Lummis, Charles Fletcher, 1859-1928
Name Entries
person
Lummis, Charles Fletcher, 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles Fletcher, 1859-1928
Lummis, Charles Fletcher
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles Fletcher
Lummis, Charles F. 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles F. 1859-1928
Lummis, Charles F.
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles F.
Charles Fletcher Lummis
Name Components
Name :
Charles Fletcher Lummis
Lummis, Charles Fletcher (American author, photographer, 1859-1928)
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles Fletcher (American author, photographer, 1859-1928)
Lummis, Charles Flechter, 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles Flechter, 1859-1928
Lummis, Charles F. (Charles Fletcher), 1859-1928.
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles F. (Charles Fletcher), 1859-1928.
Charles F. Lummis.
Name Components
Name :
Charles F. Lummis.
Lummis, Charles
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles
Lummis, Charles, 1859-1928.
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles, 1859-1928.
Lummis, Carlos F. 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Carlos F. 1859-1928
Lummis, Charlie 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charlie 1859-1928
Lummis, C. F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, C. F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Lummis, Chas. F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Chas. F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Lummis, Carlos F. 1859-1928 (Carlos Fletcher),
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Carlos F. 1859-1928 (Carlos Fletcher),
L, C. F. 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
L, C. F. 1859-1928
Fletcher Lummis, Charles
Name Components
Name :
Fletcher Lummis, Charles
Lummis, Carlos F.
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Carlos F.
Lummis, Charlie 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charlie 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Lummis, Chas. F. 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Chas. F. 1859-1928
Lummis Carlos Fletcher 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis Carlos Fletcher 1859-1928
Don Carlos 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Don Carlos 1859-1928
Lummis, C. F. 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, C. F. 1859-1928
Fletcher Lummis Charles 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
Fletcher Lummis Charles 1859-1928
Lummis, Charles F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
Name Components
Name :
Lummis, Charles F. 1859-1928 (Charles Fletcher),
C. F. L 1859-1928
Name Components
Name :
C. F. L 1859-1928
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Charles F. Lummis (1859-1928) was born in Lynn, Massachusettts. He became an editor for the Los Angeles Times on February 1, 1884, working for Harrison Gray Otis. He promoted interest in the American Southwest with his photography and articles. Lummis helped found the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles and the School of American Research in Santa Fe. The items from librarian Mary Sarber concern her research of Mr. Lummis' writings.
Lummis was born in MA in 1859; he travelled by foot from Chillicote, OH, to Los Angeles, CA, in 1885; city editor, Los Angeles times; librarian, Los Angeles Public Library, 1905-11; co-founded the Southwest Museum in 1907; founder, the Sequoia League; founder, the Landmarks Club; wrote 17 books on California and the Southwest; editor, Land of sunshine magazine; died in 1928.
Charles Fletcher Lummis was born in Lynn, Massachusetts and attended Harvard College. He began his career as a newspaper editor in Chillicothe, Ohio. Lummis travelled to California by foot in 1884, recording his journey for Colonel Harrison Gray Otis, editor of the Los Angeles Times. During his journey, he developed an appreciation for the physical beauty of the Southwest and its native cultures. When Lummis arrived in Los Angeles, Otis hired him as the newspaper's first City Editor. He went on to edit regional publications, authored numerous books, and founded the Southwest Museum, largely with his own collection of Native American artifacts. Lummis also later served as City Librarian, but he is best known as a prolific author, editor, and activist on behalf of historic preservation. He founded the Landmarks Club, an organization credited with beginning the preservation of California's missions. His home, which he built himself and called El Alisal, is now the headquarters for the Historical Society of Southern California.
Lummis was a journalist noted for his promotion of the American Southwest as a travel destination. He also founded the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles and served as director of the Los Angeles Public Library.
In 1884 Charles Fletcher Lummis was offered a job at a Los Angeles newspaper. He took the job and hiked from Ohio to California writing an account of the trip that became quite popular. Lummis was one of the first advocates for Indian and Hispanic rights, and the preservation of the natural wilderness.
Lummis was an author and photographer of the New Mexican scene. He was a member of the board of the School of American Research and a regent of the Museum of New Mexico.
Charles F. Lummis was a journalist, author, and ethnologist. He was editor of the magazine The land of sunshine (later titled, Out west), founded the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles in 1903, and served as librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library from 1905-10.
Lummis was editor of The Land of Sunshine.
