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Information: The first column shows data points from in red. The third column shows data points from Butts, Mary, 1890-1937 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Shared
Butts, Mary, 1890-1937
Barrett, John.
Name Components
Name :
Barrett, John.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Barrett, John.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Barrett, John.
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary, 1890-1937
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary, 1890-1937
Dates
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- Butts, Mary, 1890-1937
Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary Francis, 1890-1937
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary Francis, 1890-1937
Dates
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary Francis, 1890-1937
Citation
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- Butts, Mary Francis, 1890-1937
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary Frances
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary Frances
Dates
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary Frances
Citation
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary Frances
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary (Mary Franeis), 1890-1937
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary (Mary Franeis), 1890-1937
Dates
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary (Mary Franeis), 1890-1937
Citation
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary (Mary Franeis), 1890-1937
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary, 1892-1937
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary, 1892-1937
Dates
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary, 1892-1937
Citation
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary, 1892-1937
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Butts, Mary Franeis, 1890-1937
Name Components
Name :
Butts, Mary Franeis, 1890-1937
Dates
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary Franeis, 1890-1937
Citation
- Name Entry
- Butts, Mary Franeis, 1890-1937
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
The English writer Mary Butts was born in Parkstone, Dorset, the daughter of Captain F. J. Butts (grandson of Blake's patron Thomas Butts) and Mary (Briggs) Butts. Although she earned a degree in social work in 1914, she devoted herself exclusively to writing from about 1916. Butts was married twice,first to the publisher John Rodker in 1918, and secondly to the artist Gabriel Atkin in 1930. She had one child, Camilla Elizabeth Rodker, born in November 1920. On March 5, 1937, Butts died suddenly in Sennen, Cornwall, where she and Atkin had moved in 1932.
Mary Butts was born at Salterns, Dorset, England, in 1893. She was educated at Sandecotes School in Parkstone; at boarding school at St. Andrews, Scotland; at Westfield College of the University of London; and at the London School of Economics. She did welfare work for the London County Council during World War I. During this period she began writing stories and poems and her first novel, Ashe of Rings. She studied at Aleister Crowley's Temple of Black Magic at Cefalu Abbey in Sicily. She married twice, first to John Rodker, with whom she had a daughter, Camilla; then to Gabriel Aitken. She lived in Paris for many years, and was a member of Left Bank circles which included Jean Cocteau and Ford Maddox Ford. She was living in Cornwall when she suddenly became ill and died in 1937.
English writer Mary Butts was born in Dorset. After many years in London and Paris, in 1932 she settled in Sennen, Cornwall, with her second husband, the artist Gabriel Atkin. She died there at the age of 46.
The English writer Mary Butts was a pioneer in the modernist style, writing between about 1910 and 1937, and often published alongside authors such as Ezra Pound, H.D., Gertrude Stein, and James Joyce. Profoundly interested in the supernatural, and writing as often about the classical world as the modern, she was acclaimed as a short story writer and novelist in her lifetime. For many years after her death at the age of forty-six, her work was little known and her place among her contemporaries largely unrecognized.
Born Mary Franies Butts on December 13, 1890, in the village of Parkstone in Dorset, England, she was the first child and only daughter of Captain Frederick John Butts, a veteran of the Crimean War, and his second wife, Mary Jane (Briggs) Butts. A second child, Anthony Butts, was born in 1901. The family also included Mary's maternal grandmother and four unmarried aunts, who lived close by in Parkstone. Of these, she was closest to Aunt Irlam Briggs, an artist who often used her niece as a model, and especially to Aunt Ada Briggs. Ada remained a central family figure throughout Mary's life, lending her money, mediating disputes between Mary and her mother, and later raising Mary's own daughter. Butts's relationship with her mother was always strained, and grew steadily worse after her father died, when her mother sold first a collection of William Blake prints and drawings inherited from Mary's great-grandfather
Thomas Butts, Blake's patron, and then the family home, Salterns, in 1923.
