Thornton Oakley collection of Howard Pyle and his students

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Repository
Free Library of Philadelphia: Rare Book Department
Call Number
FLP.RBD.PYLE
Creator
Oakley, Thornton, 1881-1953
Title
Thornton Oakley collection of Howard Pyle and his students
Date [bulk]
Bulk, 1887-1951
Date [inclusive]
1841-1992
Extent
15.83 Linear feet
Language
English
Abstract
The Thornton Oakley collection of Howard Pyle and his students covers the influential artistic career of Howard Pyle and several of his students, most notably Maxfield Parrish, Violet Oakley, and N.C. Wyeth. The collection includes a wide range of materials, which was collected and assembled by Pyle’s former student Thornton Oakley. There are tear sheets of artwork published in magazines, original illustrations, photographs, research notes, manuscripts, and correspondence. Besides Howard Pyle, artists well represented in this collection include Elizabeth Shippen Green, Jessie Wilcox Smith, George Harding, Violet Oakley, N.C. Wyeth, and a large collection of material on Maxfield Parrish. There is also a series dedicated to the children’s author and art historian, Henry Clarence Pitz, who researched and wrote The Brandywine Tradition about Pyle and his artistic influence. The collection’s primary strength is the collection of artwork by Pyle and his students, some of which is original. Oakley also compiled clippings and tear sheets of many of Pyle's students, and organized them according to the artist’s name. This group of material would be valuable to researchers interested in tracing the careers of these artists.
Cite as
[Description and date of item], [Box and folder number], Thornton Oakley collection of Howard Pyle and his students, 1883-1992, Free Library of Philadelphia, Rare Book Department.

Thornton Oakley (1881-1943) was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He graduated in 1901 and 1902 from the University of Pennsylvania with a B.S. in Architecture and a M.S. in Architecture, respectively.

Oakley first studied with Howard Pyle at Chadd’s Ford Mill during the summer of 1902. He later studied with him at Pyle’s Franklin Street School in Wilmington, Delaware. Altogether, Oakley studied under Pyle for three years. He became an illustrator and writer for periodicals such as: Scribner’s, Century, Collier’s, and Harper’s Monthly. Oakley also received commissions to paint industrial subjects from the Pennsylvania Railroad, Philadelphia Electric Company, Sun Oil Company, the Franklin Institute, and many others.

From 1914 to 1919 and 1921 to 1936, he served as the Head of the Department of Illustration at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art. During the 1914-1915 school year, Oakley also taught drawing at the University of Pennsylvania. During his career, he gave lectures at the Art Institute of Chicago, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Curtis Institute.

Oakley served as a member of the jury of selection and advisory committee of the Department of Fine Arts at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition held in San Francisco in 1915 and at the Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Exposition in 1926.

During World War I, lithographs of Oakley’s patriotic drawings of war work at Hog Island Shipyard in Philadelphia were distributed by the U.S. government. From 1938 to 1939, he completed six murals on the epochs of science at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Oakley also did three sets of war effort pictures for National Geographic in 1941, 1943, and 1945. In 1951, Oakley donated his collection of Howard Pyle material to the Free Library of Philadelphia. He died in 1953 in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

Howard Pyle (1853-1911) was a famous American illustrator and writer, known primarily for children’s books including The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood and The Wonder Clock, and for his unique teaching style of art. Prevalent themes in his artwork were chivalry and adventure.

Pyle was born in Wilmington, Delaware. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia and the Arts Students League in New York. Pyle became an associate of the Academy in 1905 and was elected an Academician in 1907.

In 1894, he taught his first class at the Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry. His students in his first class included artists Maxfield Parrish, Jessie Wilcox Smith, and Elizabeth Shippen Green. Pyle’s teaching and class popularity led to the creation of the School of Illustration within the Drexel Institute. In 1899, he resigned from Drexel because he felt he lacked sufficient time to devote to each of his pupils, due to the growth of the program. Pyle still wanted to teach however, and beginning in 1899, Pyle opened up his own school next to his studio on Franklin Street in Wilmington, Delaware. He maintained a relationship with Drexel however and continued to host intensive summer coursework in Chadd’s Ford, Pennsylvania.

As an art teacher, Pyle emphasized thought over technique, and offered nonstop assistance and critique to his students. At his school in Wilmington, each student’s education was free, aside from paying a small monthly fee that helped offset the expense of the studio. Another aspect of his teaching style was that there was no time restriction placed on his students’ education. Instead, Pyle informed students when he thought that his instruction was no longer needed.

Pyle married Anne Poole and had seven children. In 1910 Pyle moved to Italy and died in Florence in 1911.

Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966) was one of Howard Pyle’s first students at the Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry. He was born in 1870 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. From 1884 to 1886, Parrish spent time in Europe with his parents and attended classes in the winter of 1884 at Dr. Kornemann’s school in Paris.

He graduated from Haverford College in 1892 and spent the summers of 1892 and 1893 studying art with his father in Massachusetts. From 1892 to 1894, Parrish took classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and the Drexel Institute of Art Science and Industry, where he met his future wife, Lydia. They married in 1895.

In 1898 Parrish established his permanent home in Cornish, New Hampshire where he built his house and studio at “The Oaks.” He contracted tuberculosis in 1900 and spent the next two years convalescing between Saranac Lake, New York and Hot Springs, Arizona. Parrish continued to paint during this time.

A significant change in his artwork is seen in 1931. Prior, he painted romantic themes; but after 1931, Parrish only completed landscapes of rural scenes. He died in 1966.

Sydney Gross was born in 1897, and was an aspiring artist who corresponded with Maxfield Parrish.

Henry Clarence Pitz (1895-1965) was born in Philadelphia to parents Henry William and Anna Rosina Pitz. He studied art at the Philadelphia Museum College of Art from 1914 to 1918, as well as the Spring Garden Institute in Philadelphia in 1917 and 1920. A lifelong admirer of Howard Pyle, Pitz authored a book profiling the artist in The Brandywine Tradition, which was published in 1969. Pitz won a Philadelphia Athenaeum Literary Award for this work. Over the course of his career, Pitz authored and illustrated over 160 books on various topics, including children’s literature, history, and art technique.

Several of Pyle's students became influential women illustrators. They include Jessie Willcox Smith, Violet Oakley, and Elizabeth Shippen Green.

