5946185http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6737vg9revised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
EnglishVIAFrevised2015-09-22machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-10T00:17:13machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-10T00:17:13humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-19machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonBarton, Ralph, 1891-1931presumedBarton, Ralphpresumed1891-08-141931-05-19Americans
American artist.
From the description of Autograph (3) and typewritten (2) letters signed "R." or "Ralph" : New York, Paris etc., to Anita Loos, [1925] Nov. 7-1926 Apr. 5. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 270621647From the description of Autograph letter signed : on board the S. S. France, to Anita Loos, 1926 Apr. 5. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 767530790From the description of Typed letter signed : New York, to Anita Loos, undated [1925-1926]. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 767531705Bromfield, Louis, 1896-1956.Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961.Hughes, Charles A.Koch, Frederick R.,Loos, Anita, 1893-1981,O'Neill, Eugene, 1888-1953.Pringle, Aileen, 1895-1989.Pringle, Aileen, b. 1895Van Vechten, Carl, 1880-1964Whitney Museum of American Art.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931Ohio State University. Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. Ralph Barton 1891-1931 biographical file.Ohio State University. Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum.Ralph Barton 1891-1931 biographical file.vertical file ; size varies.Biographical file may contain one or more of the following: "Biographical Registry" form filled out by the cartoonist including information about education, career history, awards, signature example, and family information; biographical essays or sketches of the cartoonist; articles by or about the cartoonist; examples of the cartoonist's work in the form of clippings or photocopies. Ohio State University LibrariesHughes, Charles A. Typed letter signed : Detroit, to Ralph Barton, 1925 Dec. 1.Hughes, Charles A.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931,Koch, Frederick R.,Detroit Athletic Club.Typed letter signed : Detroit, to Ralph Barton, 1925 Dec. 1.1 item (1 p.) ; 26.6 cmSaying that he has just read "Gentlemen prefer blondes" wondering whether Anita Loos would consider writing a piece for the Detroit Athletic Club News. Pierpont Morgan Library.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Typed letter signed : New York, to Anita Loos, undated [1925-1926].Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Loos, Anita, 1894-1981.Koch, Frederick R.,Typed letter signed : New York, to Anita Loos, undated [1925-1926].1 item (1 p.) ; 17.1 cmDescribing a "vamp" he met on the voyage and noting his plans to dine with her the following day; saying he is half finished with the drawings (for Gentlemen Prefer Blondes?). Pierpont Morgan Library.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Autograph (3) and typewritten (2) letters signed "R." or "Ralph" : New York, Paris etc., to Anita Loos, [1925] Nov. 7-1926 Apr. 5.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Loos, Anita, 1893-1981,Koch, Frederick R.,Autograph (3) and typewritten (2) letters signed "R." or "Ralph" : New York, Paris etc., to Anita Loos, [1925] Nov. 7-1926 Apr. 5.5 items (9 p.) ; (16mo, 12mo & 8vo)Concerning Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and social affairs, one a mock fan-letter. Pierpont Morgan Library.Bromfield, Louis, 1896-1956. Correspondence, 1924-1946.Bromfield, Louis, 1896-1956.Adams, James Donald, 1891-1968.Allen, Hervey, 1889-1949.Atherton, Gertrude Franklin Horn, 1857-1948.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Buck, Pearl S. (Pearl Sydenstricker), 1892-1973.Ferber, Edna, 1887-1968.Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott), 1896-1940.Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961.Hurst, Fannie, 1889-1968.Lewis, Sinclair, 1885-1951.Mann, Thomas, 1875-1955.Miller, Henry, 1891-1980.Morley, Christopher, 1890-1957.Parrish, Anne, 1888-1957.Peterkin, Julia Mood, 1880-1961.Porter, Cole, 1891-1964.Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972.Stein, Gertrude, 1874-1946.Street, Julian, 1879-1947.Suckow, Ruth, 1892-1960.Toklas, Alice B.Van Loon, Hendrik Willem, 1882-1944.Van Vechten, Carl, 1880-1964.Waugh, Alec, 1898-1981Correspondence, 1924-1946.88 items.Personal and literary letters from: James Donald Adams, Hervey Allen, Gertrude Atherton, Ralph Barton, Pearl S. Buck, Edna Ferber, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Fannie Hurst, Sinclair Lewis, Thomas Mann, Henry Miller, Christopher Morley, Anne Parrish, Julia Mood Peterkin, Cole Porter, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, Julian Street, Ruth Suckow, Alice B. Toklas, Hendrik Willem Van Loon, Carl Van Vechten, Alec Waugh. Ohio State University LibrariesBarton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Artist file : miscellaneous uncataloged material.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Artist file : miscellaneous uncataloged material.1 folder.Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas J. Watson LibraryBarton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Autograph letter signed : on board the S. S. France, to Anita Loos, 1926 Apr. 5.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Loos, Anita, 1894-1981,Koch, Frederick R.,Autograph letter signed : on board the S. S. France, to Anita Loos, 1926 Apr. 5.1 item (3 p.) ; 18 cmThanking her for throwing him a party; describing his fellow passengers on board the S. S. France. Pierpont Morgan Library.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Ralph Barton Artist file.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Whitney Museum of American Art.Ralph Barton Artist file.1 folder.Whitney Museum of American Art, LibraryCarl Van Vechten papers, 1833-1965, 1920-1940Van Vechten, Carl, 1880-1964Carl Van Vechten papers 1833-1965 1920-1940156.3 linear feet (208 boxes, 339 v.)Carl Van Vechten (1880-1964) was a writer, promoter of African-American artists during the Harlem Renaissance, patron of the arts, and photographer. After he graduated from the University of Chicago in 1930, he entered upon a career as a reporter for newspapers that included The American in Chicago and within a few years The New York Times. At the latter he served as an overseas correspondent in Paris and subsequently as an assistant to the music critic Richard Aldrich in New York City. Van Vechten moved to New York City in 1906 with his first wife Anna Elizabeth Snyder, a teacher. After his divorce in 1912, Van Vechten met and married the stage actress Fania Marinoff. Marinoff made her stage debut at the age of eight in a stock company, and eventually developed a successful stage career. Van Vechten's novels include The Blind-Bow Boy, Interpreters and Interpretations, Nigger Heaven, Peter Whiffle, Tiger By the Tail, and The Tattooed Countess. Van Vechten promoted the careers of many authors' works by writing introductions to their monographs. In his second successful career as a photographer, he had the opportunity to photograph, and to have himself photographed, with many literary figures, stage and screen stars and others. Papers reflect Van Vechten's social life and professional career as a writer, photographer and patron of the arts; they also document Van Vechten's literary and artistic circle of friends and colleagues. An avid collector, Van Vechten retained the letters of prominent individuals who corresponded with him including Ralph Barton, James Branch Cabell, Arthur Davidson Ficke, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Donald Gallup, Langston Hughes, Edward Jablonski, Klaus Jonas, James Weldon Johnson, Mabel Dodge Luhan, Bruce Kellner, Saul Mauriber, H. L. Mencken, Georgia O'Keeffe, Alfred Stieglitz, Florine Stettheimer, and Henrietta Stettheimer. Papers are also rich in Van Vechten's photographs of prominent individuals, and in 19th century photographs of his family in Iowa. Multiple editions of Van Vechten's monographs and the monographs of others add to the diversity of the papers. Many of the monographs have been autographed by the author.New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives DivisionEugene O'Neill papers, 1872-1970, 1930-1959O'Neill, Eugene, 1888-1953.Eugene O'Neill papers 1872-1970 1930-1959Total Boxes:
185 (incl. 25 oversize boxes); Other Storage Formats: 7