Mary Butts spent her childhood at Salterns, and attended the local schools until the age of fifteen. After her father's death in 1905, her mother married Francis Frederick Musgrove Colville-Hyde, and Mary was sent to St. Leonard's School for Girls in St. Andrews, Scotland. In 1909, she enrolled at Westfield College, London University, which she attended until 1912, when she was sent down for breaking college rules. She went on to earn a Social Science Certificate from the London School of Economics in 1914, and worked for some time for the Children's Care Committee in Hackney. In 1916 she worked for the National Council for Civil Liberties, under Raymond Postgate.
Once in London, Butts shed the constraints of her Victorian upbringing and adopted a bohemian lifestyle. Her social circle encompassed artists of all types: actors and particularly dancers, for she admired both the provocative Ballets Russes and the free dance of Isadora Duncan; painters, for whom she often modelled, including Gladys Hynes, Nina Hamnett, and Roger Fry; and, importantly for her own work, many of the literary avant-garde, including Ezra Pound, Wyndham Lewis, and Ford Madox Ford. Her social work involved her to some extent in the suffrage movement, and she was friendly with the outspoken feminist Wilma Meikle, among other well educated young women for whom sexual freedom was an important component of intellectual and political equality.
For several years in the mid-1910s, Butts lived with her lover Eleanor Rogers, about whom little is known. She broke with Eleanor gradually after she fell in love with the publisher and writer John Rodker. Like Butts and most of her friends at that time, Rodker opposed the First World War, and spent much of 1917 in prison as a conscientious objector.
Mary Butts and John Rodker married in 1918, and operated Rodker's Ovid Press together. In November 1920 their daughter, Camilla Elizabeth Rodker, was born. Just three months after Camilla's birth, Mary Butts left Rodker for Cecil Maitland, a wounded war veteran who frequently attempted suicide. Maitland shared her interest in magic and the occult, and the two of them spent the summer of 1921 at Aleister Crowley's Abbey of Thelema in Cefalu, Sicily, where they studied clairvoyance and practiced black magic under Crowley's guidance. At about this time Butts began to use drugs regularly; she remained addicted to opium for the rest of her life.
Butts spent the better part of the 1920s at parties and nightclubs, and, by all accounts, did more than her share to give that decade its reputation for hedonism. In her own view, however, the First World War had so damaged the few of her generation who survived it, and so blighted their chances for traditional happiness, that every day was a battle of courage against despair, and the endless party was a movement, a spiritual duty, to keep joy, beauty, and hope from going out of the world altogether. Explaining this philosophy to her Aunt Ada in 1929, Butts wrote, "But if you pray for me, my dear, don't bother about my young men, my cigarettes, dances, adventures which are one's distractions, refreshments, and have been fairly earned. There is a rather beautiful bacchanale going on for a few hundreds of us who earn our play, quite as good as any greek one--like all lovely things, we've had to create it and keep it bright" (Box 17, Folder 243).
During this time Butts lived alternately in Paris and London, basing herself primarily in Paris in the latter part of the '20s. She also spent much time among fellow writers and artists in the South of France and in Brittany. Among her many friends at this time were Jean Cocteau, Monroe Wheeler and Glenway Wescott, Peggy Guggenheim, Mireille Havet, and Duff Twysden. She left Maitland in 1925, but was greatly upset by his death in 1926. Over the next several years she was involved with a number of people, including the composer Virgil Thomson and a Russian emigré named Sergei Maslenikoff, before she met Gabriel Atkin, an artist, in 1928. Butts married Atkin (she preferred to spell it Aitkin) in London in 1930, and moved back to Britain permanently.
Butts's divorce from John Rodker was not final until 1927, and in the years following their separation responsibility for their daughter had become a source of conflict. In 1921 Camilla was left in the care of a friend in London, Poppy Vanda, where she remained until 1926. Mary Butts then took her to France and put her in a series of lodgings and schools until late 1928, when Rodker, alarmed by a visit to Camilla, insisted that she be looked after properly and educated in England. After several false starts, in 1929 Camilla was enrolled in the local school in Parkstone, where Mary Butts herself had been a student, and came to live with her great-aunt Ada Briggs, who essentially raised her from that point on.
