Sadakichi Hartmann papers, circa early 20th century, undated.
Online content
Collection context
Summary
- Creators:
- Hartmann, Sadakichi, 1867-1944
- Abstract:
- Sadakichi Hartmann (1867-1944) was a writer, poet, dramatist, and critic during the early 20th century. Hartmann was an important figure in early modernism and had a diverse social circle that included Walt Whitman, Ezra Pound, and John Barrymore. This collection includes Hartmann's published works, unpublished manuscripts, correspondence, photographs, pastels, paintings, and diaries.
- Extent:
- 84.0 linear feet (108 document boxes, multiple containers) and (108 document boxes, multiple containers)
- Language:
- English .
- Preferred citation:
-
[Identification of item], [date if possible]. Sadakichi Hartmann papers (MS 068). Special Collections & University Archives, University of California, Riverside.
Background
- Scope and content:
-
Sadakichi Hartmann (1867-1944) was a writer, poet, dramatist, and critic during the early 20th century. Hartmann was an important figure in early modernism and had a diverse social circle that included Walt Whitman, Ezra Pound, and John Barrymore. This collection includes Hartmann's published works, unpublished manuscripts, correspondence, photographs, pastels, paintings, and diaries.
A portion of this collection remains unprocessed. Please contact Special Collections & Archives for additional information regarding this material.
- Biographical / historical:
-
"The clapboard shanty known as "Catclaw Siding" is gone now, torn down many years ago, but in the summer of 1954 it stood on the desert flats of Morongo Indian Reservation, paint mostly worn away, wind rushing through its broken windowpanes. I was then a newspaper reporter, pursuing a story, and I badly wanted into the shack to see what secrets it contained. Ten years before it had been the last home of Sadakichi Hartmann (1867-1944), an almost forgotten American literary figure from the Mauve Decade. I studied the shack, carefully jotting down descriptive notes for my story. Then I walked away from it and knocked on the door of a nearby adobe house. The door was opened by a hauntingly beautiful woman with coal-black hair framing an olive-hued face.
She listened suspiciously as I explained that I was a reporter and wanted to do a story on her late father, Sadakichi Hartmann. Then she slammed the door in my face.
That was my introduction to Wistaria Hartmann Linton, who was to become a close friend and future collaborator with Professor George Knox and me in research on her father.
Some weeks before Gene Fowler had published Minutes of the Last Meeting, a popular memoir detailing the escapades of John Barrymore, W. C. Fields, and other Hollywood celebrities during their last years. The most memorable character in his book was Sadakichi Hartmann, whom he called "the magnificent charlatan." Fowler portrayed Hartmann as an ancient relic of the earliest Bohemian days of Greenwich Village--now down on his luck, cadging drinks off Barrymore and various cronies for whom he performed as a witty and sarcastic court jester. There was much that was accurate in Fowler's portrayal of the half-Japanese, half-German writer, poet, dramatist, and critic. There was also much that was hearsay with no basis in fact. Fowler had a gift for telling a good story that would amuse readers, and he enjoyed making a good story better whenever possible. He embroidered upon many of the legends that had clung to Sadakichi Hartmann, dismissed the old man's real achievements as drunken boasts, and conducted only superficial research into his subject's past.
The book was an instant best-seller and cause-célèbre that summer in the San Gorgonio Pass. Many long-time residents of the two Pass communities of Banning and Beaumont had known Hartmann--if only as an eccentric and mysterious figure with aristocratic manners who prowled their streets in a heavy overcoat, rumpled white hair poking from under a felt hat. In 1923, Hartmann had moved his family to Beaumont, and from that base he had made periodic forays to Hollywood, working on films, writing movie criticism, and joining the John Barrymore crowd as a drinking companion. In 1938, then in his 70's, Sadakichi had built his old-age shack, "Catclaw Siding" as he called it, on land owned by a Cahuilla cattlerancher, Walter Linton, who was then married to his daughter, Wistaria. Now ten years after his death everyone in the San Gorgonio Pass was reading about him in Fowler's book.
I had never heard of Sadakichi Hartmann when the book came out. I found the book entertaining, accepted all of Fowler's tales at face value, and liked Sadakichi's mocking tongue and indomitable spirit. I was surprised to find those reader's of the book who had known Sadakichi best angry at Fowler's portrait.
I believe the first criticism I heard about the book came from Mrs. George Lardner, Beaumont Librarian, who enjoyed discussing literature and often had invited Hartmann to her home for lunch. "I have yet to meet anyone who knew Sadakichi well who isn't disgusted by Fowler's book," she told me. Dr. Guy Bogart of Beaumont was also indignant. "He was a poseur, yes," admitted Bogart, "but a charlatan, no! If you read Fowler's book you'll see only a drunken moocher--the seedy old man Fowler met in his declining years. Yet Sadakichi was a rare personality, who never surrendered his ideals or artistic integrity for a moment."
