Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968

Variant names

Hide Profile

Merlin was a Hollywood writer, story editor, producer, director, and literary critic.

From the description of Letters to Milton S. Merlin, 1930-1931. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 754872436

Poet and professor of English, Winters joined the faculty of Stanford in 1928; he became a full professor in 1949.

From the description of Yvor Winters papers, 1943-1968. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702129506

American writer and literary critic.

From the description of The lie : typed poem, n.d. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 754866462

Arthur Yvor Winters, poet, literary critic, and editor, was born in Chicago on October 17, 1900. He joined the Stanford University faculty in 1928, completed his Ph.D in 1934, and remained on the Stanford faculty until 1966. Throughout his life, Winters was involved in a variety of literary pursuits. He was married to author Janet Lewis in 1926. Winters died January 25, 1968.

Janet Lewis, poet, novelist, and teacher, was born in Chicago on August 17, 1899. Lewis' numerous publications have included several genres: poetry, historical fiction, children's literature, and librettos. She has taught creative writing and literature courses at Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley.

From the description of Yvor Winters and Janet Lewis papers, 1906-1982. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122510690

Biographical/Historical Sketch

Poet and professor of English, Winters joined the faculty of Stanford in 1928; he became a full professor in 1949.

From the guide to the Yvor Winters papers, 1943-1968, (Department of Special Collections and University Archives)

Biographical Note : Yvor Winters

Yvor Winters was born in Chicago on October 17, 1900, the son of a stockbroker. As a very young child he moved west with his family to California and Washington, returning later to Chicago where he spent three years in high school and four quarters at the University of Chicago.

In his last year of high school he became interested in poetry and by age sixteen he subscribed to Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, edited by Harriet Monroe, the Little Review, and Others, all promoting the new Imagist poetry. At the University of Chicago, from 1917 to 1918, he joined the recently formed Poetry Club through which he met Harriet Monroe, Maurice Lesemann, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, and Glenway Wescott, among others.

A diagnosis of tuberculosis in 1918 cut short his college study, and he went to the drier climate of Santa Fe, New Mexico, for a three-year convalescence. During his enforced rest there, Winters had ample time for reading and correspondence. He sent poetry to Harriet Monroe for publication and continued to correspond with his Poetry Club associates. He also corresponded with Marianne Moore, then working at the New York Public Library, who sent him literary works that she admired.

By 1921 Winters had recovered sufficiently to leave the sanatorium and paid a brief visit to Chicago where he met Janet Lewis, his future wife, at the lodgings of Elizabeth Madox Roberts. The following year Janet Lewis, herself ill with tuberculosis, entered the same sanatorium in Santa Fe that Winters had just left. Winters returned to New Mexico in 1921 to teach school in the coal camps of Madrid and Cerillos, south of Santa Fe. He also published his first books at this time: The Immobile Wind, 1921; and The Magpie's Shadow, 1922. In 1923 he entered the University of Colorado and received his B.A. and M.A. in Romance Languages from the university in 1925. From 1925 to 1927 he taught French and Spanish at the University of Idaho.

Winters married Janet Lewis on June 22, 1926, in Santa Fe, but she was too weak to accompany him back to Idaho; therefore, they were apart for that first year of marriage. In 1927 they moved together to California where Winters entered Stanford as a graduate student and published The Bare Hills. In 1928 he became a full-time instructor in the English Department and started The Gyroscope Group, a dynamic group of young Stanford students who sought Winters' criticism, ideas and friendship. Winters, Janet Lewis, and Howard Baker edited a mimeographed journal, Gyroscope, in 1928-1929, which ran to four numbers. At the same time, he was Western editor of the Hound and Horn, in which, during its last couple of years, some of Winters' best uncollected critical writing may be found. He received his Ph.D. from Stanford in 1934 and stayed on as a permanent faculty member in the English Department, being appointed to the Albert Guerard Professorship in 1962. During his forty years at Stanford, Winters continued to write, teach, edit, translate, and lecture.

One of America's preeminent critics of poetry, Winters began his career as a poet, doing his important work in literary criticism later in his life. His early poetry was written under the influence of Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, and Marianne Moore, among others. An adherent of the balance between reason and emotion in poetry, Winters is highly acclaimed for critical theory which is distinctly individual yet remarkably objective. It is his poetry which provides the strong foundation for his teaching and criticism and which was the most meaningful to him personally.

In 1965 the cancer that eventually led to his death was diagnosed, and the first of two operations was performed. Despite his illness, Winters completed Forms of Discovery in 1966. He died January 25, 1968.