Jessie Willcox Smith, one of the best known American illustrators of the first half of the twentieth century, discovered her talent for art while teaching kindergarten. She studied at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art and Design) and at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where she worked briefly with Thomas Eakins. By 1888, she had left the Academy to pursue work as an illustrator. Her first job was creating advertisements for Ladies Home Journal. In 1894, Smith began studying with Howard Pyle at Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry. She credited Pyle with starting her in the field and wrote that his teaching was invaluable. Violet Oakley entered the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1896, having studied art in England and France. After only one semester at the Academy, she became a student of Howard Pyle at Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry. Recognizing her sense of color and composition, Pyle encouraged Oakley to create stained glass windows and murals which she did throughout her life. Her most important commission was designing and executing murals for the new capitol in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Elizabeth Shippen Green studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts with Thomas Anshutz, Thomas Eakins and Robert Vonnoh. After graduation, Green illustrated articles for several Philadelphia newspapers and for the Strawbridge and Clothier department store. She also illustrated stories, articles and children’s pages for many leading magazines. In 1897, Green began taking courses at Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry with Howard Pyle. Green’s career spanned forty-four years. She illustrated over twenty books. The public knew her best from the illustrations she created for Harper’s Magazine over a twenty year period.

Bibliography:

(http://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Pitz__Henry_C.html).

This collection, assembled by Thornton Oakley, covers the artistic careers of Howard Pyle and several of his prominent students. Materials in this collection include correspondence, tear sheets of artwork published in magazines, original illustrations, photographs, the Pitz research notes, and manuscripts. Pyle’s students who are best represented in this collection include Elizabeth Shippen Green, Jessie Wilcox Smith, George Harding, Violet Oakley, N.C. Wyeth, and Maxfield Parrish. The collection’s main strength is the original artwork by Pyle and some of his students. The collection dates from 1841 to 1992. There are nine series in the collection: “Thornton Oakley,” “Howard Pyle,” “Art by Howard Pyle,” “Students of Howard Pyle subject files,” “Artwork by students of Howard Pyle,” “Maxfield Parrish family papers,” “Art by Maxfield Parrish,” “Sidney Gross,” and “Henry Clarence Pitz’s research for The Brandywine Tradition.”

The first series, “Thornton Oakley papers,” primarily documents Oakley’s efforts to preserve the legacy of Howard Pyle through writing brief biographies, holding events, and corresponding with Pyle's former students. It is divided into four subseries. The “Correspondence” subseries comprises the bulk of this series and contains letters from artists and other professional contacts from the 1920s to the 1960s. The correspondence is mostly about Howard Pyle, though there are numerous letters Oakley collected that were written by Pyle. Also included are autographs of prominent literary figures such as Jules Verne, Samuel Clemens, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Frances Hodgson Burnett, which Oakley collected, and are not related to Pyle. The “Writings and Ephemera regarding Howard Pyle” subseries contains writings and ephemera compiled by Thornton Oakley on the career of Pyle. The subseries also contains the bookplates and program guides for the Howard Pyle material that Thornton Oakley gifted to the Free Library of Philadelphia in 1951. At the end of this series is the “Photographic Albums” subseries containing photographs of Oakley’s trips to the West Indies and France.

The “Howard Pyle” series documents Pyle’s career as an artist. The “Tear sheets” subseries contains pages ripped out of magazines that published works by Pyle during his career, including Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Scribner’s, St. Nicholas Magazine, and the Century. The “Subject and Research Files” subseries includes records of auction catalogs of Howard Pyle's works, a sale of estate catalog from 1912, and clippings related to Howard Pyle. The “Photographs” subseries contains photographs of Pyle, his estate in Chadd’s Ford Mill, and other photographs of artists found in the Pyle collection.

Next is the series “Art by Howard Pyle,” which contains both original and re-printed works of art. The artwork was previously cataloged by the library staff, and the finding aid arrangement reflects that system. The art is grouped into subseries based on its physical size: “Medium-Sized Prints,” “Proofs,” “Large Sized Prints,” and “Small-Sized Prints.” Also included is a sketchbook by Howard Pyle from 1898.

The next series, “Subject files on students of Howard Pyle,” contains clippings, illustrations, letters, and various course records of Howard Pyle’s students. These materials are arranged alphabetically by student name. A folder containing Maxfield Parrish material has been kept with this series to maintain original order; however researchers will find more material on Parrish in the series "Maxfield Parrish family papers," and “Art by Maxfield Parrish.”

The series, “Art by Students of Howard Pyle" contains illustrations by students of Howard Pyle. The art work is divided into subseries according to its physical size: “Medium-Sized Prints” and “Large-Sized Prints.” Subseries are arranged alphabetically by student name. Student artists include Jessie Wilcox Smith, Elizabeth Shippen Green, and Violet Oakley.

The series, “Maxfield Parrish family papers,” houses letters sent by and to Maxfield Parrish, his cousin Dillwyn Parrish, and son Stephen Parrish from 1914 to 1951, including a letter from Maxfield Parrish to Eleanor Wilson, daughter of President Woodrow Wilson.

“Art by Maxfield Parrish,” contains prints and published clippings of Maxfield Parrish’s art. The “Medium-Sized Prints” and “Large-Sized Prints” subseries contain dozens of reproduced prints by Parrish from 1902 to 1961. The “Tear sheets” subseries contain published clippings of Parrish’s art in Scribner's and Collier's. Also in this subseries are plates from various calendars and books and a box of negatives of several illustrations.

The series, “Sydney Gross,” contains the records of Sydney Gross’s personal exchanges with Maxfield Parrish, as well as some published material and photographs taken by Gross of the artist’s work. Gross’s correspondence with Parrish spans from 1933 to 1939, and 1955 to 1967. As an aspiring artist himself, Gross also kept notes on art theory which is represented in the subseries “Notes on art techniques.”

The series, “Henry Clarence Pitz research for The Brandywine Tradition,” contains the correspondence, notes, and writings of art historian Henry Clarence Pitz. There are two subseries. The first, “Correspondence,” is divided into personal and corporate correspondence, arranged alphabetically by the sender’s name. The next subseries, “Research for The Brandywine Tradition,” includes the manuscript, typescript, and proofs for this book, which was published in the late 1960s.

There are nine series in the collection: I. Thornton Oakley; II. Howard Pyle; III. Art by Howard Pyle; IV. Students of Howard Pyle subject files V. Artwork by students of Howard Pyle; VI. Maxfield Parrish family papers; VII. Art by Maxfield Parrish; VIII. Sidney Gross; IX. Henry Clarence Pitz’s research for The Brandywine Tradition.