I was puzzled by the fact that most of those local people who had known Sadakichi agreed Fowler had captured much of the man's personality--yet they still considered the book an injustice. No one denied that Hartmann drank a lot, no one denied that he lived off a string of patrons, no one denied that much of his behavior was outrageous. Yet most of those who had any personal relationship with Sadakichi professed admiration and respect for him. For that matter, it was clear that Fowler had also admired Hartmann, perhaps even envied his strange charisma. As newspaper bureau chief for the Riverside Press-Enterprise Co. in the San Gorgonio Pass, I immediately saw the potential for an interesting feature story.
I had particularly wanted to interview Mrs. Linton about her reactions to the book. But the door had slammed shut on me.
Several days later, Ruth Little, a local newspaper writer and friend of Wistaria, persuaded her to talk with me. During an afternoon, I learned some of the reasons for Wistaria's reluctance to grant an interview. During the years of WWII, Hartmann's family had almost been interned because of his German-Japanese heritage. Many townspeople had ostracized the Hartmann family and circulated rumors that Sadakichi was a spy. Both the FBI and County Sheriff's Department had hounded the family with endless questions, and sheriff's deputies in patrol cars often followed family members when they left home. Some of Hartmann's children had been embarassed by his unconventionality and flamboyant Bohemianism. They were the children of his second marriage to Lillian Bonham, and none of them had known their father at the peak of his career in New York at the turn of the century, when he had made and spent money freely. Instead, they had grown up in the midst of the Depression in the middle-class atmosphere of San Gorgonio Pass--with a father who boasted of past triumphs and didn't care what the neighbors thought of him. Fowler's book with its suggestion that Hartmann was a charlatan evoked mostly bad memories. Even so, Mrs. Linton admitted that she had laughed at parts of the book: "Some of it seemed so much like Dad!"
"Catclaw Siding" had been closed since Sadakichi's death in 1944. Now Mrs. Linton agreed to let me look inside the shack. She turned a key in the padlock and we entered. A rain-stained "History of Modern Painting" at which mice had nibbled lay on the splintered floor. Rotted floorboards exposed bare sand beneath. In a corner of the shack was a battered grey trunk--Sadakichi's manuscript trunk. I lifted the lid, sifted through the papers, and was stunned by its contents.
Inside were piles of unpublished manuscripts, published articles, short stories, and poetry, and immense bundles of correspondence. I picked up one of the letters and read the name Ezra Pound. There were letters from George Santayana, Benjamin de Casseres, Douglas Fairbanks. The trunk was a bookman's dream. And there was more. Not only the contents of the trunk. Other materials had been stored in cupboards in Mrs. Linton's house. Among these was a scrapbook dating back to the 1890's marked "Revelations." And there was Hartmann's unpublished autobiography, never completed, but nonetheless several hundred pages offering rich insights into Sadakichi Hartmann's youth and early career for future researchers. And photographs: photographs by Gertrude Kasebier, J. C. Strauss, Rudolf Eickemeyer, Frank Eugene--names of long dead photographers whose significance meant nothing to me as yet.
Most of this material would have been widely dispersed and perhaps lost to research if it had not been for Wistaria Linton. Throughout his life, whenever Sadakichi needed money desperately, he sold his manuscripts or correspondence to rare book dealers and collectors. Various auction catalogues from the early 1900's record scarce Hartmann materials that have simply vanished into private hands and have never been found. Fortunately, Wistaria recognized the importance of the Hartmann materials. As a young woman, her father had taken her education in hand, directing her reading, encouraging her interest in art, and taking her along as a companion on trips to museums or to visit literary or artistic friends. She curbed his recklessness whenever possible by talking him out of manuscripts or other items that seemed significant--or when that failed hiding them from Sadakichi. She began this habit as a teenager and continued it into Sadakichi's old age.
The summer of 1954 Wistaria and I became conspirators together. I saw the possibility of an unusual literary expose. A series of newspaper articles recording the angry reactions of Sadakichi's friends to Fowler's book and a glimpse at some of his real accomplishments. Wistaria was delighted by my defense of her father. There was far too much Hartmann material for me to become even remotely acquainted with it in a short period--and too much that I didn't know about American art and literature. Nevertheless, we worked well together, delighted each time we uncovered a new facet of Sadakichi's past.
The series, five articles titled "The Last Bohemian," appeared in the Riverside Daily Enterprise from August 4 through August 16. They were entertaining journalism, not scholarship, and looking them over today I find almost as many errors as we pinpointed in Fowler's Minutes of the Last Meeting. In February of 1955, they were singled out for an award as the best newspaper series of the year in California by the California Newspaper Publishers Association. I was transferred to the Riverside office of the Press-Enterprise Co.
Wistaria. and I remained good friends. We talked occasionally about a scholarly book about her father, but by then I was well aware of the scope of such a task and my limited background in nineteenth century art and literature. Several years later Wistaria was offered a position in the Photographic Services at UCR, where she worked until her retirement in 1976. Eventually, I also joined the staff of the University. Wistaria was concerned about many of the more perishable materials in her father's papers and sometime in the mid-1960's we arranged with Librarian Edwin Coman to store these in the UCR General Library. As yet, however, she was uncertain about their final disposition.
