Upton Beall Sinclair (1878-1968)
Miscellaneous uncatalogued materials
Includes clippings and articles on the Sacco-Vanzetti case and other research materials for Boston. Includes tapes of speeches and interviews with Upton Sinclair. Items in these boxes are not listed in Gotteman's Sinclair checklist.
To request these materials for use, complete a Lilly Library charge card indicating both collection and box number.
Example:
PS 3537
.I85
Box IX, Item 37
Box O
Top
Upton Sinclair-articles, brochures, letters and other minor works
- 1. Billy and the time, The Magnet, 1895 (date is in ink at the top of the first page of the story). Juvenile tale of a schoolboy who has a dream within a dream.
- 2. A co-operative store; practical co-operation, Pasadena, Calif. (n.d.) Brochure of 4 pp. About a co-operative store operated by the Workers Co-operative Association.
- 3. The Double standard, The Republican, Springfield, Mass (n.d.) Intended for The Masses.
- 4. Expect no peace; a discussion of the world outlook and an editorial comment, New Masses for Oct. 18, 1938. Commentary on Sinclair's article is included.
- 5. I, Governor of California, Political Straws, (n.d.) Selected comments from candidates for the governorship.
- 6. I shall go on pleading to the end, Reynolds News, London, Sept. 4, 1938.
- 7. Is it "scandal" to invade the private life of geniuses? H.G. Wells said new biography of Gissing erred on this score. American writer replies most valuable data concern human side. Source of article is unidentified.
- 8. Mr. Upton Sinclair replies, The Freeman, Nov. 23, 1921, New York, vol. IV, no. 89. Letter to the editor about the influence of Sinclair's novels on people in the working class.
- 9. Outline of a project for the reprinting of labor novels by Upton Sinclair, Monrovia, Calif., Nov. 1958. Copy of a birthday letter to Sinclair by Victor G. Euther which inspired the project and a copy of Sinclair's reply to Reuther are added.
- 10. Plays for socialism; a prospectus, San Francisco, ca. 1910, Brochure addressed to the members of the Socialist Party.
- 11. Project for the "public or private endowment of men and women who had shown signs of great literary talent," Fairhope, Ala. Mar. 30, 1910. Stems from an article originally published in The Independent.
- 12. Reds distort the truth; fantastic falsehoods, The Roanoke Times, Roanoke, Va., 1953.
- 13. A Safe world, Manitoba Commonwealth, Winnipeg, Nov. 24, 1954. Letter to the editor. Reprinted from The Propaganda Battlefront.
- 14. Sinclair and wild communism answered by Frank Harris, Pearson's Magazine for July, 1921. Harris' countercomments are included.
- 15. Sinclair tells story of strike mass-drama, New York Evening Journal, June 6, 1913. Sinclair discusses the strike of silk workers in New York and Paterson, N.J. - Gottesman, SA 33.
- 16. Speech of Upton Sinclair before the mass meeting at the State Capitol, May 15th, The Arapahoe Republican and The Englewood Tribune, Englewood, CO, May 22, 1914. Surveys the struggles of Colorado miners.
- 17. $30,00 every Thursday. Who will lick 65 billion stamps? The EPIC plan's author takes a candid look at a proposed utopia 'Liberty' Oct. 22, 1938.
- 18. Through The Workers' Monthly, Upton Sinclair pleads in hour of crisis, The Workers' Monthly, July-Aug, 1938, no. 139. Warns of the perils of fascism. Also printed by the Daily Express, London.
- 19. Transcript of Upton Sinclair spot, (n.d.) ca. 1953. From a speech or broadcast delivered to the people of Austria?
- 20. USA and USSR, The Socialist Call (June 27, 1952). Reply to Dr. Henry Pratt Fairchild of New York University about the relations between the US and the USSR. Originally intended for The Saturday Review.
