Mansfield, Robert Stuart, 1906-

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Norma Bicknell and Robert Mansfield met and married in 1925 while students at the University of Michigan; as undergraduates, both studied creative writing under the direction of Donal Hamilton Haines. Of the two writers, Robert Mansfield was first to have material accepted for publication. 1927 saw the beginning of a long series of publications over a period of ten years in young peoples' magazines such as the Haversack, The Torchbearer, the Class Mate, and the High Road . By 1930, the same magazines, along with The American Girl, were publishing Norma Mansfield's short stories on a regular basis as well.

While Robert Mansfield continued at the University of Michigan, earning a Master's Degree in Journalism, Norma Mansfield began work on the first of four juvenile books, which were to be published in the 1930s. Each of the books first appeared in serial form in Tthe American Gir l under the titles, Keeper of the Wolves, Boss of the Ragged O, McCallister Patrol, and The Girl from Frozen Bend . While waiting for a teaching position to open up for Mr. Mansfield, the couple spent what they called their "bohemian years" traveling, camping, and selling enough magazine fiction to provide a small income. During the depression, Robert Mansfield held a position as instructor in the University of Washington School of Journalism. It was at this time that he began writing and selling adult fiction to the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's and Liberty . While the early years of his career was divided between the interests of writing and teaching, by the late 1930s, Mr. Mansfield devoted himself almost entirely to teaching. For this reason, other then seven short stories published in magazines in the 1940s and one co-authored book from 1970, examples in the collection of his writing date primarily form the 1920s and 1930s. In the 25 years that Robert Mansfield taught at the University of Washington, he became full professor and, finally, acting director of the School of Journalism. As a teacher, he was particularly noted for his short story seminars. In 1959, he left the teaching profession to become assistant public relations manager of the Boeing Airplane Company of Seattle.

Norma Mansfield's success as a writer of short stories for magazine publications began after 1937, when she turned from juvenile to adult fiction. It was in this year that she turned from juvenile to adult fiction and began her twenty-year-long working relationship with the New York literary agent, Carl Brandt. Under Brandt's guidance, Norma Mansfield's fiction was submitted to and accepted by magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, Liberty, Collier's, Cosmopolitan, American, McCall's, and Woman's Home Companion . The Saturday Evening Post alone published more than 27 of her short stories.

From the guide to the Norma Bicknell and Robert Stuart Mansfield papers, 1929-1970, (Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Mansfield, Norma Bicknell. Norma Bicknell and Robert Stuart Mansfield papers, 1929-1970. University of Oregon Libraries
creatorOf Norma Bicknell and Robert Stuart Mansfield papers, 1929-1970 University of Oregon Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Brandt, Carl G. person
associatedWith Mansfield, Norma Bicknell. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
West (U.S.)
Subject
Publishers and publishing
Publishers and publishing
Authors, American
Short stories, American
Women authors, American
Children and youth
Journalism
Literary agents
Literature
Western stories
Women
Young adult literature, American
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1906

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