Meanwhile, unaware that much of the Hartmann collection was stored at UCR, Professor George Knox of the Department of English had become interested in Sadakichi Hartmann. Knox's field was nineteenth century and early twentieth century American literature, and while Hartmann was not a major literary figure, he was nevertheless a writer who had been totally ignored by scholarship while many of his lesser contemporaries had become fields of inquiry.
It was Jake Zeitlin, the antiquarian bookman, who brought us together as he has done on many occasions with other scholars. Zeitlin had sold several Hartmann Manuscripts to the UCR Library and learned about the Hartmmann papers stored in the library. When Knox on a visit to Zeitlin & Ver Brugge mentioned Sadakichi to Jake, the bookman was able to regale him with his own personal reminiscences of the Bohemian writer, who in the 1920's had often hung out at Jake's shop. He then mentioned the collection at UCR, right in Knox's own backyard. The result has been more than ten years of friendship and collaboration in Hartmann research, during which we have edited four books in Hartmann scholarship, published the Sadakichi Hartmann Newsletter, and encouraged other Hartmann researchers or scholars in peripheral areas.
Shortly before her retirement in 1976 from the University, Wistaria Hartmann Linton made the decision that her father's papers and other materials belonged in Special Collections & Archives at the UCR Library. While the Wistaria Hartmann Linton Collection makes up the bulk of the Sadakichi Hartmann Archives, the archives have been steadily growing over the years. Mrs. Dorothea Atma Gilliland of St. Petersburg, Florida, a daughter of Hartmann by his first marriage, made a substantial gift of Hartmann papers to the archives in 1972, although much of her material had been acquired earlier by the University of Oregon. Among the many persons who have donated Hartmann correspondence or other materials to the collection are Christel Gang, Nora Morgan, Helga Hanson, Raymond Brossard, Peter Krasnow, and C. Verne Klintworth. Recently, the UCR Library acquired a substantial collection of Hollywood materials from Gene Fowler's son, Will Fowler, including Hartmann manuscripts and taped interviews with Hartmann friends such as the painter John Decker and the actor Thomas Mitchell that were used in the writing of Minutes of the Last Meeting.
Those of us who use the Sadakichi Hartmann archives must be indebted to the UCR Library for providing this catalogue of the collection. It is now possible to easily locate specific items in the collection or to form a partial idea of the contents of a particular item. At the same time, a definitive annotation of the collection that would have given us reference to all of the hundreds of artists, writers, photographers, and other notables that crop up in the archives would have been a virtually impossible task that would have delayed ready access to the archives for many years. With the publication of this catalogue, the UCR Library has provided a long needed and excellent tool for those carrying out research on Sadakichi Hartmann and many of his contemporaries.
Our immeasurable indebtedness is to the daughter who as a young woman recognized the value of her father's papers and kept them from reaching the hands of private collectors. In recognition of her foresight, this catalogue is dedicated to Wistaria Hartmann Linton."
Harry Lawton, University of California, Riverside, January 15, 1980
- Processing information:
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Compiled by John Batchelor, edited by Clifford Wurfel, with an introduction by Harry Lawton. Completed in 1980.
- Rules or conventions:
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Indexed terms
- Subjects:
- Authors
Poetry
Correspondence
Diaries
Manuscripts
Photographs
Works of art - Indexes:
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Index of Personal Names
Names of correspondents, persons featured in articles, and titles of particular works by Sadakichi Hartmann with corresponding box information.