Series I. Thornton Oakley is arranged in three subseries: i. Correspondence; ii. Writings and ephemera regarding Howard Pyle; iii. Photographic albums. The correspondence subseries is arranged alphabetically by sender.

Series II. Howard Pyle is arranged in three subseries: i. Tear sheets; ii. Subject and research files; iii. Photographs.

Series III. Art by Howard Pyle is grouped into subseries according to physical size.

Series IV. Students of Howard Pyle subject files is arranged alphabetically by student.

Series V. Artwork by students of Howard Pyle is grouped into subseries according to physical size.

Series VI. Maxfield Parrish Family Papers is arranged in two subseries: i. Correspondence; ii. Notebook of displayed artwork by Stephen Parrish.

Series VII. Art by Maxfield Parrish is grouped into subseries according to physical size.

Series VIII. Sydney Gross is arranged in two subseries: i. Material related to Maxfield Parrish; ii. Notes on art techniques.

Series IX. Henry Clarence Pitz's research for The Brandywine Tradition is arranged in two subseries: i. Correspondence; ii. Research for The Brandywine Tradition.

Publication Information:

Free Library of Philadelphia: Rare Book Department, 2010.06.21

Finding Aid Author:

Finding aid prepared by Megan Good and Forrest Wright

Sponsor:

The processing of this collection was made possible through generous funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, administered through the Council on Library and Information Resources’ “Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives” Project.

Access Restrictions:

This collection is open for research use.

Use Restrictions:

The right of access to material does not imply the right of publication. Permission for reprinting, reproduction, or extensive quotation from the rare books, manuscripts, prints or drawings must be obtained through written application, stating the use to be made of the material.

The reader bears the responsibility for any possible infringement of copyright laws in the publication of such material.

A reproduction fee will be charged if the material is to be reproduced in a commercial publication.

Custodial History:

Gift of Thornton Oakley, 1952.

Processing Information:

This collection was minimally processed in 2009-2011, as part of an experimental project conducted under the auspices of the Philadelphia Area Consortium of Special Collections Libraries to help eliminate processing backlog in Philadelphia repositories. A minimally processed collection is one processed at a less intensive rate than traditionally thought necessary to make a collection ready for use by researchers. When citing sources from this collection, researchers are advised to defer to folder titles provided in the finding aid rather than those provided on the physical folder.

Employing processing strategies outlined in Mark Greene's and Dennis Meissner's 2005 article, More Product, Less Process: Revamping Traditional Processing Approaches to Deal With Late 20th-Century Collections, the project team tested the limits of minimal processing on collections of all types and ages, in 23 Philadelphia area repositories. A primary goal of the project, the team processed at an average rate of 2-3 hours per linear foot of records, a fraction of the time ordinarily reserved for the arrangement and description of collections. Among other time saving strategies, the project team did not extensively review the content of the collections, replace acidic folders or complete any preservation work.