Charles Fletcher Lummis explored and documented the cultures and histories of Spanish California and the Southwest through his writings and photography from 1884 until his death in 1928. He resided in Los Angeles for most of his life and influenced Southern California as city editor of the Los Angeles Daily Times, city librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library, and an advocate of Native American rights. He gained fame in 1884 during his "tramp across America," when he walked from Ohio to California, dispatching newspaper articles about his adventures and gaining respect for the Southwest and its people as he went. He wrote numerous books, reported on the injustices committed against Native Americans, battled to have Native American children released from government schools and returned to their families, advised President Theodore Roosevelt on "Indian affairs," and established the Sequoya League to defend Native American rights. Lummis also photographed and explored the Southwest, Mexico, Central America, and South America, collecting artifacts along the way. He also collected Native American and Spanish folktales and recorded many traditional songs on wax cylinders. He founded the Southwest Museum in Los Angles to share his collections with the public and established the Landmarks Club to restore the old Spanish missions. Lummis' campaigns and editorials in favor of preserving Native American and Spanish culture were unusual for the time and often generated great debate.
C.F. Lummis was an anthropologist, writer, photographer, an editor of the Los Angeles Times, and of "Land of Sunshine" and "Out West" magazines. He was the City Librarian for Los Angeles Public Library, and founder of the Southwest Museum. During his career he established the Landmarks Club "to preserve California Missions"; the Sequoya League "to preserve the rights of the Native Americans"; and the Southwest Society "to preserve our archaeological heritage", a chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America, the predecessor of the Southwest Museum.
American author, editor, librarian, promoter of the Southwest.
American author, editor, librarian, and promoter of the Southwest.
Lummis was a noted historian and librarian.
Biography
Lummis was born in Massachusetts in 1859; he travelled by foot from Chillicote, Ohio, to Los Angeles, California, in 1885; city editor, Los Angeles Times ; librarian, Los Angeles Public Library, 1905-11; co-founded the Southwest Museum in 1907; founder, the Sequoia League; founder, the Landmarks Club; wrote 17 books on California and the Southwest; editor, Land of Sunshine magazine; died in 1928.
Biography / Administrative History
The Gamut Club was founded in 1904 by L.E. Behymer and a group of Los Angeles musicians. The membership of this musical society was exclusively male and its objective, as described by their librarian Ben F. Field in 1918, was "brotherhood, assistance to the musical fraternity, and the uplifting of the art." Shortly afterwards, the Club broadened the scope of its activities by including other types of artists such as writers, painters, sculptors, filmmakers, and actors. According to the 1912 Gamut Club yearbook, the Club continued to expand its society by adding "business and professional men of artistic tastes and talents." The Gamet Club building was located on 1044 South Hope Street in Los Angeles and built to meet the needs of their artistic clientele. Their building included a 668 seat theatre, music and banquet room, and artists studios. Charles Fletcher Lummis was a member of the Gamut Club and in 1924 they held a fiesta in his honor. The Club described Lummis as "our most distinguished member."
Biographical/Historical note
Dr. Joseph Amasa Munk was born on November 9, 1847 in North Georgetown, Ohio. He joined up with the Union Army from 1864-1865 and fought in the Civil War. When the war was over, he attended Mt. Union College in Ohio from 1865-1866 and then the Eclectic Medical Institute of Cincinnati, graduating in 1869. While attending Mt. Union College, he met Emma S. Beazell, and they married in 1873. While in school, Munk also enjoyed learning to read and sing music, a hobby he continued on into the 1870s. By the time he published a book of his own compositions, he was the organist and choir leader of his church.
Munk was living in Topeka, Kansas in 1884 when he made his first trip to Arizona to visit his brothers Edward and William on their cattle ranch. He came away from the trip so fascinated by Arizona that he set out to collect every publication he could find on the subject. He wrote articles about Arizona and the Southwest which were published in the same medical journals as his writings on medical topics. In 1892, Munk and his family moved to Los Angeles, where Munk was dean of the California Eclectic Medical College from 1907-1915 and president of the National Eclectic Medical Association in 1910.
About ten years after reaching Los Angeles, Munk decided to open his collection of books to the public and began to seek out a fitting repository. While Arizona was the obvious choice, it was still just finding its footing as a state. Munk’s concerns of access, custodianship, and the lack of a fireproof building led him to decide not to donate the collection to the state of Arizona. Munk kept searching for the proper home for his collection and discussed this with his friend Charles Fletcher Lummis. They shared a concern for the fragility of the Southwestern lifestyle and the desire to preserve its culture.
In 1903, Munk joined Lummis’s newly established local branch of the Archaeological Institute of America, whose ultimate goal was to create the Southwest Museum. In 1907, the Southwest Museum was incorporated into being, and Munk was elected to the Board of Trustees. In 1910, Munk donated his collection, which Lummis named the Munk Library of Arizoniana, to the Southwest Museum. After the University of Arizona built its own fireproof library in 1923, a bid was made to obtain the Munk Library of Arizoniana from the Southwest Museum. The request was denied, so Munk sent all of his collection's duplicates to the university instead. Munk continued to visit his library housed at the Southwest Museum up until his death on December 3, 1927.