Abhayananda, Swami: Box 13 Adamic, Louis: Box 12 (see Transcripts) Alexander, John White: Box 20 "Along Timberline": Box 5 Aman-Jean, Edmond: Box 21 Amy --: Box 13 Anton, Harold: Box 40B Armstrong, Will: Box 20 "Art Aphorisms": Box 5 "Art News": Box 17 "Aspirations of a Playwright": Box 5 "At the Training School": Box 5 Autobiography: "Baker Eddy": Ballard, Claude N.: Ballator, Alice R.: Box 13 Barrow, Thomas Frank: Box 33 Barrymore, John: Box 39 Beach, Howard A.: Beardsley, A.H.: Box 13 Beerbohm, Marvin: Beers, Jan van: Box 20 Bell, Curtis: Bender, Albert: Box 13 Bennett, Jeanne E.: Benton, Thomas Hart: Box 13 Ben-Yusuf, Zaida: Box 40A Berg, Charles I.: Box 21 Berlin, Ben: Betts, Louis: Box 20 Bjornson, B.: Box 19 "Black Smoke": Box 5 Bloiss, Harry A.: Box 20 Bogardus, Abraham: Box 40A Bogart, George: Box 13 Bogart, Guy: Bohrod, Aaron: Box 13 Boldini, Giovanni: Box 40A Bonaventura, (Rome, Italy): Box 20 Bonham, Lillian: Borg, Sidney C.: Box 13 "Boston Lions": Box 5 Boyd, Ben: Box 13 Bradley, A.F.: Box 20 Breese, James: Box 13 Brossard, Raymond: Brown, William: Box 13 Brownell, William: Box 13 Bruguiere, Francis: Bruno, Guido: Box 35 Bruno's Weekly: Box 35 Buchanan, Ella: Box 13 Buckley, L.H., (Binghampton, N.Y.): Box 20 Buckner, Samuel O.: Box 13 "Buddha": Buehrmann, Bessie (Elizabeth): Burnell, W.E., (Buffalo): Box 20 Burroughs, John: "Bus Line Correspondence": Box 11 Butler, George B.: Box 20 Cahill, Holger: Calder, Mrs. (Nanette?): Box 13 "Can Poets Help?": Box 5 "Career of a Violinist": Box 5 Carlson, Erik: Box 19 Carnegie Funds: Box 11 Carns, Arthur L.: Box 13 Caro Delvaille: Box 20 Catclaw Siding Shack (photos): Box 39 Catlin, John: Box 13 Cauldwell, Leslie G.: Cecil, Arthur B.: Box 13 Cecily --: Box 13 Chamberlain, Edward: Box 13 Chaplin, Charles S.: Chapman, H.T.: Box 11 Chase, William M.: "Cherry Blossoms": Box 18 "Christ": Box 5 "Cimmerian Darkness": Box 5 Clark, Alvah (see School of Industrial Arts): Box 20 Clark, Frank Scott, (Detroit): Clark, Rose: Clement, E.H.: Box 13 Clews, Henry: Box 19 Coburn, Alvin Langdon: Box 19 "Cock in the Air": Box 5 Coby: Box 11 Coles, Captain: Box 39 Colette --: Box 13 "Come Here": Box 5 "Confessions of an Ex-Journalist": Box 5 Constant, Sadi: Box 40A "Contributions to the Technique of Draughtsmanship": Box 5 "Conversations with Walt Whitman": Box 5 Converse, Frederick: Box 13 Conyers, H.B.: Box 21 Cooper, James: Box 20 Cooper, Marcelle: Box 13 Coppe, Francois: Box 19 Coppin, John S.: Coquelin: Box 40A Corcoran Gallery of Art: Box 11 Corke, H. Essenhigh: Box 20 Coubillier: Box 19 Coutant, Nellie: Box 40A Craig, Edward Gordon: Box 13 Crawley, Ida Jolly: Box 13 Cresmer, William T.: Box 13 Crinkle, Nym (A.C. Wheeler): Box 20 Crocker, Harry: Box 13 Dallin, Cyrus Edwin: Box 13 "The Dance Pavilion": Box 5 Davidson, Jo.: Box 13 Davies, Arthur B.: Box 13 Davis, Charles: Davis, Robert H.: Day, F(rank) Holland: Box 40A De Casseres, Benjamin: Box 13 Decker, John: Decker, Phyllis: Box 12 (see Transcripts) De Cleyre, Voltairine: Box 21 De La Tour: Box 20 Delsarte System: Box 31 Demachy, Robert: Box 13 "The Deserted Cottage": Box 5 Deutsch, Boris: Box 39 De Verley, Inez: Box 13 De Witt, Captain: Box 40A De Zayas, Marius: "Diamond Lizard": Box 18 Dillon, Lou: Box 40A Dodsworth, Alice A.: Box 13 "Dolor": Box 5 Donoghue, John: Box 19 D'Ora, (Venice): Box 20 Dougherty, P.: Box 21 Dramatic Sketch: Box 5 "Drifting Flowers of the Sea": Box 18 Duhrkoop, Rudolph: Dumont, John E.: Box 19 Duncan, Isadora: Box 19 Durant, Will: Box 13 Durer, Albrecht: Box 20 Duse, Eleonora: Box 40A Dutton, J.W.: Duveneck, Frank: Box 20 Eakins, Susan M. (Mrs. Thomas Eakins): Box 13 Eakins, Thomas: Box 20 "Early Poems": Box 6 Eickemeyer, Rudolf, Jr.: