (1922-1937)
(9)
James Hilton (1934-1942) (16)
Herbert Hoover (1927, 1936-1938) (4)
Gerard
Hopkins (1916) (2)
A. E. Housman (1926) (1)
Mark A. DeWolfe Howe (1915-1945)
(49)
William Dean Howells (1915-1919) (20)
Cordell Hull (1924, 1937, 1939)
(5)
Julian Huxley (1929-1932) (9)
MacKinley Kantor (1935-1936) (4)
McKenzie King
(1919) (1)
Rudyard Kipling (1919) (1) + (7) notes
George Lyman Kittredge (1920-1937)
(11)
Frank Knox (1941) (1)
Christopher LaFarge (1927-1940) (7)
Oliver LaFarge
(1927-1940) (7)
Walter Savage Landor (1924) (2)
Owen and Eleanor Lattimore (1926-1934)
(7)
Mary Lavin (1939-1941) (7)
Stephen Leacock (1919) (2)
Sinclair Lewis (1915,
1936) (3)
Vachel Lindsay (1921-1928) (5)
Walter Lippmann (1918-1939) (43)
Henry
Cabot Lodge, Sr. (1917) (1)
Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (?) (1)
Mr. and Mrs. Jack London
(1916-1917) (6)
A. Lawrence Lowell (1915-1934) (15)
Amy Lowell (1914-1925) (38)
E.
V. Lucas (1918-?) (5)
Rose Macaulay (1938-1944) (16)
David McCord (1922-1932)
(6)
Alfred R. McIntyre (1927-1946) (16)
Archibald McLeish (1917-1935) (11)
John
Masefield (1915-1926) (10)
Andre Naurois (1925, 1931) (4)
Charles Mayo (1924)
(1)
Roger B. Merriman (1937) (1)
Thomas James Merton (1940-1941) (3)
Alice Duer
Miller (1915) (1)
Margaret Prescott Montague
Merrill Moore (inscribes POEMS,
1922-1926)
Henry Morgenthau (1931) (3)
Samuel Eliot Morison (1918-1942)
(23)
Christopher Morley (1915-1944) (35)
Guy Murchie, Jr. (1916, 1930) (2)
Robert
Nathan (1934) (2)
Reinhold Niebuhr (1916-1930) (23)
Eliot Norton (1930, 1932)
(2)
Alfred Noyes (1915, 1921) (2)
Frank O'Connor (1930, 1931) (2)
Alfred Ollivant
(1916) (1)
Eugene O'Neill (1932) (1)
Endicott Peabody (1918, 1931, 1933, 1939)
(4)
Maxwell Perkins (1928-1933) (4)
Bliss Perry (1915-1943) (26)
General John
Pershing (1922) (1)
William Lyon Phelps (1920-1930) (9)
Arthur Pound (1918-1944)
(49)
Chandler R. Post (1925) (1)
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (1931, 1920) (2)
Agnes
Repplier (1914-1938) (86)
Kenneth L. Roberts (1922) (1)
Edward Arlington Robinson
(1915-1929) (13)
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (1915-1933) (14)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(1921-1932) (4)
Theodore Roosevelt (1927) (1)
Hilda Rose (1924-1937)
(several)
Eugene Rosenstock-Huessy
Bertrand Russell (1915-1937) (42)
Leverett
Saltonstall 1932) (1)
Carl Sandburg (1922-1927) (8)
George Santayana (1920)
(1)
Harlow Shapley (1936-1945) (5)
Dallas Lore Sharp (1915-1925) (23)
Margery Sharp
(1928) (2)
Vincent Sheean (1925-1950) (17)
Robert Sherwood (1936) (1)
Andre Sigfried
(1927-?) (18)
Otis Skinner (1922, 1932) (2)
Alfred Smith (1930) (1)
Betty Smith
(1942) (2)
Logan Pearsal Smith (1936-1944) (45)
Julia M. Sothern & E. H. Sothern
(1917) (4)
Theodore Spencer (1932, 1943) (2)
Edward R. Stettinius (1934) (1)
Lytton
Strachey (1918-1929) (3)
Anne Sullivan (Macy) (1933) (1)
William H. Taft (1925-1929)
(5)
Rabindranath Tagore (1929) (3)
Booth Tarkington (1922) (1)
Francis Henry Taylor
(1935) (2)
Albert Payson Terhune (1935) (2)
Norman Thomas (1931) (3)
Dorothy
Thompson (Mrs. Sinclair Lewis) (1918-1937) (13)
Arnold Toynbee (1918-1933) (20)
George
Macaulay Trevelyan (1914-1923) (9)
Carl and Irita Can Doren (8)
Henry A. Wallace (1935)
(2)
Hugh Walpole (1923-1940) (5)
Sidney Webb (1914, 1917, 1922) (3)
H. G. Wells
(undated) (6 signatures)
Rebecca West (1915-1924) (9 signatures)
Edith Wharton (1916,
1933) (5)
William Allen White (1915-1939) (25)
Alfred North Whitehead (1924-1926)
(4)
Thornton Wilder (1934) (1)
Wendell L. Willkie (1937-1941) (4)
Ben Ames Williams
(1926, 1942) (3)
Robert Cade Wilson (1946) (1)
Woodrow Wilson (1921, 1923) (3)
Owen
Wister (1915-1937) (55)
Virginia Woolf (1929-1933) (7)
Alexander Woollcott (1934 and
undated) (2)
Materials Removed from the Collection
Photographs from this collection have been removed to the Ellery Sedgwick photographs, ca. 1900-1942. Photo. Coll. 208.
For a list of printed materials removed from this collection, see Curator of Manuscripts.
Preferred Citation
Ellery Sedgwick papers, Massachusetts Historical Society.
Access Terms
This collection is indexed under the following headings in ABIGAIL, the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should search the catalog using these headings.