Box 2
Contains 14 Results:
Correspondence of Publishers – The Macmillan Company, 1905-1907
Correspondence of Publishers – "The North American Review", 1906-1907
Correspondence of Publishers – "The Outlook", 1905-1908
Personal Correspondence B-H, 1885-1923
Personal Correspondence I-M, 1905-1922
Correspondents include: Charles E.M. Ince (1863-1932); Mary Jenkins; Harriet L. Jones; Virginia Lee Morris King (1898- ); C.G. Laird; Eleanor Selden Tucker Lee (1875-1962); the Reverend Arthur S. Lloyd; M.S. Mackintosh; A.G. McCulloh; Prestonia Mann Martin; [Hamilton?] W. Maxie; Mary Mears (concerning an article about her mother, Helen Farnsworth Mears); Marion C. Miles; F.S. Montgomery; and Fillmore Moore
Personal Correspondence P-W, 1907-1922
Correspondents include: Katharine Park-Lewis; Endicott Peabody (concerning an examination for Westmore Willcox, Jr.; Archibald Maclay Pentz (1865-1924); [L.]H. Porter; William Rapp (about the opera singer Schumann Heinz); Elizabeth C.H. Reid; Oscar Saenger; Edna Sprague; F.C. Steel; W.R. Sully; A.D. Thomas; John R. Walker; Stuart Walker; Gerard Warriner (cousin); and [?] Wood
Personal Correspondence – Margaret Macmillan Baxter (1852-1925), [1906], undated
Personal Correspondence – Fannie Reed Brewer, 1922
Personal Correspondence – S.R. Carter, 1905-1907
Personal Correspondence – Annie Clephane (1836?- ), 1904-1906
Personal Correspondence – Claudia Stuart Coles, writes chiefly concerning the Bahai faith, undated
Personal Correspondence – Mary Ellis (3 folders), 1904-1905, undated
Personal Correspondence – Joseph A. Graham, journalist in St. Louis, Philadelphia and elsewhere, undated
Graham discusses journalism in the United States and his experiences with hunting dogs; in particular two letters from Hillsboro, Alabama (no year, January 11 and January 21), and one letter from New Albany, Mississippi (no year March 8) discuss life in the rural South; his desire to write about the real lives of ordinary African-Americans in the South and their accomplishments, offset by his hesitancy about offending his white hosts; and the low standards of contemporary literature
Personal Correspondence – S.B.M. [Sara B. Mackintosh], Winchester, Massachusetts, a friend and former school teacher, 1904-1907, undated
The correspondent often critiques articles by Willcox that appear in "Harper’s Weekly" and other publications in her letters; she also comments on Theodore Roosevelt and his career (February 8, 1905)