Eisenstein: Box 21 Ellis, Havelock: Box 15 (see Sargents Court Correspondence) Ellis, William Shewell: Box 19 Erfurt, Hugo: Box 19 Ermates, Arthur: Box 38 "Esthetic Verities": Box 9 Eugene, Frank: Ewing Studio, (Washington, D.C.): Box 38 Fabijanovic, Stephanus: Box 13 Fabris, Alfred: Box 38 Fairbanks, Douglas: Falk, Benjamin Joseph: "Famous Lovers": Box 6 Feldman, Fred J., (El Paso): "A Few Words on Criticism": Box 6 Field, J.H.: Box 40A Fiene, Ernst: Box 13 "Fighting Japs": Box 6 Fisher, George: Box 33 Fisk, Bertha: Box 13 Flaishman, Leopold: Box 11 Fleckenstein, Louis: "Flirtation": Box 6 Ford, Kay: Ford, Tod: Box 13 "Four Views of San Jacinto": Box 6 Fournier, Paul: "Fourteen Points in Favor of Sadakichi Hartmann": Box 6 Fowler, Gene: Fowler, Will: Box 34 Frederiksen, Carl: Box 19 Freer, Charles L.: Box 13 French, Daniel Chester: Box 13 French, Elizabeth: Box 13 French, Mary (Mrs. Daniel C. French): Box 13 Freystadt, George W.: Box 13 "From Sagebrush to Columbine": Box 6 Frost, Leon: Box 11 Gaiduschek, E.: Box 19 Gainsborough, Thomas: Box 20 Gallagher, Minerva Hartmann: Box (see Hartmann, Minerva) Gang, Christel L.: Garborg, Arne: Box 20 Gardner, Isabelle Stewart (Mrs. John Lowell): Box 13 Garo, John H.: Gauley, Robert: Box 13 Gellatly, John: Box 13 Genthe, Arnold: Box 30 Gerschel, Charles: Box 20 Gibbons, Austin Cedric: Box 13 Gilbert, John: Box 13 Gilliland, Atma Dorothea: Box (see Hartmann, Atma Dorothea) Gledhill, (Santa Barbara): Box 20 Godwin, Nora and Parke: Goldensky, Elias: Goldsmith, Mr.: Box 11 Goncourts: Box 19 Gordigiani, E.: Box 39 Gottheil, A., (Danzing): Box 19 Gottschalk: Box 13 Gottheil, W.G.: Box 40A Goya y Lucientes, Francisco Jose de: Box 20 Grafly, Dorothy: Box 13 Grainer, Franz: Box 19 "Graveland in a Flat": Box 6 Greenwich Village: Box 35 Greuze, Jean Baptiste: Box 20 Groll, Albert L.: Gron, Victor: Box 13 Grosvenor Public Library (Buffalo): "Ground Fog": Box 6 Guilbert, Yvette: Box 40A "The Hand": Box 6 "Hanka and Dodoitsu": Box 6 Hansen, Ejnar and Helga: Hansson: Harris, George: Box 13 Hartmann, Arthur M.: Box 26 Hartmann, Astor: Hartmann, Atma Dorothea (Dorothea Gilliland): Hartmann, Elizabeth Blanche Walsh: Hartmann, Carl Hermann Oscar (Sadakichi Hartmann's father): Box 39 Hartmann, Edgar: Box 16 Hartmann, Ernst Ferdinand Caspar: Box 27 Hartmann, Jonquil: Box 43 Hartmann, Minerva (Mrs. W.J. Gallagher): Box 16 Hartmann, Osada: Box (see Osada) Hartmann, Oscar: Hartmann, Paul: Hartmann, Robert: Box 26 Hartmann, Sadakichi: Box 34 (memorabilia) Hartmann, Tansy: Hartmann, Taru: Box (see Hartmann, Oscar) Hartmann, William: Box 13 Hartmann, Wistaria: "Hartmann-Eickemeyer" (by R. Hull): Box 35 Hartmannea: Box 6 Hassam, Childe: Box 31 "The Haunted Vine": Box 6 Hawthorne, Charles W.: Box 20 Hearst, Phoebe A.: Box 11 Heckman, R.G.: Box 26 Hemmerdinger, William: Box 34 Henderson, Daniel: Box 11 Henner, Jean Jacques: Box 20 Henri, Robert: Herbert, Henry: Box 13 Herkomer, Hubert: Box 20 Heyne, Anna: Box 39 Hier, Frederick, Jr.: Box 13 Higgins, Edgar (Eddie) F.: Hill, Richard: Hilsdorf, Jacob: Box 19 Hirsch, Fred S.: Box 13 Histed, E.W.: Box 19 Hobart: Box 40A Hoffman Studio, (Philadelphia): Box 19 "Hog Island": Box 6 Holbein, Hans: Box 20 Holladay, Paula: Box 11 Hollinger, W.M.: Hope, Charles: Box 13 Horowitz, Leopold: Box 19 "How Poe Wrote the Raven": Box 6 Hubbard, Elbert: Hull, Roger P.: Box 35 Hummer, Helen: Box 13 Huneker, James Gibbons: Box 30 Huntington, D.: Box 13 Hutchinson, Eugene R.: Box 19 "Ides of March": Box 6 "In Search of My Likeness": Box 6 "Instead of a Preface": Box 6 "Invisible Arms": Box 6 Jaegers, Albert (sculptor): Box 13 Janvier, Meredith: Box 40A "Japan in the Sixties": Box 6 "Japanese