broadsides, 4 art storage items, cold storage; Linear Feet: 92.60The Eugene O'Neill Papers document the life ofdramatist Eugene O'Neill, especially his life with Carlotta Monterey O'Neillafter 1928. Correspondents include O'Neill's lawyers, Harry Weinberger andWinfield E. Aronberg; his agent, the Richard J. Madden Play Company, Inc.;friends and colleagues; and family members, including his daughter, Oona, hissons, Shane and Eugene, Jr., his third wife, Carlotta, and her daughter,Cynthia Chapman Stram. The collection also contains Carlotta'scorrespondence after O'Neill's death. There is correspondence with her lawyersat Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft and at Nutter, McClennen & Fish; theYale Library system regarding her gift of O'Neill's papers; biographers ofO'Neill; others concerning her work on the production and publication ofO'Neill's plays; and friends and family members. There are also letters fromformer husband Ralph Barton before she married O'Neill. Writings includenotes, outlines and plot summaries, drafts (typescript and holograph), proofs,contracts, programs, and clippings for many of O'Neill's plays. There are somepoems and other writings, as well as his work diaries, in which he documentedhis writing schedule from 1924 to 1943. There are also some works by othersabout O'Neill's life and writing. The personal papers include addressbooks, membership certificates, awards for O'Neill's writing, Carlotta'sdiaries from 1928 to 1964, clippings and ephemera about friends and relatives,and financial material, including cancelled checks and checkbooks. Thephotographs document O'Neill, his family members, friends, colleagues, pets,and places where he lived and visited. Some of the photographs are in albums.There are also photographs of productions of his plays, from 1916 to 1966. Thememorabilia includes office materials, writing tools, jewelry, and locks ofhair, among other items. Artists represented in the collection include CyrusLeroy Baldridge, Miguel Covarrubias, Alfred Joseph Frueh, and Robert EdmondJones. Some of the artworks are portraits of O'Neill; others pertain to hisplays; others were given to, or collected by, the O'Neills. The recordings (allafter O'Neill's death) include three recordings of O'Neill plays and onetribute to O'Neill. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript LibraryBarton, Ralph, 1891-1931. Correspondence with Theodore Dreiser, n.d.Barton, Ralph, 1891-1931.Correspondence with Theodore Dreiser, n.d.2 items (2 leaves).University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt LibraryHemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961. Ernest Hemingway papers [manuscript], 1925-1966.Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961.Armitage, Merle, 1893-1975Beckett, G. Campbell,Bridges, Robert, 1858-1941,Capa, Robert, 1913-1954.Cohen, Barbara A.,Dietrich, MarleneGilfond, M. E.,Gorman, Herbert Sherman, 1893-1954Hemingway, Gregory H. (Gregory Hancock), 1931-2001Hemingway, Patrick,Hemingway, Valerie, 1940-Hotchner, A. E.,Hynan, Patrick.La Follette, Philip Fox, 1897-1965Ingersoll, Ralph, 1900-1985Liveright, Horace Brisbin, 1886-1933,Losey, Joseph,Moorhead, Ethel,Romaine, Paul,Stallman, R. W. (Robert Wooster), 1911-1982Stanton, Frank,Strauss, Charles B.,Viertel, Peter.Walsh, Ernest, 1895-1926,Ernest Hemingway papers [manuscript], 1925-1966.274 items.The collection contains manuscripts of essays, poems, and short stories including "The Dangerous Summer"; a clean carbon of "Green Hills of Africa" typed by Jane Armstrong; and galley proofs of "The old man and the sea," "A Farewell to Arms," and "Death in the Afternoon." The collection also contains the manuscript of a dramatization of "The Snows of Kilimanjaro"; the manuscript of Peter Viertel's screenplay of "The Sun also Rises" with Hemingway's extensive autograph corrections, together with the mimeographed first draft and final script; the transcript of an interview with students in Hailey, Idaho; and page proofs of the original version of "Papa Hemingway." In letters to Ernest Walsh and Ethel Moorhead, Hemingway chiefly discusses publication of "The Undefeated" including printing problems with "This Quarter." He also discusses writing "The Sun also Rises," The Fall of Herriot's Government," a "Tyrolean Walking Tour, and mentions Sylvia Beach, H. L. Mencken, Robert McAlmon, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, and the current French and Italian governments. Correspondence with Horace Liveright discusses the publication of "In our time," including the replacement of a censorable story, sales potential and possibility of favorable reviews. Letters also discuss "The torrents of spring" and its satirization of Sherwood Anderson, and mention James Joyce's "Finnegan's Wake," an appearance in an anthology, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Louis Bromfield, and Ralph Barton. Correspondence between Ralph Ingersoll and Joseph Losey discusses a production of "The fifth column." Letters to A. E. Hotchner discuss work for Cosmopolitan magazine, Italy after World War II, fishing, hunting, bull-fighting