Corporate Name(s)
  • Howard Pyle School of Art.
Form/Genre(s)
  • Clippings
  • Correspondence
  • Drawings (visual works)
  • Ephemera
  • Photograph albums
  • Photographs
  • Sketches
Geographic Name(s)
  • Brandywine Creek Valley (Pa. and Del.)
  • Chadds Ford (Pa.)
  • Philadelphia (Pa.)
  • Wilmington (Del.)
Personal Name(s)
  • Elliott, Elizabeth Shippen Green
  • Gross, Sydney
  • Harding, George Matthews, 1882-1959
  • McAdoo, Eleanor Wilson, 1889-1967
  • Oakley, Thornton, 1881-1953
  • Oakley, Violet , 1874-1961
  • Parrish, Maxfield, 1870-1966
  • Pitz, Henry Clarence, 1895-1976
  • Pyle, Howard, 1853-1911
  • Smith, Jessie Willcox, 1863-1935
  • Wyeth, N.C., (Newell Convers), 1882-1945
Subject(s)
  • Art
  • Artists
  Date Oversize Box Folder Volume
Thornton Oakley 1841-1992
Correspondence 1841-1968
Edwin A. Abbey to Mr. Fairchild 1883 March 1 1
1
Edwin A. Abbey to Mr. Macmillan undated 1
2
Gertrude Abbey to Thornton Oakley 1926 May 25 1
3
Charles D. Abbott to Thornton Oakley 1950 July 28 1
4-5
Martin Abbott to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1951 December 26 1
6
Frederica Allen to Thornton Oakley 1953 March 2 1
7
James Lane Allen to Mrs. Van de Water 1916 May 9 1
8
American Library Service to Thornton Oakley 1946 August 16 1
9
John A. Angus to Thornton Oakley 1946 December 12 1
10
Stanley Arthurs to Thornton Oakley 1945-1947 1
11-14
William J. Aylward undated 1
15
William J. Aylward to Thornton Oakley 1920-1953 1
16-30
Rexford Barton to Thornton Oakley 1927 August 2 1
31
D.M. Beach to Thornton Oakley 1935 October 15 1
32
Florence Harper Beadleston to Thornton Oakley 1942 August 26 1
33
Cecilia Beaux to Thornton Oakley undated 1
34-35
"Natalie" to unknown 1924 September 16 1
36
Mary A. Benjamin to Thornton Oakley 1949-1951 1
37-40
Walter R. Benjamin autographs to Thornton Oakley 1946 1
41
Anna Whellan Betts to Thornton Oakley 1948-1953 1
42-52
Gertrude Biddle to Thornton Oakley 1934-1935 1
53-54
Edwin H. Blashfield to Miss Mechliu 1911 April 19 1
55
Edwin Howland Blashfield to Thornton Oakley undated 1
56
Theodore Bolton to Thornton Oakley 1947-1952 1
57-62
Bretano's to Thornton Oakley 1923 February 9 1
63
C. Barton Brewster to Thornton Oakley 1951 1
64-69
William Harlow Briggs to Thornton Oakley 1935 June 19 1
70
Gertrude Brinckle to Thornton Oakley 1919-1957 1
71-74
Phoebe Brokaw to Thornton Oakley 1947 February 12 1
75
Robert Brokaw to Thornton Oakley 1951 1
76-77
N.C. Brooks to R. Benjamin undated 1
78
Ethel Brown to Thornton Oakley 1947-1953 1
79-88
Earlham Bryant to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 28 1
89
William C. Bryant to unidentified 1874 March 4 1
90
William C. Bryant to Mr. Ketchum undated 1
91
Philip Burnet to Thornton Oakley 1923 July 2 1
92
Frances Hodgson Burnett to Mrs. Tweedie undated 1
93
Frances Hodgson Burnett autograph undated 1
94
Paul C. Burns to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 6 1
95
Margaret Keen Butcher to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 6 1
96
James Branch Cabell to Miss Munson 1934 September 8 1
97
James Branch Cabell to Thornton Oakley 1938 March 10 1
98
Cadmus Bookshop to Thornton Oakley 1930 April 3 1
99
Helen L. Card to Thornton Oakley 1948-1949 1
100-101
Will Carleton to Mr. Sinclair undated 1
102
Anna E. Cebart to Thornton Oakley 1952-1953 1
103-110
D. Lawrance Chambers to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 26 1
111
Henrietta Chapin to Thornton Oakley 1942-1944 1
112-113
J.H. Chapin to Thornton Oakley 1923-1943 1
114-117
William Fayal Clarke to Thornton Oakley 1923-1924 2
1-4
Samuel L. Clemens to Howard Pyle 1950 December 10 2
5
Lammot Copland to Thornton Oakley 1944 June 19 2
6
Louise Corkman to Thornton Oakley 1951-1952 2
7-9
Staats Cotsworth to Thornton Oakley 1952 April 17 2
10
James Creese to Amy Oakley 1951 November 9 2
11
Eleanor Crichton to Thornton Oakley 1924-1952 2
12-15
Willard E. Crichton to Thornton Oakley 1952 July 2
16
Wilbur L. Cross to Thornton Oakley 1957 October 19 2
17
Millicent Dales to Thornton Oakley undated 2
18
Charles W. David to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 28 2
19
Paul A. Davis to Thornton Oakley 1934 December 28 2
20
Robert Dechert to Thornton Oakley 1951 October 28 2
21
Margaret Deland to Thornton Oakley 1937 2
22-24
Margaret Deland to Miss Loring undated 2
25
Thomas F. Dibdin to Maria 1841 April 7 2
26
Lucy Walker Donnalld to Mrs. Oakley 1934 October 1 2
27
Richard T. Dooner to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 19 2
28
James Dougherty to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 1 2
29
Edith True Drake to Thornton Oakley 1925-1932 2
30-32
Harvey Dunn to Thornton Oakley 1947-1951 2
33-36
Tulla Dunn to Thornton Oakley undated 2
37
Huger Elliott to Thornton Oakley 1947 2
38-39
Charles P. Everitt to Thornton Oakley 1936 March 25 2
40
Louis Ewald to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 24 2
41
Mabel Swift Eure to Amy Oakley 1951 November 8 2
42
Louisa Eyre to Thornton Oakley 1952 February 26 2
43
Mrs. J. Gordon Fetterman to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 30 2
44
Franklin L. Fisher to Thornton Oakley 1947-1951 2
45-47
Harrison Fisher to Miss Horner undated 2
48
Alfred Fouler to Thornton Oakley 1922 September 30 2
49
William Hogan Fox to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 9 2
50
Joseph T. Fraser to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 8 2
51
Donald Gardner to Thornton Oakley 1936 March 26 2
52-53
C.D. Gibson to Thornton Oakley 1923 January 12 2
54
Bradley Gilman to Thornton Oakley 1908 August 26 2
55
Berthe M. Goodwin to Thornton Oakley undated 2
56
Gordon Grant to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 24 2
57
Elizabeth Shippen Green to Thornton Oakley 1916-1950 2
58-69
Emerson Greenaway to Thornton Oakley 1951-1953 2
70-72
Sydney Gross to Thornton Oakley 1952 February 7 2
73
Sydney Gross (Typescript of address on Maxfield Parrish) 1934 February 16 2
74
Gilbert and Elsie Grosvenor to Thornton Oakley undated 2
75
Betsy Harding Christmas Card undated 3
1
Charlotte Brown Harding to Thornton Oakley 1919-1947 3
2-4
George Harding to Thornton Oakley 1928-1951 3
5-19
Milton B. Harding to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1952 February 17 3
20
Ellen Mary Hare to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 8 3
21
Reuben Harris to Thornton Oakley 1938-1941 3
22-24
C. F. Hartman to Thornton Oakley 1918 October 25 3
25
Theodosia C. Hauiland to Thornton Oakley 1952 January 6 3
26
Nathaniel Hawthorne typescript 1848 May 22 3
27
Nathaniel Hawthorne to William D. Ticknor (envelope only) 1856 November 22 3
28
Southard Hay to Thornton Oakley 1938 January 10, 1928 January 30 3
29-30
Thomas Wentworth Higginson to Dr. Thwing 1906 December 26 3
31
Henrik Hilbom to Thornton Oakley 1929-1935 3
32-36
Margaretta S. Hinchman to Thornton Oakley 1951 May 29 3
37
Ernest G. Hoffsten to Thornton Oakley undated 3
38