For the first two years after their marriage, Mary Butts and Gabriel Atkin lived in London and Newcastle, near his family. In 1932, they moved to Sennen, a village near Land's End in Cornwall, and bought a cottage there which they called Tebel Vos. The marriage with Atkin was troubled, and he left her in 1934. At about this time she returned to the Christian faith, attending church in Sennen regularly. Her closest friend during this period was Angus Davidson, who bought a cottage near hers in 1934, and whom she designated her literary executor. On March 5, 1937, Mary Butts died suddenly after emergency surgery for a perforated ulcer.
Further details about Mary Butts's life can be gleaned from her fiction and poetry, much of which draws on or closely mirrors her real life. She wrote steadily from an early age; although a poem and an essay were published in 1906, her first real success as a writer came toward the end of the 1910s, when her work began to be published and well reviewed in little magazines on both sides of the Atlantic. She was encouraged early in her career by John Rodker, Ezra Pound, and Ford Madox Ford, and in the 1920s her growing literary reputation was helped along by friends like Glenway Wescott, who wrote a glowing review of her first collection of short stories, Speed the Plough (1923), and Jean Cocteau, who illustrated her epistolary novel Imaginary Letters (1928). Butts's years in Cornwall were her most productive as a writer: during this period she wrote several novels, including The Death of Felicity Taverner (1932) and The Macedonian (1933); many stories and essays; a steady stream of book reviews; and her memoir, The Crystal Cabinet, which was published posthumously.
For a fuller description of Butts's childhood and family, see her memoir, The Crystal Cabinet: My Childhood at Salterns . For a detailed treatment of her life, her work, and her relationships with other figures of the modern era, see Nathalie Blondel, Mary Butts: Scenes from the Life (Kingston, New York: MacPherson & Company, 1998).
BUTTS AND BRIGGS FAMILIES
The names of individuals represented in the papers are emphasized. For a more detailed Butts genealogy see the Appendix .
Thomas Butts (1759-1846) (Blake's patron) m. Elizabeth Cooper ----Thomas Butts, Jr. (1788-1862) m. Mary Ann Barrow -------- Frederick John Butts (1833-1905) 2nd. m. Mary Jane Briggs (1863-1944) ------------ Anthony Bacon Drury Butts (1901-1941) ------------ Mary Franies Butts (1890-1937) m. John Rodker (1894-1955) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2nd. m. Gabriel Atkin (1897-1937) ---------------- Camilla Elizabeth Rodker (1920- ) m. H. Israel (d.1950s) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2nd. m. Reginald Bagg --------------------Daniel Israel (b. ca. 1949) --------------------Edward Israel (b. ca. 1951) Thomas Briggs (b. 1799) m. Mary Robinson ----James Briggs (1830-1874) m. Sarah Anne Ellis (1859-1924) -------- Ada Elizabeth Briggs (1861-1951) -------- Emma Irlam Briggs (1867-1951) --------Monica Briggs (1872-1901) --------Agnes Briggs (ca. 1870-1940) -------- Mary Jane Briggs (1863-1944) m. Frederick John Butts (1833-1905) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2nd. m. Francis F. Colville-Hyde (d. 1919) ------------ Anthony Bacon Drury Butts (1901-1941) ------------ Mary Franies Butts (1890-1937) m. John Rodker (1894-1955) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2nd. m. Gabriel Atkin (1897-1937) ---------------- Camilla Elizabeth Rodker (1920- ) m. H. Israel (d.1950s) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2nd. m. Reginald Bagg --------------------Daniel Israel (b. ca. 1949) --------------------Edward Israel (b. ca. 1951)
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Holls, Frederick William, 1857-1903. Frederick William Holls papers, 1880-1903.
Title:
Frederick William Holls papers, 1880-1903.
Letters to and copies of letters, letter books, and miscellaneous papers of (George) Frederick William Holls. There is also an amount of clippings and other miscellanea. The correspondence is with many persons important in the areas of politics and education. The subject content of the letters is international in scope, including such matters as the Suez Canal, the Webster-Ashburton Treaty, the Dreyfuss scandal, the Hague Peace Conference, Rhodes Scholarships, unification of education in New York State, the St. Louis Exposition, and tenement reform. Among the principal correspondents represented by groups of letters are John Barrett, Nicholas Murray Butler, Henry W. Diederick, Theodor Lange, Hugo Munsterburg, F.J. Odendahl, Theodore Roosevelt, and Carl Schurz.