and travels in Spain, "Across the River and into the Trees," "Old Man and the Sea," Hotchner's adaptations of Hemingway's work for the theater, and the writing of and events and people in "The dangerous summer" including matadors Antonio Ordóñez and Luis Miguel Dominguín. There are comments on Ingrid Bergman, Malcolm Cowley, Robert Flaherty, Joe Di Maggio and baseball, Ava Gardner, John O'Hara, Ted Patrick, Eric Sevareid, Gary Cooper, Valerie Danby-Smith, Alfred Rice, cock-fighting, sailing, the 1948 election, Korean War, Cuban revolution, Peter Buckley's "Bullfight," business arrangements, health and sobriety, and family. Several letters from Mary Hemingway to Hotchner discuss Hemingway's health and writing as well as her own writing. Individual letters mention hunting in Idaho, Leonard Bernstein, the Cuban revolution, bull fighting and "Death in the Afternoon." Letters to Bronisław Zieli*nski discuss shooting in Idaho, royalties to establish a prize in Poland, health, the Cuban Revolution, short story "Cross Roads," love of Spain, translations and Zieli*nski's PEN prize. Correspondence with Jane and Richard Armstrong concerns the typing of "Green Hills of Africa." The letters also mention John and Katy Dos Passos, Max Perkins, requested photographs of Carlos Gutiérrez rigging baits, work on Cuba, H. L. Woodward, and response of old timers in Kenya to "Green Hills." A letter to Peter Viertel, written on safari in Africa with his wife Mary, mentions a hitch as temporary game ranger, surveying elephants and fish, and flying with Roy Marsch. He writes in more detail about looking "after a leopard who killed 10 goats in one night...."; boxing with native "boys"; and learning to hunt with a spear, giving a list of animals killed to date. He also refers to [movie collaboration?] between Faulkner and Hughes, noting "all the stories I know now are barred farom the screen on acct of miscegenation...." Another letter of interest to Philip La Follette describes the development of characters and incidents in "Across the river and into the trees" and relates an incident from the Battle of the Bulge involving Col. Jim Luckett of the 12th Infantry. Correspondence with Barbara A. Cohen discusses the Caedmon Publishers proposal to do a Hemingway recording. Two letters to bookseller Paul Romaine give permission to reprint a poem in "Salmagundi," respond angrily to Romaine's suggestion that he stop writing about the lost generation and bulls and comment on Thornton Wilder, John Dos Passos, Victor Hugo, Emile Zola, Gustave Flaubert and Stendhal. Additional letters discuss James Joyce, life in Paris, discrepancies between views of critics and readers, criticism by Max Eastman, the long time necesary to learn the writer's trade, bullfighters, being struck by lightning, John Hemingway's World War II service, a postcard of his Key West house, and editorial decisions about "Farewell to Arms." He also responds to collectors, and lists the best three books of 1932. People mentioned include Sidney Franklin, Samuel Goldwyn, and Archibald MacLeish. Additional correspondents include Merle Armitage, Campbell Becket, Robert Bridges, Marlene Dietrich, M. E. Gilfond, Herbert Gorman, Gregory H. Hemingway, Patrick Hemingway, Valerie Danby-Smith Hemingway, R. W. Stallman, Frank Stanton, Charles B. Strauss, and Ernest Walsh. The collection contains photographs of Hemingway, Mary Hemingway and bullfights, including nine by by Robert Capa; a photograph with Myrna Loy, William Powell and Luise Ranier taken on a visit to Paramount Pictures; and miscellaneous photographs from magazines. Many of the photographs were taken with Ava Gardner in Spain during the filming of "For whom the bell tolls." The collection also contains contracts; recordings of readings by Hemingway, including interviews by Patrick Hunan; a water-color portrait of Hemingway; and a record album "A portrait in sound of Ernest Hemingway". The collection also contains circa 100 newsclippings about Hemingway and his work collected by Clifton Waller Barrett. The collection also contains an untitled 16 mm motion picture film (silent, in color) of Hemingway in Cuba. University of Virginia. LibraryAileen Pringle papers, 1887-1970Pringle, Aileen, b. 1895.Aileen Pringle papers 1887-1970Total Boxes: 11; Other Storage Formats: Oversize; Linear Feet: 6.0The Aileen Pringle Papers consist of letters, photographs and personal papers relating to Pringle's career as a silent film actress and her relationship with H. L. Mencken.Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library