Leicester B. Holland to Thornton Oakley 1938-1942 3
39-41
Rupert Sargent Holland to Thornton Oakley 1951 3
42-43
Oliver Wendell Holmes 1878 November 15 3
44
Oliver Wendell Holmes to Mr. Lathrop 1881 December 22 3
45
Oliver Wendell Holmes to Dr. Nichols 1883 February 11 3
46
Oliver Wendell Holmes to Mrs. Lillie undated 3
47
Oliver Wendell Holmes to Mrs. Loring undated 3
48
Oliver Wendell Holmes to W. E. Robinson undated 3
49
Charles Hopkinson to Thornton Oakley 1945 June 2 3
50
Hannah Mee Horner to Thornton Oakley undated 3
51
John Mead Howells to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 29 3
52
Mildred Howells to Thornton Oakley 1924-1952 3
53-54
William Dean Howells to Mr. W. H. Cary 1866 June 5 3
55
William Dean Howells to Mr. Hall 1898 April 17 3
56
Serena M. N. Hutchinson to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 2 3
57
Charles L. Huyer to Thornton Oakley 1949-1951 3
58-59
Charles Huyck to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 5 3
60
James H. Hyde to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 22 3
61
Philip P. Jacobs to Thornton Oakley 1926 January 18 3
62
Bessie D. Johnson to Thornton Oakley 1952 January 7 3
63
Merle Johnson to Thornton Oakley 1923-1925 3
64-69
Robert Underwood Johnson to Thornton Oakley 1922 November 14 3
70
Deane Keller typescript of Howard Pyle 1942 April 19 3
71
Kelsey to Thornton Oakley 1944 November 5 3
72
H. B. Keneally to Thornton Oakley 1947 June 4 3
73
Charles Kingsley to unidentified 1859-1869 3
74-75
George S. Koyle to Thornton Oakley 1949 3
76-77
Josephine L. to Thornton Oakley 1934 February 4 3
78
Warren P. Laird to Thornton Oakley 1943 June 28 3
79
E. W. Latendorf to Thornton Oakley 1946-1951 3
80-88
John F. Lewis Jr. to Thornton Oakley 1951 October 19 3
89
Henrietta Lindsay to Thornton Oakley 1920 January 12 3
90
Henry Cabot Lodge to North American Review 1894 November 24 3
91
Henry Cabot Lodge to William L. Stone 1898 December 8 3
92
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to unidentified undated 3
93
Benson J. Lossing to Thomas C. Powell 1876 October 5 3
94
James Russell Lowell to G. P. Morris 1854 February 21 3
95
Sarah Lowrie to Thornton Oakley 1951 3
96-98
Mabel Stewart Ludlum to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1951 November 10 3
99
Richard W. Lykes to Thornton Oakley 1945-1952 3
100-114
Russell Lynes to Thornton Oakley 1950 October 26 3
115
Julia Clyde MacAlister to Thornton Oakley undated 4
1
Katherine McBride to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 28 4
2
Gordon M. McCouch to Thornton Oakley 1952 4
3-5
Thomas McIver to Thornton Oakley 1952 January 22 4
6
John and Ann McKay, Christmas card 1948 4
7
Maggs Brothers to Thornton Oakley 1935 October 17 4
8
Bertha E. Mahony to Thornton Oakley 1931 March 25 4
9
Otto Tod Mallery to Thornton Oakley 1951 4
10-11
Paul Manship to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 27 4
12
Edwin Markham undated 4
13
Elsie Masson to Thornton Oakley 1929 November 10 4
14
Matthias to Thornton Oakley 1952 January 30 4
15
T. E. Mergendahl Jr. to Thornton Oakley 1950 November 29 4
16
Katherine Milhous to Thornton Oakley 1946-1951 4
17-18
Coleman Mills to Thornton Oakley 1947 March 6 4
19
Bertha E. Mahony Miller to Thornton Oakley 1947 October 23 4
20
Wilson Minshall to Amy and Thornton Oakley 1950 December 11 4
21
S. Weir Mitchell 1877 June 20 4
22
S. Weir Mitchell to C. L. Moore undated 4
23
S. Weir Mitchell to Mrs. T. Williams undated 4
24
John B. Moll Jr. to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 2 4
25
Constance Moore to Thornton Oakley 1944-1952 4
26-27
Harrison Morris to Thornton Oakley 1923 February 1 4
28
Willard S. Morse to Thornton Oakley 1922-1923 4
29-37
Howard S. Mott to Thornton Oakley 1947 January 14 4
38
Anna Murphy to Thornton Oakley undated 4
39
Amy James Newton to Thornton Oakley 1946 August 14 4
40
F. Maurice Newton to Thornton Oakley 1947 January 12 4
41
Gertrude Novokovsky to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 4 4
42
Amy Oakley to "My Darling Boy" undated 4
43
Imogen B. Oakley 1900 February 4
44
Thornton Oakley deed of gift to Free Library of Pennsylvania undated 4
45
Thornton Oakley to John Ashhurst 1920 4
46-49
Thornton Oakley to Franklin Price 1938 September 4
50-51
Thornton Oakley to Mr. Sessler 1939-1941 4
52-57
Thornton Oakley to Mabel Zahn 1941 September 10 4
58
Thornton Oakley to Franklin Price 1951 February 17 4
59
Thornton Oakley to Emerson Greenaway 1953 February 18 4
60
Thornton Oakley to Mr. Sessler undated 4
61
Thornton Oakley Contemporary Club proposal for membership 1918 April 23 4
62
Violet Oakley to Thornton Oakley 1923 September 27 4
63
Violet Oakley to Thornton, Amy, and Landsdale Oakley 1943 December 24 4
64
Violet Oakley to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1944 September 21 4
65
Violet Oakley to Thornton Oakley 1950 March 4
66
Violet Oakley to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1950 August 3 4
67
Violet Oakley to Thornton Oakley 1952 4
68-69
Violet Oakley to Thornton and Amy Oakley undated 4
70-71
Violet Oakley to unknown undated 4
72
Merle M. Odgers to Thornton Oakley 1951 4
73-74
Thomas Nelson Page to the editors of The Critic 1890 November 22 5
1
Gilbert Parker 1914 March 5
2
Francis Parkman to William H. Cary 1871 March 27 5
3
Francis Parkman to Mrs. Greenough 1872 August 12 5
4
William F. Parr Jr. to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1953 February 8 5
5
Maxfield Parrish to Thekla Horner 1912 July 27 5
6
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1913-1915 5
7-8
Maxfield Parrish to My Dear Rose 1920 May 18 5
9
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1922 December 12 5
10
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1923-1930 5
11-17
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1933-1934 5
18-22
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1934 5
23-14
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1934 March 5 5
25
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1934 5
26-29
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1938-1939 5
30-33
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1940 5
34-38
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1941-1948 5
39-46
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1948 September 20 5
47
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1951-1952 5
48-50
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1952-1953 5
51-52
Maxfield Parrish to Thornton Oakley 1953 January 30 5
53
Maxfield Parrish to Sydney Gross 1954-1968 5
54-65
Maxfield Parrish to "Dear Lady" undated 5
66
Maxfield Parrish photograph undated 5
67
Maxfield Parrish photograph with envelope circa 1957 5
68
Grace B. Patten to Thornton Oakley 1937-1945 5
69-73
Leonora T. Patterson to Thornton Oakley 1951 October 14 5
74
Henry J. Peck to Thornton Oakley 1950-1953 5
75-91
Elizabeth Robbins Pennell to Miss Lewis 1926 May 27 6
1
Joseph Pennell to Mr. Carsons 1889 February 24 6