Before he retired in 1966, Winters had taught and influenced many young writers who have since become known and respected in their own right. A partial list includes Steve Berry, Gus Blaisdell, J.V. Cunningham, Catherine Davis, Kenneth Fields, Lee Gerlach, Barbara Gibbs, Albert Guerard, Jr., Charles Gullans, Thom Gunn, Donald Hall, Philip Levine, Edward Loomis, (James McMichael), N. Scott Momaday, Raymond Oliver, Grosvenor E. Powell, Judith Roscoe, Ann Stanford, Don Stanford, Alan Stephens, Helen Pinkerton Trimpi, and Wesley Trimpi.

Yvor Winters' publications include: The Proof, 1930; The Journey, 1931; Before Disaster, 1934; Primitivism and Decadence and Twelve Poets of the Pacific (editor), 1937; Maule's Curse, 1938; Poems (handprinted by his own Gyroscope Press), 1940; The Anatomy of Nonsense and The Giant Weapon, 1943; Edwin Arlington Robinson, 1946; In Defense of Reason and The Brink of Darkness, 1947; Poets of the Pacific, 2nd series (editor), 1949; Collected Poems, 1952; The Function of Criticism, 1957; The Early Poems, 1966; and The Quest for Reality, published in 1969, the year after his death. His publisher, Alan Swallow, became an important and close friend. Winters contributed to almost all the important American literary journals, among the Poetry, Dial, The New Republic, The Hudson Review, the New Mexico Quarterly Review, and Hound and Horn.

Publications about Winters include:

Davis, Dick. Wisdom and Wilderness. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 1983. (Incl. Bibliog.)

Isaacs, Elizabeth. An Introduction to the Poetry of Yvor Winters.

Chicago: Swallow Press, 1981. (Incl. Bibliog.)

McKean, Keith F. The Moral Measure of Literature. Denver:

A. Swallow, 1961.

Powell, Grosvenor. Language as Being in the Poetry of Yvor Winters. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1980.

Sexton, Richard J. The Complex of Yvor Winters' Criticism.

New York, Fordham University. Thesis. 1973.

Powell, Grosvenor, 1932-. Yvor Winters, an annotated bibliography, 1919-1982. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1983.

Biographical Note: Janet Lewis

Janet Lewis was born in Chicago on August 17, 1899, the daughter of Elizabeth Taylor Lewis and Edwin H. Lewis, an English college teacher, novelist, and poet. From her father Janet received her basic education in English prose as well as the background and chief inspiration for her novel The Invasion, a narrative of events concerning the Johnstone family of St. Mary's. The year Janet was born her father built a cabin on an island in the St. Mary's River, at a spot called Sailor's Encampment, between Mackinac and Sault Ste. Marie. It was there the Lewis family spent their summers and there, also, that the grandchildren of the Johnstone family of The Invasion (John Johnstone and his Ojibway wife Neengay) became dear and lasting friends.

Janet Lewis attended Oak Park High School in the prosperous suburb of Chicago, where she wrote for the student publications Trapeze and Tabula, later attended the Lewis Institute, and then entered the University of Chicago as a French major, receiving her Ph.B. in 1920. White at the University, she belonged to the Poetry Club, sponsored chiefly by Robert Morss Lovett, and contributed to Harriet Monroe's Poetry Magazine. Other members of the Club at that time included Maurice Lesemann, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, Yvor Winters, Glenway Wescott (president), Pearl Andelson, Edward Sherry, John Toigo, and Kathleen Foster, among others. Immediately upon graduation she left for Paris where she worked at the U.S. Passport Bureau. On her return to Chicago she was for a short time on the staff of Redbook and she also taught at the Lewis Institute.

Late in 1921 she met Yvor Winters, her future husband, in Chicago, at the lodgings of Elizabeth Madox Roberts. Earlier, not having yet met Lewis, Winters, as secretary of the Poetry Club, sent her notification of admission to the Club on the strength of her poem Freighters. In 1922 her first collection of poetry, Indians in the Woods, was published in Monroe Wheeler's Manikin I. It was also in that year she discovered she had tuberculosis.

In the early fall of 1922 she went to Sunmount Sanatorium in Santa Fe, New Mexico, to tutor a boy, from a wealthy New York family, who had a tubercular knee. She received board and keep as well as the concerned supervision of a doctor there, although she was at that time an arrested case. After one academic year of tutoring her student, she returned to Everens Point on Neebish Island, in the St. Mary's waterway, for the summer, became ill in the autumn, and returned to Sunmount Sanatorium just before Christmas 1923 where she remained until the spring of 1927. While at the sanatorium, she tutored, without compensation, a couple of young boys who were also patients there.

