Showing Collections: 151 - 169 of 169
Katharine Tynan letter to Elkin Mathews
Letter from Katharine Tynan to Elkin Mathews.
Katharine Tynan letters to Aliston [?] Mathews
Letters from Katharine Tynan to Aliston Mathews.
Katharine Tynan letters to Egan Mew
Letters from Katharine Tynan to Egan Mew.
Katharine Tynan letters to Langbridge
Letters from Irish author Katharine Tynan to Langbridge.
Katharine Tynan letters to Miss Gosset
Letters from Katharine Tynan to Miss Gosset.
Louis Untermeyer correspondence with John D. Weaver
Leters, together with clippings, manuscripts and letters with other correspondents exchanged by American author, anthologist, and editor Louis Untermeyer and American writer John D. Weaver.
Louis Untermeyer papers
The Louis Untermeyer papers consist of five linear feet of manuscript material abandoned by Untermeyer when he sold his Adirondack home, Stony Water, around 1970. Dating from 1902 through 1972, with the bulk of the papers dating 1912–1935, the collection is composed of correspondence, proofs, lists, scrapbooks, notes, photographs, programs, announcements, lectures, anthologies, poems, reviews, essays, and a bookplate.
Helen Waddell letter to Stanley Nott
Letter from Irish author Helen Waddell to Stanley Nott.
Christopher Ward letter to Marina Wister
Delaware author Christopher Ward sent this three-page signed and handwritten letter to his friend Marian Wister in 1926.
Charles Wertenbaker letter to Libby [Holman]
American journalist for Time magazine and author, Charles Wertenbaker (1901-1955), typed and signed this letter addressed to Libby (possibly Holman) on July 27, 1931, discussing, among other items, Wertenbaker's inability to visit Baltimore.
Literary letters to Dr. Alvin C. Weseley
This collection consists of correspondence from writers Elizabeth Tallent, Jane Smiley, and Larry McMurtry to Dr. Alvin C. Weseley, dating between 1987 and 1995.
Gustave Percival Wiksell miscellaneous material related to Bliss Carman, F. B. Sanborn, and R. W. Trine
Gustave Percival Wiksell (1863-1940) was a Boston dentist who also served as president of the Walt Whitman Fellowship from 1903 until 1919. The Gustave Percival Wiksell miscellaneous material related to Bliss Carman, F. B. Sanborn, and R. W. Trine contains letters, photographs, and clippings that were originally laid in books that were part of Wiksell's collection.
Patrick Williams letter
Letter from Patrick Williams to an unidentified individual originally laid in a copy of Patrick Williams' The Way Home.
William Carlos Williams and Kay Boyle letters to Charlotte Wilson
Eight autograph letters, one written and signed by William Carlos Williams to Charlotte Wilson commenting positively on a poem she wrote, five letters from Williams's wife, Florence, to Wilson, and two letters from Kay Boyle to Wilson, dated from December 3, 1957 to November 1, 1961.
William Carlos Williams collection
The William Carlos Williams collection, spanning the dates 1916-1973, consists of sixty-nine letters from noted American poet William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) to several different individuals discussing a variety of issues and reflecting his relationship to the various recipients. Letters from Florence Williams (wife of William Carlos) to several of these individuals, several letters written by Fred Miller, and manuscripts by Williams and Miller also comprise the collection.
Robert A. Wilson collection related to James Purdy
Originally the private collection of book dealer Robert A. Wilson, this collection spans the years 1956–1998 and includes letters, manuscripts, galleys, publicity fliers, publishers’ announcements, and ephemera related to the work of twentieth century American author James Purdy.
Jack B. Yeats letter to Lady Gregory
Letter from Jack B. Yeats to Lady Gregory originally laid in Jack B. Yeats book Sligo.
Jack B. Yeats letters to Elkin Mathews
Letters from Jack B. Yeats to Elkin Mathews including one card from his sister Lily Yeats to Mathews.
W. B. (William Butler) Yeats letter to George MacDonald
Letter from W. B. Yeats to George MacDonald and a letter from MacDonald's secretary to W. B. Yeats. These items were originally laid in W. B. Yeats's A Speech In Two Poems (1937).