ArchivalResource: 21 boxes, 19 volumes.
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- Holls, Frederick William, 1857-1903. Frederick William Holls papers, 1880-1903.
Lowry, Malcolm, 1909-1957. Malcolm Lowry - John Davenport papers, 1926-1970.
Title:
Malcolm Lowry - John Davenport papers, 1926-1970.
The collection consists of material by and about Malcolm Lowry, including correspondence between John Davenport (Lowry's friend and executor) and publishers, colleagues and friends of Lowry; between Malcolm Lowry and Carol Brown, his beau of the 1920s; between Marjorie Bonner Lowry (Mrs. Malcolm Lowry) and John Davenport; and on letter fragment from Davenport to Lowry. The correspondence spans the dates 1926 to 1966. The writings included in the collection consist of autograph, typescript, carbon copy typescript and photocopy typescript drafts of poems, articles, and novels by Lowry. Also included is Davenport's autograph draft biography of Lowry and his typescript preface to the novel ULTRAMARINE. The typescript of UNDER THE VOLCANO has been catalogued separately.
ArchivalResource: 1 document box.
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- Resource Relation
- Lowry, Malcolm, 1909-1957. Malcolm Lowry - John Davenport papers, 1926-1970.
Lawrence & Wishart records, 1927-1951
Title:
Lawrence & Wishart records 1927-1951
The collection consistsof correspondence, business and financial records, artwork, and photographsrelating to the early years of the British publishing company Lawrence &Wishart, its predecessor company Wishart & Company, and the foundingpartner Ernest Edward Wishart. Correspondence includes letters to, from, andabout various authors, journalists, lawyers, and booksellers, among others.There is extensive correspondence concerning the publication of Jack ButlerYeats's book Sligo (1930), the sales of Nancy Cunard's book Negro Anthology(1934), and the libel case regarding Gerard Kersh's book Jews Without Jehovah(1934). Business and financial records include estimates from printers andbinders, sales figures, royalty statements, stocktaking records, loandocuments, minutes of director's meetings, and reader's reports. Also presentis material documenting the company's involvement in the Publishers'Association of Great Britain and Ireland and its collaborations with the LeftBook Club and Workers' Bookshop, as well as original cover artwork for SeveralOccasions by Mary Butts, among other books.
ArchivalResource: 4.63 linear feet (12boxes)
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- Resource Relation
- Lawrence & Wishart records, 1927-1951
[Player File : Barrett, John, 1872- / compiled by the National Baseball Hall of Fame Library, Cooperstown, N.Y.].
Title:
[Player File : Barrett, John, 1872- / compiled by the National Baseball Hall of Fame Library, Cooperstown, N.Y.].
Player file includes material documenting his baseball career and personal life. These items may include newspaper and magazine articles, biographical material, press releases, copies of original documents, and other sundry items. Some player files may not contain any material due to the brevity of his career and/or the time period which he played. File contents: folder 1 (1872- ).
ArchivalResource: 1 folder.
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- [Player File : Barrett, John, 1872- / compiled by the National Baseball Hall of Fame Library, Cooperstown, N.Y.].
Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960. Douglas Goldring fonds. [1900-1964].
Title:
Douglas Goldring fonds. [1900-1964].
The fonds consists of drafts of his works, including handwritten manuscripts, typescripts and carbon copies with sometimes extensive corrections of much of his published work and several unpublished titles; correspondence from personal friends and publishers; Goldring's letters to the editor; diaries and notebooks, 1903-1960; newspaper clipping files; and a Goldring biography file. Names of correspondents include: Richard Aldington, John Betjeman, T.S. Eliot, Emma Goldman, Aldous Huxley, W.S. Maugham, and Alec and Evelyn Waugh. The largest correspondence files are from Mary Butts, Ethel Mannin and Louis Wilkinson. Also included is a file of correspondence from Betty Duncan to Conal O'Riordan. She later became Goldring's first wife and the mother of his two children.
ArchivalResource: 2 m of textual records.