2
Joseph Pennell to Sam 1912 June 2 6
3
Joseph Pennell to Mr. Lewis 1919 6
4
Joseph Pennell to Thornton Oakley 1921 June 19 6
5
Joseph Pennell to Buel 1925 November 3 6
6
Franklin Price to Thornton Oakley 1952 March 31 6
7
Katherine Pyle to Thornton Oakley 1933 April 26 6
8
Anne P. Pyle manuscript "Hans Gollenlieb" 1877 6
9
Anne P. Pyle to Thornton and Amy Oakley 1920-1922 6
10-11
Anne P. Pyle to Thornton Oakley 1922-1938 6
12-33
Godfrey Pyle to Thornton Oakley 1929 May 12 6
34
Henry S. Pyle to Thornton Oakley 1939 June 7 6
35
Howard Pyle manuscript begins "Bric a Brac" undated 6
36
Howard Pyle manuscript "A Transferred Romance" undated 6
37
Howard Pyle to Mr. Patten 1877 December 9 6
38
Howard Pyle unidentified 1880 April 30 6
39
Howard Pyle to Mr. Drake 1883 October 10 6
40
Howard Pyle to Ben M. Austin 1886 May 31 6
41
Howard Pyle to Mrs. Morse 1887 December 11 6
42
Howard Pyle to Mr. Stedman 1888 6
43-44
Howard Pyle to Mr. Drake 1888 December 20 6
45
Howard Pyle to Mr. Stedman 1889 January 23 6
46
Howard Pyle to Mr. Drake 1889 April 13 6
47
Howard Pyle to unidentified 1889 May 14 6
48
Howard Pyle to Mr. S.S. McClure 1889 November 10 6
49
Howard Pyle to unidentified 1892 May 12 6
50
Howard Pyle to George Willard Benson 1892 April 6 6
51
Howard Pyle to unidentified 1892 July 3 6
52
Howard Pyle to Ms. McIlvaine 1892 October 12 6
53
Howard Pyle to Mr. Bush 1893 March 12 6
54
Howard Pyle to Mr. W.F. Clarke 1894 6
55-56
Howard Pyle to Charles A. Burkhardt 1895 January 7 6
57
Howard Pyle to Edith Robinson 1895 March 26 6
58
Howard Pyle to Mrs. Talcott Williams 1895 April 24 6
59
Howard Pyle to Mrs. Alfred Meyer 1895 October 29 6
60
Howard Pyle to Dr. James MacAlister 1897 6
61-63
Howard Pyle to Principal of Moravian Seminary 1897 March 14 6
64
Howard Pyle dated check 1898 May 16 6
65
Howard Pyle to Ross Turner 1899 November 21 6
66
Howard Pyle to Mr. Patten 1899-1900 6
67-69
Howard Pyle checks 1900 October 20 6
70-71
Howard Pyle to Mr. E.C. McAlister 1901 July 26 6
72
Howard Pyle to Charles F. Hazeltine 1902 November 7 6
73
Howard Pyle to Mr. Clarke 1903 May 6
74-75
Howard Pyle to Mr. Johnson 1905 February 20 6
76
Howard Pyle to Mary S. Underwood 1905 November 1 6
77
Howard Pyle to William Jackson 1906 6
78-79
Howard Pyle to Mr. William Patten 1907 October 10 6
80
Howard Pyle to C.S. Jackson 1907 December 3 6
81
Howard Pyle to Dr. Frederick Fraley 1909 June 16 6
82
Howard Pyle to Mrs. Brigham 1909 December 22 6
83
Howard Pyle to C. S. Jackson 1910 6
84-86
Howard Pyle to Mr. Harper 1911 February 22 6
87
Howard Pyle to Mary E. McAuley 1911 August 12 6
88
Howard Pyle sixteen autographs undated 6
89
Howard Pyle photograph undated 6
90
Howard Pyle Jr. to Thornton Oakley 1939 6
91
Howard Pyle (Governor of Arizona) to Joseph Carson 1951 November 1 6
92
Howard Pyle (Governor of Arizona) to Thornton Oakley 1951 January 31 6
93
Katherine Pyle to Thornton Oakley 1933 May 1 6
94
Bernard Quaritch Ltd. to Thornton Oakley 1923 August 23 7
1
Conyers Read to Violet Oakley 1940 September 13 7
2
Charles Repper to Amy Oakley 1954 October 18 7
3
Edward K. Robinson to Thornton Oakley 1952 January 7 7
4
Edith Kermit Roosevelt to Thornton Oakley 1923 March 25 7
5
Theodore Roosevelt autograph undated 7
6
Herb Roth to Thornton Oakley 1952 December 7
7-8
Anne W. Rush to Amy Oakley 1951 November 8 7
9
A.W. Rushmore to Thornton Oakley 1923 January 19 7
10
Augustus Saint-Gaudens to Franklin W. Hooper 1902 March 14 7
11
Augustus Saint-Gaudens to Mr. Rie 1896 November 18 7
12
Augustus Saint-Gaudens to Thornton Oakley 1948 7
13-14
William B. Salsbury to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 31 7
15
Birger Sandzen to Thornton Oakley 1951-1953 7
16-17
Frank E. Schoonover to Thornton Oakley 1922-1953 7
18-23
Frank E. Schoonover to Amy Oakley 1953 April 10 7
24
Frank E. and Martha Schoonover Christmas cards undated 7
25
Margaretta Morris Scott to Thornton Oakley 1951 November 8 7
26
H.E. Scudder to Arthur Gilman 1882 August 9 7
27
H.E. Scudder to Stimson undated 7
28
Don C. Seitz to Edwin H. Frost 1924 March 22 7
29
Charles Sessler invoice 1948 August 9 7
30
J. Leonard Sessler to Thornton Oakley 1941-1942 7
31-32
Joe and Nancy Sims Christmas card 1949 7
33
Mary P. G. Sinkler to Thornton Oakley 1952 February 18 7
34
John P. B. Sinkler to Thornton Oakley 1952 February 18 7
35
Sam F. Sipe II to Thornton Oakley undated 7
36
Gertrude B. Smith to Thornton Oakley 1949 September 25 7
37
Jessie Wilcox Smith to Thornton Oakley 1916-1929 7
38-43
Livingston Smith to Thornton Oakley 1949 February 24 7
44
Dick Sparks to Thornton Oakley 1937 7
45-46
Sarah Logan Wister Starr to Thornton Oakley 1947 June 30 7
47
Edward C. Stedman 1887 7
48
Robert Lewis Stevenson 1887 April 19 7
49
Harry Stone to Thornton Oakley 1930 December 3 7
50
Lyman B. Sturgis to Thornton Oakley 1923-1930 7
51-54
Oliver G. Swan to Thornton Oakley 1929 January 2 7
55
Lucy Taggart to Thornton Oakley undated 7
56
Emily Dayton Taylor to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 31 7
57
Celia Thaxter to Mrs. Alexander 1869 August 13 7
58
William Tidball to Thornton Oakley 1943 July 16 7
59
Allen Tupper True to Thornton Oakley 1938-1952 7
60-73
Ivan Turgenieff to unidentified 1879 May 23 7
74
Henry van Dyke to Dr. William Hayes March 1890 January 16 7
75
Henry Van Dyke to Leila Mechlin 1921 April 13 7
76
Jules Verne to unidentified 1881 July 12 7
77
Mary A. Ward to Lord Snonham 1916 December 19 7
78
Edward Warwick to Thornton Oakley 1951-1953 7
79-80
Harold Tucker Webster to Thornton Oakley 1949 January 27 7
81
Everett West to Thornton Oakley 1928 August 11 7
82
S. Burns Weston to Thornton Oakley 1920 November 9 7
83
Samuel Wetherill Jr. to Thornton Oakley 1927 October 11 7
84
Frederic Whitaker to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 29 7
85
C. E. H. Whitlock to Thornton Oakley 1946 January 21 7
86
May Whitlock to Thornton Oakley 1943 September 17 7
87
John G. Whittier autographs undated 7
88
Louise P. Whyte to Thornton Oakley 1947 7
89-90
Mary E. Wilkins to Ms. Aldrich 1892 December 9 7
91
John L. B. Williams to Thornton Oakley 1949 February 24 7
92
Richard N. Williams II to Thornton Oakley 1947 March 12 7
93
Katherine Richardson Wiseman to Thornton Oakley 1951 December 21 7
94
Clinton Rogers Woodruff to Mrs. Talcott Williams 1899 April 15 7
95
N. C. Wyeth to Thornton Oakley 1920-1924 7
96-99
Louis A. Wuerth to Thornton Oakley 1930 November 6 7
100
N. C. Wyeth to Thornton Oakley 1942 November 8 7
101
N. C. Wyeth to Roger Scaife 1944 April 11 7
102
N. C. Wyeth to Thornton Oakley undated 7
103-104
Mabel Zahn to Thornton Oakley 1944-1953 7
105-108
Writings and ephemera regarding Howard Pyle
Writings on Howard Pyle and his career by Thornton Oakley 1931, 1951, 1953 8
1
Ephemera and Clippings regarding Howard Pyle 1949-1992 8
2
Ephemera of students of Howard Pyle 1922-1924 8
3
Ephemera related to Thornton Oakley 1901, 1950 8
4
Bookplates for Thornton Oakley Collection on Howard Pyle undated 9

