Dunn, James Taylor
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Dunn, James Taylor
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Dunn, James Taylor
Dunn, James T.
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Dunn, James T.
Taylor Dunn, James
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Taylor Dunn, James
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Biographical History
James Taylor Dunn was born in St. Paul in 1912, the third and youngest son of Alice Monfort and John Warner Grigg Dunn. He attended Saint Paul Academy from 1921 to 1930 and graduated from the Milford School (Milford, Conn.) in 1932. He pursued his college education at Hamilton College (Clinton, N.Y., 1932-1936).
In 1936, Dunn and his two brothers started Globe, a magazine devoted to "travel, romance, adventure, and world interest." Despite contributions from such well-known authors as Ludwig Bemelmans, Vardis Fisher, Langston Hughes, Harrison Salisbury, William Saroyan, Jesse Stuart, William Carlos Williams, and Ezra Pound, Globe folded in 1938 due to editorial and financial difficulties.
After the demise of Globe, Dunn continued his education, earning a degree in library science from Syracuse University (N.Y.) in 1939. After a brief stint at the University of California at Berkeley, he took positions in the public libraries of Chemung County and Olean, New York.
Dunn's library career was temporarily interrupted by World War II. In 1942, Dunn was inducted into the U.S. Army and served as second and first lieutenant with an antiaircraft battalion in the United States. He went overseas in February 1944 and saw action in England, France, and Germany before returning to the United States in December 1945.
During his military service in Europe, Dunn met Marie-Catherine Bach, a native of Luxembourg. The couple were married in 1946 and settled in Cooperstown, where Dunn resumed his work as head librarian of Olean Public Library and later moved on to the New York State Historical Association. Dunn moved back to Minnesota in 1955, when he became chief librarian at the Minnesota Historical Society, where he worked until his retirement in 1972.
Throughout his life Dunn sustained a deep love for the St. Croix River Valley, inspired, perhaps, by the many happy days spent at the family summer home in Marine on St. Croix (donated to the Science Museum of Minnesota in 1999) during his youth. Like his father, he became dedicated to the protection and preservation of the St. Croix River area, and he served on a number of committees devoted to that purpose. In 1965 he published The St. Croix: Midwest Border River and later published several histories of the town of Marine on St. Croix, along with numerous articles and booklets about the region.
Dunn was an avid genealogist and conducted thorough research on his family history. He took a particular interest in his great aunt, Elizabeth Taylor, an artist and writer who traveled extensively, living for ten years in the remote Faroe Islands. Dunn collected and edited her writings, which he compiled in a volume he titled "Elizabeth and the Far Islands: Ten Years on the Faroes." After a 17-year search for a publisher, the book, now titled The Far Islands and Other Cold Places: Travel Essays of a Victorian Lady, was published by Pogo Press in 1997. Dunn's tenacity was rewarded in 1998 when he received the Minnesota Book Award for Personal Papers.
John Grigg, born in Cornwall, England, joined the Benjamin Johnson Book Sellers firm in 1816, eight years after its founding by Johnson and Benjamin Warner. When Warner died in 1823, Grigg expanded the firm to include publication of medical texts and it became one of the largest publishing firms in Philadelphia. In 1850 Grigg sold the firm to J. B. Lippincott.
Nathaniel Pitt Langford was born in New York state (1832) and came to St. Paul in 1854, entering the banking field. He lived in Montana (1864-1868), and was on the expedition that discovered the Yellowstone Park area (1870). Langford authored two books on the Yellowstone and died in St. Paul in 1911.
Chloe Sweeting Langford was born in New York state (1794); married George Langford (1814), another member of the Langford family; and died in St. Paul (1888). Their daughter Chloe (b. 1821) married James Wickes Taylor.
James Wickes Taylor was born in New York state (1918); graduated from Hamilton College (Clinton, N.Y.); and was a lawyer by profession. He came to St. Paul in 1856 and was appointed U.S. Consul at Winnipeg, Canada (1870), remaining in that position until his death in 1893.