In 1926 she married Yvor Winters in Santa Fe and, upon her release from Sunmount in 1927, they moved to Stanford where she continued to write, combining the role of author with that of wife and mother of two children, Joanna and Daniel. Since the death of her husband in 1968, she has taught writing at Stanford and literature at the University of California in Berkeley. She and her husband had a mutually reinforcing effect on each other's work, sharing many critical standards. Together they gardened, raised goats, bred and showed prize Airedales. These daily life pursuits, together with her wide circle of close friends, provided the rich experience that is reflected in her writing. Janet Lewis still lives in the Los Altos home she and her husband, Yvor Winters, shared for many years.

Among her published works are a children's story, The Friendly Adventure of Ollie Ostrich, 1923; poetry: The Wheel in Midsummer, 1927; The Earth-Bound, 1946; Poems, 1922-1944, 1950; The Ancient Ones, 1979; and Poems Old and New, 1918-1978, 1981; fiction: Against a Darkening Sky, 1943; Good-bye, Son, and Other Stories, 1946; historical fiction, cases of circumstantial evidence: The Wife of Martin Guerre, 1941; The Trial of Sören Qvist, 1947; and The Ghost of Monsieur Scarron, 1959; historical narrative: The Invasion, 1932, and After Father Allouez, 1970; and librettos: The Wife of Martin Guerre, 1958; The Last of the Mohicans, 1976; and The Birthday of the Infanta, 1979. She has also contributed to journals such as Poetry, The Lyric West, The New Republic, This Quarter, and Hound and Horn.

For additional biographical material, see:

Crow, Charles L. Janet Lewis. Western Writers Series, No. 41 Boise, Idaho: Boise State University, 1980. (Bibliography.)

Peck, Ellen McKee. Exploring the Feminine: A Study of Janet Lewis, Ellen Glasgow, Anais Nin and Virginia Woolf. Stanford, Department of English. Ph.D. Thesis. 1974. (Bibliography.)