Programs for Howard Pyle: His Art and Personality 1951 November 8 10

Photographic albums circa 1924
The West Indies undated 1-3
The West Indies and Hill-towns of the Pyrenees undated 4
Cloud Lands of France 1924 5-6
Howard Pyle 1871-1985
Tear sheets 1876-1927
Harper's New Monthly Magazine 1879 May-1888 December 11
1-12
Harper's New Monthly Magazine 1889 April-1897 April 12
1-12
Harper's New Monthly Magazine 1898 April-1908 December 13
1-14
Harper's Monthly Magazine 1909 August-1913 June 14
1-8
Harper's Young People 1880 July 13-1894 June 29 15
1-20
Harper's Young People 1896 March 24, 1897 June 29 15
21
Scribner's 1876-1877 16
1-2
Scribner's 1878 April-1878 June 16
3
Scribner's 1887 January-1887 February, 1887 December 16
4
Scribner's 1889 December 16
5
Scribner's 1889-1898 16
6-14
Scribner's 1900-1903 16
15-17
St. Nicholas Magazine 1877-1879 17
1-3
St. Nicholas Magazine 1881, 1892 17
4
St. Nicholas Magazine 1894 April-1895 September 17
5-6
St. Nicholas Magazine 1902-1903 17
7-9
St. Nicholas Magazine 1915 May, 1925 January 17
10
The Century 1893 May, 1893 December, 1895 April-1895 June, 1895 September, 1895 November 18
1
The Century 1896-1897 18
2
The Century 1897 Febuary-1897 March, 1901 November 18
3
The Century 1902 December 18
4
The American Magazine of Art 1927 August 18
5
The Book Buyer 1887 December, 1888 October, 1894 December, 1897 December, 1897 March, 1897 May, 1899 November 18
6
Book News 1904 December 18
7
The Bookman 1907 July, 1908 September, 1912 January 18
8
Cosmopolitan 1892 June, 1894 August 18
9
The Craftsman 1909 January 18
10
Everybody's Magazine 1902 June, 1913 January 18
11
The Independent 1905 December 14, 1907 November 21 18
12
Leslie's Magazine August 1903 18
13
McClure's Magazine 1899 December, 1900 December, 1901 August, 1906 October-1906 November 18
14
The Reader 1903 May 18
15
Wide Awake Magazine 1885 December, 1886 January-1886 October, 1887 July, 1887 December, 1889 December 18
16
Assorted Tear sheets collected by Thornton Oakley
This box contains tear sheets from Scribner's, Harper's, and The Literary Digest.
1887-1911 15
Subject and research files
This series includes both graphic materials and text. The graphic materials are housed separately from the text, accounting for the different locations of materials. Researchers will find graphic materials in boxes 2 and 3, and text in boxes 19 to 21.
1871-1985
Book Dealer and Auction Catalogs regarding Howard Pyle 1917-1942 19
2
1
1
Century Club, New York 1906, 1917 19
2
2
2
Ephemera 1895-1932 2
19
3
3
Exhibition Catalogs 1881-1985 20
2
19
1
4
4
Magazine Articles 1944-1975 3
20
2
2
Newspaper Clippings 1871-1944 20
3
Publications 1915-1974 21
1
Sale of Estate Catalog 1912 21
2
Wilmington Society of Fine Arts, Delaware Art Center, Wilmington Public Library 1923-1973 21
3
Writings 1890-1902 21
4
Photographs 1902-1970
Photographs of the Mill, Chadd's Ford 1953 22
1
Photographs of Howard Pyle and studio undated 12
5
Photographs of original art by Howard Pyle undated 12
6
Assorted photographs undated 13
25-27
Photographs of Chadd's Ford Mill 1902-1903 13
28-30
Photographs used in show "Brandywine Tradition" 1970 14
Art by Howard Pyle
Due to housing issues, the art housed in this series is grouped into subseries according to physical size. The organization and identification of the art was established by a previous cataloging effort completed by the Free Library staff. Researchers interested in learning more about the content of this series should contact the Free Library special collections department.
1893-1908
Medium size prints 1893-1907
M1-M25 undated 1