Rhythms": Jarmig, Carl: Box 13 Jefferson, Joseph: Box 40A Johnson, --: Box 13 Johnson, Belle: Box 20 Johnson, Eastman: Box 19 "Journey to Sadakichi" (by Joe Weinberg): Box 36 Juhl, Ernst: Box 19 Kahn, Otto (?): Box 13 Kairiyama, T.: Box 13 Kasebier, Gertrude: Box 40A Katherine --: Box 11 Kaulbach, Frederick August von: Box 20 Keen, E.: Box 13 Keet, A.E.: Box 13 Keiley, Joseph T.: Box 11 Kennedy, Mary: Box 13 Kernan, Frank J.: Box 40A "Kiel": Box 6 Kielland, Alexander: Kimmel, Stanley: Kipp, Karl: Box 40A Klintworth, C. Verne: Klausner, Oscar: Box 30 Knaffle Bros., (Knoxville): Box 20 Knox, George: Koner, Max: Krakow, Louise E.: Box 13 Krasnow, Peter: Krauth, Alfred: Box 19 Kroll, Leon: Box 11 Kronberg, Louis: Box 13 Kryzanowsky, Romana: Box 13 Kuhn, Heinrich: Box 11 "Lady of Castle Rock": Box 6 "Lady of the Yellow Jonquils": Box 6 Lance, Elizabeth D.: Box 11 Lardner, Mrs. George: Box 33 "The Last Thirty Days of Christ": Box 6 Latoix, Mrs. B.D.: Box 14 Lawton, Harry: Leachy, --: Box 19 Le Beque, Renee: Box 19 Ledoux, Louis: Box 14 Leibl, Wilhelm: Box 20 Lenbach, Fritz von: Lersky, Helmar, (Milwaukee): Box 20 Lesseps, Ferdinand de: Box 21 Lesoir, George: Box 31 Library Company of Philadelphia: Box 14 Lifshey, Sadakichi Hartmann: Linder, Henry: Lindhe, Roy E.: Box 14 Link, Herman: Box 19 Linton, Wistaria Hartmann: Box (see Hartmann, Wistaria) Linton, Marigold: Box 39 Linton, Walter: Box 39 Lipton, George: Lloyd, J. William: Box 14 "London Days": Box 6 Lorey, Gustave: Box 19 "Lost in the Northwoods": Box 6 Loy, Mina: Box 33 Lucas, Albert Pike: Box 19 Lucille (Aunt): Box 39 Mabbott, Thomas Ollive: McAllister, John E.: Box 14 Macaray, Florence: Box 14 MacCameron, Robert S.: Box 20 McClure, Samuel Sidney: Box 14 McCormick, F.: Box 14 MacDonald, Pirie: MacDowell, Mrs. Edward: Box 14 MacFarlane, Ida: Box 14 McGeorge, Robert R.: Box 20 McGinnity, Joe: Box 40A McIntosh, Burr: Box 40A McMahan's Furniture: Box 14 McNear, Willa: Box 14 MacNeil, Herman Atkins: Box 14 "Maid of Shiloh": Box 6 Makintosh, Mary: Box 14 Mallarmé: "Malmaison": Box 6 Manet, Edouard: Box 20 Mann, Thomas: Box 14 Marceau, Theo: Box 20 Marie --: Box 14 Marigold Linton: Box (see Linton, Marigold) Markham, Edwin: Box 14 Marks, Robert: Box 14 Marsh, Frederick Dana: Marshall, A.: Box 19 Martin, D.B.: Box 14 Martinot, Sadie: Box 30 Martiny, Yvonne: Box 14 Marvin, C.F.: Box 14 Marx, Ben T.: Mason, Redfern: Box 12 Matthews, Brander: Maurice, Arthur B.: Box 35 Max, Gabriel: Box 20 Mayer, Louis: Box 14 Melchers, Gary: Box 20 Mencken, H.L.: Mervin Sales Co.: Box 14 Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York): Metzgar, Judson: Box 26 Meyer, Eugene: Box 12 Midway Studios: Box 14 Miller, Richard E.: Box 20 Minnigore, C. Powell: Mishkin: Box 19 "Miss Profile": Box 6 Mitchell, J.D.: Box 20 Mock, J. Ernest: "Modern Decameron Stories": Box 6 "Mohammed": Moholy-Nagy, L.: Box 14 Monahan, Michael: Box 14 Monsen, Frederick I.: Montlitury: Box 40A Moore, Edith K.: Moore, Matt: Morgan, Nora: Morgan, Roy: Morgenthau, Henry: Box 14 Morrissette, Bruce: Box 33 Morton, James F.: Box 14 Moschcowitz, Paul: Box 14 "Moses": Mosley (?): Box 14 "The Motion Picture": Box 6 "Munich Days": Box 6 Munter, Paul: Box 14 "Music Charts": Box 6 "My Lady's Lingerie": Box 6 "My Theory of Soul Atoms": Box 6 "Naked Ghosts": Box 7 Needham, Charles Austin: Box 21 Nelson, R.C., (Hastings, Neb.): Box 20 "New York's Homeless": Box 7 Newhall, Beaumont: Box 33 Newman, Percy: Box 20 Newman, William W.: Box 14 Nicholas, A.A.: Box 38 Niedringhaus, Charles: Box 14 Nineteenth Century Club: Box 12 "Nocturne": Box 7 "Notes for Lectures": Box 7 Nurva: Box (see Hartmann, Minerva) Nussbaumer, J. George: Box 20 "Obituary": Box 7 O'Brien, D.H.: Box 14 O'Connor, Jeremiah: Odenburg, J.: Box 12 "An Old Storck and His Wife": Box 7 Olesen, Olaf: Box 14 "On the Mechanism of Patriotism": Box 7 "On the Origin of Art": Box 7 "One-Thousand Happy Moments": Box 7 "O'Neill Laughed": Box 7 "Open Letters": Box 7 Orchardson, W.Q.: Box 20 Orpen, William: Box 19 Osada (Sadakichi Hartmann's mother): Box 39 "Osadda's Revenge": Box 7 Ota, Saburo: Ottendorfer, Oswald: Box 14 "Our Last Walk": Box 7 Ozias, Blake: Box 14 Paddock, W.D.: Box 21 Page, Walter H.: Box 14 Paget-Fredericks, J.: Box 30 Paintin, Ronald: Box (see Ron Paintin) Parkinson, Morris Burke: Parrish, Stephen: Box 14 Parrish, W. and G.: Box 40A Patterson, Tom: Pearson, Norman Holmes: Box 33 Perry, T. Lockwood: Box 14 Peters, Isabelle: Box 14 Petzold, Adolph: Box 40A Phillips, Duncan: Box 14 Pierce, Henry Havelock: Pierce, Robert Bruce: Box 40A "Poems": Pohle, Frederick, (Buffalo): Box 20 Poillon, William: Box 14 Pollard, Sara: Box 14 Polowetzsky, Charles: Box 12 Possart, Ernst: Box 19 Post, William B.: Box 19 Pound, Ezra: Box 14 Pound, H.L. (see Ezra Pound): Box 14 Powers, Leroy: Box 12 Prall, Virginia M.: Box 19 "Prayer for the Jews": Box 8 Preface to Leaves on the Water (by Stanley Kimmel): Box 8 Pringle, Aileen: Proctor, A.T.: Box 19 Purcell, Mrs. W.: Box 26 Purdy, Lawson: Box 14 Puyo, C.: Box 19 Quick, Herb: Box 38 Quirt, W.: Box 14 Rachel: Box 40A "Rain": Box 8 Raphael, Sandro: Box 20 Redon, Odilon: Box 14 Reece, Jane, (Dayton): Box 20 Reed, Frederick: Box 14 Reeves, Alfred: Box 14 Reid, Roland: Box 14 Reineke, Miss: Box 20 Reiter, Josef (composer of "Sadakichi March"): Box 34 Reith, Julia: Box 14 "Religious Degenerations": Box 8 Rembrandt van Rijn: Box 20 Renoir, Auguste: Box 20 Rey, Guido: Reynolds, Sir Joshua: Box 20 Ridder, Herman: Box 14 "The Rise and Fall of Art": Box 8 "Rising Mist": Box 8 "Robert Marks of Detroit": Box 8 Robinson, Marie: Box 14 Rocker, R.: Box 14 Rohlfs, Charles: Box 19 Romm: Box 12 Ron (Ronald Paintin): Box 15 (see also Sargents Court Correspondence) Rood, Roland: Roos: Box 12 Rosen, Ray: Box 40B Rosenthal, Herbert: Rosenthal, Moritz: Box 12 Rosetti, Dante Gabriel: Box 20 Rota, Herb: Box 40A Roycrofters: Box 30 Rubens, Peter Paul: Box 20 Ryder, Albert Pinkham (American painter): "Sadakichi March" (by Josef Reiter): Box 34 Sage, Cornelia B.: St. John, Adela Rogers: Box 30 "St. Louis Art Situation": Box 8 Salter, Leon: Box 40B Saltman, D.J.: Box 12 Saltus, Edgar: "Salut au Monde": Box 8 Sandburg, Carl: Box 34 Sanders, Henry S.: Box 14 Santayana, George: Box 14 Sargent, John Singer: Box 20 Sargent, Franklin H.: Box 14 Sargents Court Correspondence: Sarony, Napoleon: Box 19 Scharf, Otto: Box 19 "Schemes": Box 8 Schlageter, Alberta: Box 15 Schliepmann, Elizabeth, (St. Louis): Box 20 Schneidau, Emil: Box 15 Schneider, Isidor: Box 12 Schoenheit, Edward D.: Box 15 "Schopenhauer in the Air": Box 18 Schrader, Fred: Box 15 Schroeder: Box 38 Schuler, J.W.: Box 40A Schull, Sherrill: Box 21 Schwab, Arnold T.: Box 33 Seaman, A.C.: Box 15 Selznick, David O.: Box 15 "Seven Weeks in a German Prison": Box 8 Sexauer, H.F. (see Sargents Court Correspondence): Box 15 Sexauer, Maya: Box 12 (see passim in Sargents Court Correspondence) Shannon, Sir James Jebusa: Box 20 Sharman, Grant: Box 26 Short Stories: Box 8 Sigel, Tobias: Simon, Lucien: Box 20 Sinclair: Box 40A Sipperell, G.J., (Buffalo): Box 20 "Slaughter of the Innocents": Box 8 Sloan, John: Box 30 Smith, Edison: Box 12 Smith, May L., (Binghamton, N.Y.): Box 20 Soissons, Comte de: Box 31 Spreckels, Alma: Box 15 Springer, H.J.: Box 19 Stedman, E.C.: Box 12 Steffens, M.J.: Box 21 Steichen, Edward J.: Stein, S.L.: Box 20 Stieglitz, Alfred: Stimson, John Ward: Box 15 "Story