From the guide to the Yvor Winters and Janet Lewis papers, 1906-1982, (Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Stanford Program for Recordings in Sound audio recordings, 1953-1975 Cecil H. Green Library. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn George and Dolly Miller Crane collection, 1941-2000. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Crane, Hart, 1899-1932. Hart Crane papers, 1926-1930. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Hart Crane Collection, (1910-1972) Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
creatorOf Henderson, Alice Corbin, 1881-1949. Papers, 1861-1987 (bulk 1920-1949). Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
referencedIn Sheehy, Eugene P. (Eugene Paul), 1922-. Papers, 1956-1966. Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University Libraries
referencedIn Witter Bynner papers, 1829-1965. Houghton Library
referencedIn Gioia, Dana. Dana Gioia typed letter, signed, to Matt Phillips, 2000 Dec. 9. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Yvor Winters papers, 1943-1968. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Notebooks for courses with Yvor Winters, 1947-1948 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Poetry (Firm). Poetry : a magazine of verse : records, 1912-1961. University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Guérard, Albert J. (Albert Joseph), 1914-. Albert J. Guérard papers, 1932-1998. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Kathleen Foster Campbell papers, 1924-1992 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
referencedIn J.V. (James Vincent) Cunningham Typescripts of poetry, 1931-1943 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn T. C. Wilson Papers, (1928-1947) Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
referencedIn Burrows, Diane Axelrad. Diane Axelrad Burrows notebooks for courses with Yvor Winters, 1947-1948. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Typed letter signed to Howard Baker, 1966 July 6. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Gresser, Sy, 1926-. Seymour Gresser papers, 1950-1958. University of Connecticut, Homer Babbidge Library
referencedIn American authors collection, 1832-1956. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. The lie : typed poem, n.d. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Stanford, Donald E. (Donald Elwin), 1913-1998. Donald E. Stanford papers, 1865-1998 (bulk 1941-1998). Louisiana State University, LSU Libraries
creatorOf Bogan, Louise, 1897-1970. Papers, 1930-1990 (inclusive), 1930-1970 (bulk). Amherst College
referencedIn Manuscripts and proofs of New Directions books, 1937-1997. Houghton Library
referencedIn John Keith Stewart Papers, 1961-1986, 1959-1981 University of Cincinnati, Archives and Rare Books Library
referencedIn Paterson, John, 1923-,. John Paterson correspondence : Berkeley, Calif., 1961-1962. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Schneider, Isidor, b. 1896. Papers, 1925-1975. Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University Libraries
referencedIn Robert Lowell papers, 1861-1976 (inclusive) 1935-1970 (bulk). Houghton Library
referencedIn Gullans, Charles B. Manuscript notes laid in two poetry books of Yvor Winters, c. 1960-1970. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Wilson, Theodore Carl, 1912-1950. T. C. Wilson Papers (1928-1947). Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
referencedIn Stanford, Donald E., 1913-. Donald Stanford oral history interview, 1992. Louisiana State University, LSU Libraries
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Orpheus [manuscript]. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Conley, John, 1912 Jan. 2-. Papers, 1934-1993. University of California, Los Angeles
creatorOf Sir, Niel. The upper meadows : cycle for a cappella chorus on poems by Yvor Winters / Niel Sir. New York Public Library System, NYPL
creatorOf Yvor Winters papers, 1943-1968 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Stanford, Donald E. (Donald Elwin), 1913-1998. Donald E. Stanford papers, 1933-1985. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Day, A. Grove (Arthur Grove), 1904-1994. Letter to Thomas Parkinson : Honolulu, Hawaii : LS, 1979 May 10. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Alice Corbin Henderson Collection TXRC92-A24., 1861-1987 Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
referencedIn George and Dolly Miller Crane collection, 1941-2000 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Letters : Los Altos, Calif., 1942. Ohio State University Libraries
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Yvor Winters and Janet Lewis papers, 1920-1970. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Lesemann, Maurice, b. 1899. Maurice Lesemann papers, 1918-1986. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Allen, Don Cameron, 1904-. Don Cameron Allen papers, 1948-1972. Johns Hopkins University, Sheridan Libraries and the Milton S. Eisenhower Library
creatorOf Yvor Winters and Janet Lewis papers, Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Moore, Marianne, 1887-1972. General correspondence, 1901-1972. Rosenbach Museum & Library
referencedIn Stanford Program for Recordings in Sound. Stanford Program for Recordings in Sound assorted recordings, 1953-1975. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Isidor Schneider Papers, 1925-1975 Columbia University. Rare Book and Manuscript Library
referencedIn Glenway Wescott papers, 1900-1990 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
creatorOf Crane, Hart, 1899-1932. To Emily Dickinson : ms. S, [undated]. UC Berkeley Libraries
creatorOf Carroll, Donald, 1940-. Donald Carroll letters received from poets, 1959-1969. Pennsylvania State University Libraries
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Letters to Milton S. Merlin, 1930-1931. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Ramsey, Henry. Henry Ramsey papers, 1929-1984. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn John Conley Papers, 1934-1993 University of California, Los Angeles. Library Special Collections.
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Letters to Miss Kawaguchi, 1956 April. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Colt Press. Colt Press records, ca. 1941-1942. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Stafford, Clayton. Clayton Stafford papers, 1911-1981. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Gunn, Thom. Typed letter signed : San Francisco, to Lee Smith, 1988 June 21. Pierpont Morgan Library.