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- Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960. Douglas Goldring fonds. [1900-1964].
Glenway Wescott papers, 1900-1990
Title:
Glenway Wescott papers 1900-1990
The Glenway Wescott Papers consist ofcorrespondence, journals, notebooks, manuscripts, personal and financialpapers, research files,photographs, graphic items, clippings, objects, andaudiotapes. The material documents Wescott's life, work, and personalrelationships with many noted artists, writers, and performers of the 20thcentury including his long-time companion, Monroe Wheeler, many of whose papersare included here. Series I, Correspondence, consists of six subseries:Wescott-Wheeler Correspondence (letters between the two men); Wescott FamilyCorrespondence; Wescott Family Third-party Correspondence; Wheeler FamilyCorrespondence; General Correspondence; and Third-partyCorrespondence. Series II contains Wescott's Journals and Notebooks, anextensive collection of personal records detailing the author's life andthoughts from the late 1930s up to shortly before his death. Wescott's"journals" are in the form of three-ring binders, filled with notes, clippings,copies of letters, and images. Series III, Writings, represents a portionof Wescott's original works. The writings are divided into five subseries:General Writings (including drafts of an autobiography, "The Odor ofRosemary"); Writings about People; Lectures, Broadcasts and Speeches; Writingsabout Glenway Wescott; and Writings of Others. Personal Papers contains arange of material documenting the various activities of Wescott and Wheelerarranged in 18 subseries. Financial Papers, gathers together material in achronological run, from 1925 through 1986. Series VI contains Wescott's ownResearch Files of various subjects. Photographs are grouped into ten subseries.Graphic Items consists of various image materials. Clippings covers a widerange of subjects, with a focus on art, book reviews, current events, essaysand articles, and people. Series X, American Academy of Arts and Letters,concerns Glenway Wescott's membership in this organization, including the yearsof his presidency, 1960-62. Objects consists of pieces of realia received withthe archive. Audio-Visual Materials is a collection of sound recordings and avideotape. Series XIII, Additions transferred from the Monroe WheelerPapers, contains items relating to GW which came to light during the processingof the Monroe Wheeler Papers and which could not be easily integrated into theexisting archival arrangement.
ArchivalResource: Total Boxes: 489; Other Storage Formats: audiotapes, art storage; Linear Feet: 216
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- Glenway Wescott papers, 1900-1990
Leighton, Warren, Mrs,. Mrs. Warren Leighton papers, 1823-1858.
Title:
Mrs. Warren Leighton papers, 1823-1858.
Miscellaneous manuscripts including genealogical data on the families of John Barrett, Jonathan Lewis, Joseph Meriam, and Thomas Wilson.
ArchivalResource: 9 items.
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- Leighton, Warren, Mrs,. Mrs. Warren Leighton papers, 1823-1858.
Loomis, Francis B. (Francis Butler), 1861-1948. Francis B. Loomis papers, 1897-1939. [microform].
Title:
Francis B. Loomis papers, 1897-1939. [microform].
Official and personal correspondence, reports, legal briefs, speeches, publications, photographs, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous material; also included is correspondence dealing with Loomis' involvement in crises relating to Venezuela, Santo Domingo, and Panama, his role during negotioation of the Russo-Japanese War, and his participation in Republan politics during the years 1898-1912; post World War I correspondence focuses on such varied topics as the Japanese question in California, the importance of newspapers in forming public opinion, and consular reform and political issues; numerous Presidents of the U.S. and other notable figures of the period are represented.
ArchivalResource: 9 microfilm reels.
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- Loomis, Francis B. (Francis Butler), 1861-1948. Francis B. Loomis papers, 1897-1939. [microform].
[Genealogies of Barrett families].
Title:
[Genealogies of Barrett families].
Genealogies of Barrett families, including William Barrett, born 1630; and John Barrett of Chelmsford, Mass. Miscellaneous notes on the Barrett family of Littleton, Mass.
ArchivalResource: [26] p. ; 21-25 cm.
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- Resource Relation
- [Genealogies of Barrett families].
Papers of Richard Ellis Roberts, 1917-39, n.d.
Title:
Papers of Richard Ellis Roberts 1917-39, n.d.