Biography / Administrative History
Paul De Longpre was born in 1855 in Lyons, France and died in 1911. He was a self taught painter who moved to New York in 1880 and then to California in 1899. The home he built in Hollywood, California became to be celebrated for its magnificent flower gardens. Among his most famous paintings are "Double Peach Blossoms" and "White Fringed Poppies" (1902).
Historical Background
Biography
Charles Fletcher Lummis explored and documented the cultures and histories of Spanish California and the Southwest through his writings and photography from 1884 until his death in 1928. He resided in Los Angeles for most of his life and influenced Southern California as city editor of the Los Angeles Daily Times, city librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library, and an advocate of Native American rights. He gained fame in 1884 during his "tramp across America," when he walked from Ohio to California, dispatching newspaper articles about his adventures and gaining respect for the Southwest and its people as he went. He wrote numerous books, reported on the injustices committed against Native Americans, battled to have Native American children released from government schools and returned to their families, advised President Theodore Roosevelt on "Indian affairs," and established the Sequoya League to defend Native American rights. Lummis also photographed and explored the Southwest, Mexico, Central America, and South America, collecting artifacts along the way. He also collected Native American and Spanish folktales and recorded many traditional songs on wax cylinders. He founded the Southwest Museum in Los Angles to share his collections with the public and established the Landmarks Club to restore the old Spanish missions. Lummis' campaigns and editorials in favor of preserving Native American and Spanish culture were unusual for the time and often generated great debate.
Lummis also positively affected the community of Los Angeles during his controversial tenure as city librarian. In 1905 veteran librarian Mary L. Jones was fired (without apparent justification) from her job as city librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) and replaced by Lummis, who was a popular figure, but had no library experience. In 1910, during a very public scandal surrounding his second divorce, Lummis was accused of neglecting his duties and was forced to resign his position. In spite of his stormy career as librarian, Lummis' contributions to the community were significant. He insisted on equal access to library materials for all people regardless of their social or economic standing, instituted entrance exams for library employees in an effort to establish fair hiring practices, and lobbied to increase salaries for library employees. Lummis also boosted the popularity of the library, built a collection of contemporary biographies and autographs, instituted the branding of books to prevent theft, improved children's services, and moved the main library to a better facility.
Lummis' personal life was as turbulent as his professional life. His mother died when he was young and his father remarried. He grew up with one sister, three half sisters, and one half-brother. He was married and divorced three times. He fathered one child before he was married and later had four children with his second wife, Eve. He received his early education from his father, Reverend Henry Lummis, and later attended Harvard. While at Harvard, he worked summers in the print shop of a resort in New Hampshire, where he printed and sold his first work, Birch Bark Poems . In spite of his demonstrated intelligence, Lummis was unenthusiastic about his studies. Ultimately, he failed two final exams in mathematics and, rather than retake the exams, he left Harvard without a degree. Years later, after Lummis had gained national renown, Harvard bestowed an honorary bachelor's degree upon him. He received other honors during his lifetime, including an honorary degree from Santa Clara College and knighthood from the King of Spain. Aside from his service as LAPL librarian and his time as editor of the Los Angeles Daily Times and Out West Magazine, he depended upon the sale of his books, articles, and essays for income. Charles F. Lummis died of cancer at his home, El Alisal, in 1928. The home, which Lummis built with his own hands, is now a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Biography
Lummis, Charles Fletcher (1 Mar. 1859-25 Nov. 1928), author, editor, and explorer was a lifetime supporter of Native American culture and worked to preserve national landmarks such as the California missions. Lummis is known for numerous undertakings, including city editor of the Daily Times, chief librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library, editor of Land of Sunshine (later retitled Out West), and founder of the Southwest Museum. Charles Lummis was also an avid and prolific photographer, documenting his travels across the Southwest and trips south of the American border. His most commonly printed cyanotypes, a process that was relatively portable and easy to do. Many of his photographs regularly appeared in Land of Sunshine and Out West.
Charles Fletcher Lummis was born in Lynn, Massachusetts on March 1, 1859, and died in Los Angeles on November 25, 1928. He was educated at home, and later attended Harvard University until 1881. He soon moved to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he briefly managed his father-in-law's farm before taking a job as reporter, and later as editor, with the local newspaper Scioto Gazette .
He introduced himself to the West on foot during his famous 143 day walk from Cincinnati to Los Angeles. He began work there as editor of Harrison G. Otis' newspaper, The Los Angeles Times .