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. History of American literature : notes for lectures and a possible book, ca. 1950-1968. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Combs, Tram, 1924-. Correspondence with Prof. and Mrs. Yvor Winters, 1950-1959. University of California, San Diego, UC San Diego Library; UCSD Library
creatorOf Crane, Hart, 1899-1932. Collection, 1920-1932. North Central College, Oesterle Library
creatorOf Dawson, Mitchell, 1890-1956. Mitchell Dawson papers, 1810-1988. Newberry Library
referencedIn Cunningham, J. V. (James Vincent), 1911-1985. Typescripts of poetry, 1931-1943. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn New Directions Publishing records Houghton Library
creatorOf Winters, Yvor, 1900-1968. Letter to John Paterson : Los Altos, Calif. : LS, 1961 Oct. 1. UC Berkeley Libraries
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Allen, Don Cameron, 1904- person
associatedWith Baker, Howard, 1905-1990. person
associatedWith Bergsma, William, 1921-1994. person
associatedWith Bierce, Ambrose, 1842-1914? person
associatedWith Blackmur, R. P. (Richard P.), 1904-1965. person
associatedWith Blaisdell, Gus. person
associatedWith Bliven, Bruce, 1889-1977. person
associatedWith Bogan, Louise, 1897-1970. person
associatedWith Bowers, Edgar. person
associatedWith Bryant, William Cullen, 1794-1878. person
associatedWith Burrows, Diane Axelrad. person
associatedWith Burrows, Diane Axelrad. person
correspondedWith Bynner, Witter, 1881-1968 person
associatedWith Campbell, Kathleen. person
associatedWith Campbell, Kathleen. person
associatedWith Carroll, Donald, 1940- person
associatedWith Colt Press. corporateBody
associatedWith Combs, Tram, 1924- person
associatedWith Conley, John, 1912 Jan. 2- person
associatedWith Cooper, James Fenimore, 1789-1851. person
associatedWith Crane, Hart, 1899-1932. person
associatedWith Cunningham, J. V. (James Vincent), 1911-1985. person
associatedWith Damon, S. Foster (Samuel Foster), 1893-1971. person
associatedWith Daryush, Elizabeth Bridges. person
associatedWith Dawson, Mitchell, 1890-1956. person
associatedWith Day, A. Grove (Arthur Grove), 1904-1994. person
associatedWith Dwight, Timothy, 1752-1817. person
associatedWith Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882. person
associatedWith FitzGerald, Robert David, 1902- person
associatedWith Gioia, Dana. person
associatedWith Gordon, Caroline, 1895-1981. person
correspondedWith Gresser, Sy, 1926- person
associatedWith Guérard, Albert J. (Albert Joseph), 1914- person
associatedWith Gullans, Charles B. person
associatedWith Gunn, Thom. person
associatedWith Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1804-1864. person
associatedWith Henderson, Alice Corbin, 1881-1949 person
associatedWith Holt, Achilles. person
associatedWith Irving, Washington, 1783-1859. person
associatedWith James, Henry, 1843-1916. person
associatedWith Jones, Richard Foster, 1886- person
associatedWith Kagawa family. family
associatedWith Lamson, David. person
associatedWith Leavis, F. R. (Frank Raymond), 1895-1978. person
associatedWith Lesemann, Maurice, b. 1899. person
associatedWith Lewis, Edwin Herbert. person
associatedWith Lewis, Janet, 1899-1998. person
correspondedWith Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977 person
associatedWith Manzanar War Relocation Center. corporateBody
associatedWith Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728. person
associatedWith Mather, Increase, 1639-1723. person
associatedWith Melville, Herman, 1819-1891. person
associatedWith Merlin, Milton, 1905- person
associatedWith Momaday, N. Scott, 1934- person
associatedWith Moore, Marianne, 1887-1972. person
associatedWith Morris, Wright, 1910-1998. person
associatedWith Motley, John Lothrop, 1814-1877. person
associatedWith New Directions Publishing Corp. corporateBody
associatedWith Olsen, Tillie. person
associatedWith Parkinson, Thomas. person
associatedWith Parkinson, Tom. person
associatedWith Parkman, Francis, 1823-1893. person
associatedWith Paterson, John, 1923- person
associatedWith Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809-1849. person
associatedWith Poetry (Firm) corporateBody
associatedWith Porter, Katherine Anne, 1890-1980. person
associatedWith Prescott, William Hickling, 1796-1859. person
associatedWith Ramsey, Henry. person
associatedWith Rexroth, Kenneth, 1905-1982. person
associatedWith Roberts, Elizabeth Madox, 1881-1941. person
associatedWith Roethke, Theodore, 1908-1963. person
associatedWith Saroyan, William, 1908-1981. person
associatedWith Schneider, Isidor, b. 1896. person
associatedWith Seagrove, Malcolm. person
associatedWith Sheehy, Eugene P. (Eugene Paul), 1922- person
associatedWith Sherry, Pearl Andelson. person
associatedWith Sir, Niel. person
associatedWith Stafford, Clayton. person
associatedWith Stanford, Ann. person
associatedWith Stanford, Donald E., 1913- person
associatedWith Stanford Program for Recordings in Sound. corporateBody
associatedWith Stanford University. Dept. of English corporateBody
associatedWith Stanford University. English Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith Stanford University. English Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith Stewart, Keith (John Keith) person
associatedWith Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896. person
associatedWith Swallow, Alan, 1915-1966. person
associatedWith Tate, Allen, 1899-1979. person
associatedWith Thoreau, Henry David, 1817-1862. person
associatedWith Trimpi, Wesley. person
associatedWith Tule Lake Relocation Center. corporateBody
associatedWith Twain, Mark, 1835-1910. person
associatedWith University of Chicago. Poetry Club. corporateBody
associatedWith Wescott, Glenway, 1901-1987. person
associatedWith Wharton, Edith, 1862-1937. person
associatedWith Whitaker, Virgil K. (Virgil Keeble), 1908- person
associatedWith Williams, John. person
associatedWith Wilson, Theodore Carl, 1912-1950. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Los Altos (Calif.)
Subject
American literature
American literature
American literature
American literature
American literature
Authors, American
Poets, American
Children's literature, American
Concentration camps
Gyroscopes
Japanese Americans
Women
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1900-10-17

Death 1968-01-25

Americans

English

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bc3zz0

Ark ID: w6bc3zz0

SNAC ID: 28165043