ArchivalResource: 3 shelfmarks
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- Papers of Richard Ellis Roberts, 1917-39, n.d.
Barrett, John. Miscellaneous manuscripts, 1727.
Title:
Miscellaneous manuscripts, 1727.
Bill for business services made out to the Rev. Jonathan Dickerson, payable to Samuel Barrett. Signed for Samuel Barrett by his son John Barrett.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 leaf).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155886068 View
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- Barrett, John. Miscellaneous manuscripts, 1727.
Mary Butts papers, 1830-1990, 1915-37
Title:
Mary Butts papers 1830-1990 1915-37
Series I, Papers of Mary Butts, consists ofcorrespondence, writings, photographs, and artwork. Series II, Family Papers,contains papers of Butts's daughter Camilla Rodker Bagg, her mother MaryColville-Hyde, her brother Anthony Butts, her aunts Ada and Irlam Briggs, andher first husband John Rodker, and photographs and artwork. Series III, Papersof Others, contains a draft of Robert H. Byington's biography of Butts, "TheQuest for Mary Butts;" the writings, research files, and researchcorrespondence of Butts researcher Herbert Frank Ingram; and a single file ofnotes about Butts compiled by Stanley Revell.
ArchivalResource: Total Boxes: 27 (including 3 oversize boxes); Linear Feet: 14.70
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- Mary Butts papers, 1830-1990, 1915-37
Gates, Horatio, 1728-1806. American Revolution collection : military matters, 18th-20th centuries.
Title:
American Revolution collection : military matters, 18th-20th centuries.
Military order to Ebenezer Hancock, paymaster general, to pay Scarboro Gridley, assistant engineer, $490, signed by Gen. Horatio Gates; list of soldiers in the town of Lexington, both foot and horse, called upon to train under Capt. Benjamin Reed and under Capt. William Reed (1739 Dec. 27); facsimile of the commission (1775 June 19) of George Washington as general and commander in chief of the Army of the U.S.; memorandum (1837 Aug. 9) from Daniel Webster concerning a pension for widows and orphans of men killed at Lexington on Apr. 19, 1775; appointment of Josiah Parker as lieutenant of the militia company in Lexington by Jonathan Belcher, governor of Massachusetts Bay (1739 Apr. 16); bill from Dr. Joseph Fiske to the Province of Massachusetts for services rendered in care of British soldiers on Apr. 19, 1775; payroll (1776) of Ipswich minute men; appointment (1778) of Samuel Lawrance as adjutant in the State of Massachusetts Bay; orders (1760, 1764) from Thaddeus Bowman, first lieutenant, to Corporal John Parker to warn foot soldiers in this town to meet at the house of Jonathan Raymond; and letter (1775 Nov. 15), written at Newtown [N.Y.?], from Samuel Barrett to John Barrett, with enthusiasm for the Continental Congress and military affairs. Also includes bond of William Davis and Thomas Durfee for 2000 pounds (1775 Oct. 30) relating to the purchase of gunpowder for the sloop Relyance; list of drafted reinforcement soldiers from Biddeford [Me.], who joined the Continental Army in New York; ms. signed by Capt. William Munroe directing Corp. Samuel Downing to assemble the militia in his squadron for review on June 24, 1782; commission of Joseph Hosmer as captain of a light infantry company in the Middlesex County militia; autograph order for ordnance, signed by Lt. Col. Francis Smith who led the British grenadiers, and other troops on their ill-fated march to Lexington and Concord (1775 Apr. 19); extracts of letters from General Gage to the Earl of Dartmouth; negative of Earl Percy's payroll (May to Dec. 1774); letters from Edmund Munro to his wife, written at Valley Forge (1777-1778); deposition of Capt. William Briggs relating to Apr. 19, 1775; group of 22 receipts signed by Lexington residents (1776 to 1810), many made out to James Brown; rules and regulations of the Lexington minute men as drawn up by Edmund Munroe in 1774; genealogical records of the Sayles and Taft families, including Revolutionary War pension claim documents of Smith Sayles, a private from Rhode Island; MA thesis of Stephen R. Gilbert, University of Wisconsin on the organization and internal composition of the British Battalion of Light Infantry during the first year of the war; and various muster rolls and orders. Also includes letter (1776 Sept. 6, sent twice) from Samuel Bowers, written to John Parkis at Lexington and to Lieut. Samuel Bowers at Ticonderoga describing the status of his regiment at Ticonderoga; report (1779 May 14) of Benjamin Brown listing men who deserve compensation for military service; proclamation creating Earl Percy's 5th Regiment of Foot and Lord Blayney's 30th Regiment of Foot, dated at the Court of St. James, London, Dec. 15, 1775, bearing signatures of King George III, and others; facsimile of petition by Timothy Blodgett (1776 Apr. 19) requesting compensation for the loss of his musket during the Battle of Lexington; transcription of letter from Gen. John Burgoyne to Major General Heath (1778 Jan. 17) written at Cambridge, requesting a report regarding meetings attended; letter (undated) on letterhead of The Colorado Society, Sons of the American Revolution, with drawn plan showing where 3 British soldiers were killed on Apr. 19, 1775, near the Reed or Fish house; and other papers.