Elizabeth Taylor, daughter of James Wickes Taylor, was born in 1853. She never married, but traveled extensively in Canada and Europe. In the 1880s and the 1890s she made two journeys on the Nipigon and MacKenzie rivers in Canada and visited a number of European countries, residing for a while in England. She also visited Iceland and lived for more than ten years on the Faroe Islands, where she was interned during World War I, finally returning to the U.S. in the 1920s. From that time until her death in 1932, Taylor lived at "Wake Robin," a cabin she had built near Rochester, Vermont. She was an artist and writer, and a number of her descriptive writings were published in outdoor and nature magazines as well as in Atlantic Monthly and Forum.
Charles Junius Monfort was born in 1841 in New York state and came to Minnesota in the early 1860s. After serving as clerk to the paymaster, Department of Dakota, during the Civil War, he operated a grocery business (1867 to the 1880s) and later became the proprietor of the Windsor Hotel in St. Paul. He married Alice Taylor (daughter of James Wickes Taylor and sister of Elizabeth Taylor) in 1871.
Alice Monfort, daughter of Charles and Alice Monfort, was born in St. Paul in 1872. She married John Warner Grigg Dunn in 1902 and the couple had three sons. Alice Monfort died in 1954.
John Warner Grigg Dunn was born in Pennsylvania (1869) and came to Minnesota in the early 1890s. He was a sportsman and authored numerous articles on outdoor life. He was also interested in horticulture and maintained extensive gardens in his homes in St. Paul and Marine on St. Croix. His interest in the St. Croix River Valley prompted him to build a home in Marine. "Pine Needles" became the family summer home and was maintained by family members until 1998, when the property was donated to the Science Museum of Minnesota. Dunn married Alice Monfort in 1902 and had three sons: John Warner Grigg, Jr., Montfort (baptized Monfort), and James Taylor. Dunn died in St. Paul in 1941.
John Warner Grigg Dunn, Jr. ("Jack") was born in St. Paul (1903). He graduated from Stanford University (1929), where he studied journalism, and for three years served in the Merchant Marines. From 1931 to 1933 he traveled extensively in Europe, visiting almost every country. In 1937 he and his two brothers started at travel magazine, Globe, which lasted until 1941. Dunn served in the U.S. Naval Intelligence during World War II and then resumed his travels, mainly in Mexico and other Latin American countries. He authored a number of travel guides to those countries, wrote newspaper articles on them, and lived a part of each year in Mexico. He died in St. Paul in 1975.
Montfort Dunn was born in St. Paul in 1907 and graduated from Yale University in 1930. After studying art in Paris under Amédée-Julien Ozenfant and Louis Marcoussi during the early 1930s, he returned to St. Paul to become art director of Globe magazine. In the 1940s and 1950s, he served as gallery director for the St. Paul Gallery and School of Art and the University Gallery in Minneapolis.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/18562584
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82045052
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n82045052
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eng
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fre
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Subjects
Air defenses
Air defenses
Art schools
Art schools
Women authors
Book industries and trade
Book industries and trade
Universities and colleges
Universities and colleges
Environmental protection
Environmental protection
Students
Students
Exiles' writings
Fishing
Fishing
Gardening
Gardening
Hunting
Hunting
Inventions
Inventions
Journalism
Journalism
Libraries
Libraries
Libraries
Literature publishing
Literature publishing
Manuscript preparation (Authorship)
Maple syrup
Music
Music
National socialism and literature
Outdoor life
Periodicals
Periodicals
Steam power plants
Steam power plants
Tourism
Women travelers
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945
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Art school directors
Editors
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Journalists
Librarians
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Places
Saint Croix River (Wis. and Minn.)
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Marine Mills (Minn.)
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Marine on Saint Croix (Minn.)
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Canada
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Cornwall (England : County)
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Faroe Islands
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Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
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Minnesota--Saint Paul
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Africa, North
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Faroe Islands
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Alaska
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Luxembourg
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Normandy
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Canada
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England
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Irvine Park Neighborhood (Saint Paul, Minn.)
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Luxembourg
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Occupied territories
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New York (State)
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New York (State)--Clinton
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Saint Croix River Valley (Wis. and Minn.)
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Africa, North
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Irvine Park (Saint Paul, Minn.).
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United States
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Alaska
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Minnesota
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