From 1885 on, Los Angeles was his base from which he explored, defended, and promoted the Southwest. His energy and enthusiasm were as broad as the land he loved. He investigated the Apache Wars in Arizona in 1886, recovered from a stroke and shooting in New Mexico, traveled with Adolph Bandelier to Peru, edited one of the most progressive periodicals of the region Land of Sunshine and Out West, built a monumental hilltop home El Alisal, and served as librarian to the Los Angeles Public Library. His aggressive drive to establish permanent cultural institutions and civic traditions culminated in his work for the Landmark Club, Sequoya League, and, closest to his heart, the Southwest Society and its Southwest Museum
A prolific promoter of the Southwest and California history, Lummis wrote many books on the area including A New Mexico David, Some Strange Corners of Our Country, A Tramp Across the Continent, and The Land of Poco Tiempo . His poetry, articles and reviews were also widely distributed in the leading magazines of his day. His friends ranged from Presidents to fisherman. His favored causes, such as pristine lands, native peoples, or historical monuments, were empowered by his forceful advocacy in print and in person of their collective needs.
Lummis was married and divorced from Dorothea Rhodes (1880-1891), Eva Frances Douglas (1891-1910), and Gertrude Redit (1915-192?). His children were Bertha Belle Page, b. 1879, Dorothea Turbese, 1892-1968, Amado Bandelier, 1894-1900, Jordan (Quimu), b. 1900, and Keith, 1904-1991.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/66548614
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50043005
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50043005
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2959074
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
spa
Zyyy
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Publishers and publishing
Authors, American
Authors, American
Authors, American
Authors, American
Authors, American
Anthropology
Antisemitism
Apache Indians
Apache Indians
Archaeologists
Archaeology
Architecture
Authors
Autographs
Aymara dance
Ships
Bibliography
Book collecting
Book collectors
Botanical illustration
Civic leaders
Civic leaders
Clubs
Coastlines
Cupeño Indians
Cupeño Indians
Cupeno Indians
Medicine, Eclectic
Editors
Editors
Encyclopedias and dictionaries
Excavations (Archeology)
First editions
Flowers in art
Folk songs, Spanish
Geology
Government
Historians
Historians
Hopi
Hopi Indians
Hopi Indians
Hospitals
Inca art
Indian art
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North American
Isleta Indians
Isleta Indians
Landscape
Librarians
Librarians
Librarians
Librarians
Libraries
Longpre, Paul de, 1855-1911
Lummis, Charles Fletcher, 1859-1928
Mineral industries
Mines and mineral resources
Missions
Mohave Indians
Munk Library of Arizoniana (Southwest Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.))
Museums
Music
Music
Natural history
Pueblo Indians
Pueblo Indians
Pueblos
Pueblos
Railroad bridges
Villard expedition, 1892
Vocabulary
Wine and wine making
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Authors
Editors
Historians
Librarians
Librarians
Photographers
Legal Statuses
Places
United States
AssociatedPlace
Peru
AssociatedPlace
Arizona
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
Isleta Pueblo (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
Chapultepec (Mexico City, Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
Spain
AssociatedPlace
New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Popocatépetl (Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
Southwestern States
AssociatedPlace
Bandelier National Monument (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
Yucatán (Mexico : State)
AssociatedPlace
California, Southern
AssociatedPlace
Los Angeles County (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Arequipa (Peru)
AssociatedPlace
Los Angeles (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
Zacatecas (Zacatecas, Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
La Paz (Bolivia)
AssociatedPlace
Bolivia--Tiahuanacu
AssociatedPlace
Los Angeles County (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
Arizona
AssociatedPlace
New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
Southwestern United States
AssociatedPlace
New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Warner's Ranch (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
Santa Cruz Mission (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
Guatemala
AssociatedPlace
California--Los Angeles
AssociatedPlace
Pala (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
West (U.S.)
AssociatedPlace
Panama
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
Peru
AssociatedPlace
Chaco Canyon (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
Acapulco (Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
Mexico City (Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
Walpi Pueblo (Ariz.)
AssociatedPlace
West (U.S.)
AssociatedPlace
Mitla Site (Mexico)
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
California--Los Angeles
AssociatedPlace
Los Angeles (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
California--Los Angeles
AssociatedPlace
Andes
AssociatedPlace
Southwest, New
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
Pueblo of Laguna, New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Peru
AssociatedPlace
California, Southern
AssociatedPlace
California, Southern
AssociatedPlace
Mexico--Guanajuato (State)
AssociatedPlace
Isleta Pueblo (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
San Francisco (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
San Francisco (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
Arizona
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>