of Albert P. Ryder": Box 8 "The Story of An American Painter": Box 8 "Story of the Buddha": Box 8 "The Story of the Engineer": Box 8 Strauss, Alex: Box 15 Strauss, J.C., (St. Louis): Strindberg, August: Box 20 Stromberg, Gustaf: Box 15 Sturgis, George: Box 15 "The Stylus": Box 17 Sussman, Jeffrey: Box 35 Sutro, Florence C.: Box 15 Swift, Ivan: Box 15 T.M. ("Tramp Madonna"): Box see Lillian Bonham "Tanka": Box 8 "Tanka and Haikai": Tarkington, Booth: Box 15 Taubes, Frederic: Box 15 Tennant, T.D.: Box 15 "Three Years in Philadelphia": Box 8 Throop, Anne: Titian: Box 20 Titus, A.D., (Buffalo): Box 20 "To A.T.": Box 8 "To My Mother": Box 8 Toloff, J.T., (Evanston, Ill.): Box 20 Tompkins, F.H.: Towles Studio: Box 21 "Tragedy in a New York Flat": Box 8 "Tramp Madonna": Box (see Lillian Bonham) "Tramp Madonna" (story): Box 18 Troubetzkoy, Amelie ("The Princess"): Box 15 Tryon, W.D.: Box 8 "Vacant Bungalow": Box 8 Valentine, E.E.: Box 12 (see Transcripts) "Valiant Flyer of the Air": Box 8 "The Valley of Silence": Box 8 Vander Weyde, W.: Van Duzee, Edward P.: Box 12 (see Transcripts) Van Dyck, Anton: Van Haagen, Henry J.: Box 15 Van Noppen, Leonard: Box 15 Vaterlandischer Hilfsverein: Box 15 Velazquez, Diego: Box 20 Verbeck, Gustav: Box 15 "A Visit to John Burroughs": Box 8 Vonnoh, Robert: Box 15 Wade, Elizabeth Flint: Waide, Milton: Box 20 Wallace, --: Box 20 Walsh, Elizabeth Blanche: Box (see Hartmann, Elizabeth Blanche Walsh) Walt Whitman Society: Box 37 Warburg, Mrs. Felix: Box 15 Warrington, C.: Box 38 Warshaw, --: Box 15 Watson, Dawson: Box 19 Watts, George Frederick: Box 20 Weber, Harry (see Sargents Court Correspondence): Weinberg, Joe: Box 36 Weinberger, Harry: Box 15 Weir, Alden: Box 20 Wendt, --: Box 15 Wesselman, Cliff: Weston, Edward: Wheeler, A.C. (see Nym Crinkle): "When I Was King of Bohemia": Box 8 Whistler, James Abbott McNeil: Box 20 "White Chrysanthemums": Box 41 White, Clarence H.: Whitman, Walt: Box 40A Wiboldt: Box 34 Wiksel, G.P.: Wiles, Irving: Box 15 Williams, Margaret: Box 15 Williams, Wheeler: Box 15 Wilson, James: Box 12 Wilson, Maude: Winter, Margery: Wistaria (the flower): Box 8 "With Knapsack and Staff": Box 8 "Women as Delineated in Modern Literature": Box 8 "Women's Dress and the Artist": Box 8 Wood, Grant: Box 15 "Workers on Art Relief, Come Forth": Box 8 Wright, Dunbar: Box 38 Yens, Karl: Box 15 "A Youngster Dons Mikado Garb": Box 8 Zeitlin, Jake: Box 12 Zimmerman, Walter: Zimmermann, Frank M.: Box 15 Zola, Emile: Box 19
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This collection is open for research.
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Copyright Unknown: Some materials in these collections may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). In addition, the reproduction, and/or commercial use, of some materials may be restricted by gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions, privacy and publicity rights, licensing agreement(s), and/or trademark rights. Distribution or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. To the extent other restrictions apply, permission for distribution or reproduction from the applicable rights holder is also required. Responsibility for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user.
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[Identification of item], [date if possible]. Sadakichi Hartmann papers (MS 068). Special Collections & University Archives, University of California, Riverside.
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University of California, Riverside - Special Collections and University ArchivesP.O. Box 5900Riverside, CA 92517-5900, US
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