M26-M50 undated 2

M51-M75 undated 3

M76-M100 1891-1893 4

M101-M125 1893-1907 5

M126-M143 undated 6
1-17
Proofs undated
1-24 undated 13
Large size prints undated
L1-L5 undated 9
Small size prints undated
S1-S10 undated 11
Sketches
Sketchbook 1898 12
1
Sketchbook undated 12
2
American Red Cross seals 1908 12
3
Autograph cards with sketches undated 12
4
Students of Howard Pyle subject files undated
John Wolcott Adams undated 22
2
Stanley Arthurs undated 22
3
Clifford W. Ashley undated 22
4
William W. Aylward undated 22
5
Arthur E. Becker undated 22
6
Anna Whellan Betts undated 22
7
Ethel Franklin Betts undated 22
8
Clyde O. DeLand undated 22
9
Dean Cornwell undated 22
10
Harvey T. Dunn undated 22
11
William Harrden Foster undated 22
12
Philip R. Goodwin undated 22
13
Elizabeth Shippen Green undated 22
14-17
Charlotte Harding undated 23
1
George Harding undated 23
2
P. L. Hoyt undated 23
3
Oliver Kemp undated 23
4
Ethel P. B. Leach undated 23
5
Gordon M. McCouch undated 23
6
Frank B. Masters undated 23
7
Violet Oakley undated 23
8-12
Maxfield Parrish undated 23
13-16
Henry J. Peck undated 24
1
Frank Schoonover undated 24
2-3
E. Roscoe Shrader undated 24
4
Howard E. Smith undated 24
5
Jessie Wilcox Smith undated 24
6-7
Alice Barber Stephens undated 24
8
Sarah S. Stilwell undated 24
9
Ella Bernard Thompson undated 24
10
Harry Townsend undated 24
11
Allen Tupper True undated 24
12
Herman C. Wall undated 24
13
N. C. Wyeth undated 1
24
14-15
Art by Students of Howard Pyle
Due to housing issues, the art housed in this series was grouped into subseries according its physical size.
1903-1918
Medium size prints undated
Clifford W. Ashley undated 6
M144
Anna Whelan Betts undated 6
M145
Elizabeth Shippen Green undated 6
7
M146-M150
M151
Gordon M. McCouch undated 7
M152
Thornton Oakley undated 7
M153-M156
Large size prints 1903-1918
Cecilia Beaux undated 9
L6
Alfredo Lutz Demorest 1916 9
L7
Elizabeth Shippen Green undated 9
L8
George Harding 1911 9
L9
Violet Oakley 1918 9
L10
Jessie Wilcox Smith undated 9
L11-L12
Jessie Wilcox Smith and Elizabeth Shippen Green 1903 9
L13-L19
Maxfield Parrish Family papers 1880-1951
Correspondence 1917-1951
Bok, Hannes undated 25
1
Brannock, George F. 1936 April 27 25
2
Bunting, Joseph T. 1920 March 2, 1920 March 22 25
3
Cutler, Charles N. 1936 March 7 25
4
Haven, Emerson 1935 February 12 25
5
Gaskell, Frank 1951 February 20 25
6
Johnson, E. 1936 April 14 25
7
Johnson, John Allen 1936 June 5 25
8
P.C.: Kullman and Company 1917 February 3 25
9
Low, Joseph S. 1936 March 10 25
10
Nolan, Marion Atkinson 1936 March 27 25
11
Parrish, Jean 1938 July 13 25
12
Parrish, Lydia Austin 1935-1951 25
13-100
Parrish, Maxfield 1914-1949 26
1-41
Seymour, Augustus T. 1935-1937 26
42-45
Summers, Harriet Joy undated 26
46
Unidentified Sender-"Mary Frances" 1936 January 5 26
47
Unidentified Sender-"A" 1936 February 8 26
48
Unidentified Sender-"Peggy" 1936 February 26, 1936 March 2 26
49-50
Unidentified Sender-"Elschen" 1936 March 8 26
51
Unidentified Sender-"Rozzie" 1936 March 30 26
52
Unidentified Sender-"N.B." 1937 March 1 - 1938 January 10 26
53-56
Unidentified Sender-"Pabnuts" 1938 December 1, 1939 February 6 26
57-58
Walker, Kitty Wirt 1936 April 25 26
59
Wiley, Peggy 1935 December 21 26
60
Williams, Bunting 1920 January 10-1920 January 23 26
61-63
Notebook of displayed artwork by Stephen Parrish
1880-1892 26
64
Art by Maxfield Parrish
Due to housing issues, the art housed in this series is grouped into subseries according to physical size. The organization and identification of the art was established by a previous cataloging effort completed by the Free Library staff. Researchers interested in learning more about the content of this series should contact the Free Library special collections department
1902-1964
Medium size prints undated
M157-M175 undated 7
M176-M200 undated 8
Large size prints 1902-1964
L20-L25 1902-1956 9
L26-L45 1937-1964 10
Tear sheets of Maxfield Parrish's art work
This subseries contains tear sheets from Scribner's, Collier's, and various calendars and book illustrations.
undated 17-19
Negatives of Illustrations undated 20
1-14
Sydney Gross 1921-1969
Material related to Maxfield Parrish 1921-1969
Correspondence regarding Maxfield Parrish 1933-1939 27
1
Correspondence to Maxfield Parrish and from others regarding Maxfield Parrish 1955-1967 27
2
Photographs of Maxfield Parrish and his house 1928-1936 27
3
Photographs of Maxfield Parrish art 1964-1969 27
4
Published material 1921-1936 28
1
Published Material 1937-1966 28
2
Assorted files on Maxfield Parrish 1925-1930 28
3
Notes on art techniques 1929-1959
1929-1959 28
4
undated 28
6
Henry Clarence Pitz's research for The Brandywine Tradition 1968-1969
Correspondence undated
Allinson-Jackson undated 29
1
Jamison-Zepesnick undated 30
1
Corporate: Adams Real Estate-The Woodmere Art Gallery undated 31
1
Research for The Brandywine Tradition 1968-1969
Manuscripts outline and photographs undated 32
1
Manuscript 1969 33
1
Typescript undated 34
1
Proofs 1968 35-36
Proof sheet for The Brandywine Tradition undated 16