ArchivalResource: 59 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/645246715 View
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- Gates, Horatio, 1728-1806. American Revolution collection : military matters, 18th-20th centuries.
Butts, Mary, 1890-1937. Mary Butts miscellany, 1918-1992.
Title:
Mary Butts miscellany, 1918-1992.
This collection of materials relating to Mary Butts consists mainly of copies of her book reviews and articles, and of reviews of her books. Most of the materials are either photocopies or typescript transcriptions. Many were gathered from her scrapbook and some were obtained by her clipping service (some of the handwriting on these is her own, however). Other copies of reviews were obtained from various university libraries.
ArchivalResource: 2 boxes (.75 linear ft.)
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- Butts, Mary, 1890-1937. Mary Butts miscellany, 1918-1992.
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- Holls, Frederick William, 1857-1903.
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- Atkin, Gabriel.
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- Atkin, Gabriel, 1897-1937.
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- Bagg, Camilla Rodker, 1920-
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- Barrett, Samuel.
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- Briggs, Ada E., 1861-1951.
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- Briggs, E. Irlam (Emma Irlam), 1867-1951.
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- Bull, Harcourt Wesson.
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- Butt family.
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- Butt family.
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- Butt family.
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- Butts, Anthony, 1901-1941.
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- Butts, Frederick John, 1833-1905.
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- Butts, Thomas, 1759-1846.
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- Byington, Robert H.
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- Cocteau, Jean, 1889-1963.
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- Colville-Hyde, Mary, 1863-1944.
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- Davidson, Angus, 1898-
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- Dickerson, Jonathan.
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- Forster, E. M. (Edward Morgan), 1879-1970.
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- Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960.
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- Ingram, Herbert Frank, d. 1984.
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- Joyce, James, 1882-1941.
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- Julian, Emperor of Rome, 331-363.
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- Lawrence & Wishart.
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- Lawrence & Wishart.
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- Leighton, Warren, Mrs,
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- Lindsay, Jack, 1900-
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- Lindsay, Jack, 1900-1990.
Loomis, Francis B. (Francis Butler), 1861-1948.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61z58pz
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- Loomis, Francis B. (Francis Butler), 1861-1948.
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- Lowry, Malcolm, 1909-1957.
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- Lynes, George Platt, 1907-1955.
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- Maitland, Cecil, d. 1926.
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- Mayne, Ethel Colburn, d. 1941.
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- Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972.
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- Revell, Stanley.
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- Revell, Stanley.
Roberts, R. Ellis (Richard Ellis), 1879-1953.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w664019h
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- Roberts, R. Ellis (Richard Ellis), 1879-1953.
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- Rodker, John, 1894-1955
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- Ross Williamson, Hugh, 1901-1978.
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- Royde-Smith, Naomi.
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- Royde-Smith, Naomi.
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- Sinclair, May.
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- Sinclair, May.
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- Wells, H. G. (Herbert George), 1866-1946.
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- Wescott, Glenway, 1901-1987.
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- Williams, Charles, 1886-1945.
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British literature
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English literature
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World War, 1914-1918
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World War,1914-1918
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