- 21. Upton Sinclair-an old campaigner measures the gains, United States Information Service, Nov. 1966, LP-1493. "Article is based on a recent interview"
- 22. Upton Sinclair appeals to President Roosevelt for Tom Mooney, May 12, 1934; Upton Sinclair refuses to accept dictation from Democratic machine, May 8, 1934. Two letters reprinted in a political broadside, San Francisco, 1934.
- 23. Upton Sinclair talks about the past-and the future (an interview), 1966, F-66-463. Conducted probably by some US Government employee?
- 23a. Vlastelinut na umovete by Upton Sinkler. In Otechestven Front, 28 March 1947, p. 6. Translation of a piece by Sinclair on the occasion of the 120th anniversary of Beethoven's death.
- 24. The Arden incident: a miscellaneous collection of materials. Includes: The Menageries (poem) by Upton Sinclair; Grubb's Corner or the Dutch on the Delaware, a colonial operetta, as sung by the Arden Chorus; and a letter to Frank Ball, Secretary of the Trustees of the New Castle County Workhouse by Upton Sinclair, the Morning News, Wilmington, Del., Aug. 7, 1911.
- 25. Borets za edin po-dobur sviat; Upton Sinkler [by?] V. Shivacheva [and?] D.R. Gradinarova. In Otechestven Front, 15 Dec. 1946, p. 6. [About Upton Sinclair]
- 26. Letters, i.e. affidavits in possession of Upton Sinclair concerning the divorce from his first wife, 1912.
- 27. Letter "recommending to the Swedish Academy of Letters the names of Upton Sinclair as candidate for the award of the Nobel Prize for Literature. Printed version signed by John Dewey, Paul H. Douglas, Bertrand Russell, Albert Einstein, etc. [n.d.]
- 28. One piece of political literature; a card with the inscription on the obverse: Socialist Candidate for Congress, 10th District, Upton Sinclair.
- 29. Upton Sinclair descants on the stage socialistic, drama talks conducted by Ralph E. Renaud, The Bulletin, San Francisco, Jan. 2, 1909, vol. 107, no. 75. Contains extensive discussion of Sinclair's play Prince Hagan.
- 30. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about Sinclair.
- 31. Upton Sinclair's Baltimore, The Sun Magazine, October 10, 1965.
- 32. Upton Sinclair et L'U.R.S.S.: Un dialogue difficile, by Andre Muraire. In Essais sur le dialogue, Grenoble, Universite des langues et lettres. Vol. 2, 1948.
- 33. Six Sinclair studies by Andre Muraire, professor of English at the University of Bordeau:
- "Du destin romantique eu determinisme naturaliste." Annales du Centre de Recherches sur L'Amerique Anglophone, vol. 2, 1973, p. 87-97.
- "Searching for a Theatre in France: Upton Sinclair vs. Albert Camus, Andre Malraux, and Jean Vilar." Ball State University Forum, vol. 15. No. 2, Spring 1974. P. 77-79.
- "Communication et propaganda: Upton Sinclair ou l'art engage." Rhetorique et Communication. Actes du Congres de Rouen (1976). Etudes Anglaises, no. 75, p. 287-297.
- "Upton Sinclair et le 'Reve americain'." Extrait de la Revue Francaise D'etudes Americaines, no. 2, Octobre 1976, p. 131-138.
- "Upton Sinclair: The Brass Check ou l'organisation rhetorique d'une revolte." Annales du Centre de Recherches sur L'Amerique Anglophone. Nouvelle serie no. 4, Seminaires 1978. P. 107-119.
- "L'Apocalypse selon Sinclair." Le Facteur Religieux in Amerique du Nord. No. 2: Apocalypse et autres Travau. Actes du Colloque des 10 et 11 Octobre 1980, p. 85-105.
BOX OA
Top
Upton Sinclair-articles, brochures, letters and other minor works (cont.)
Upton Sinclair's Interview with Albert Einstein
- 1. Capitalist press refuses to print Einstein's views on economic crisis, by Upton Sinclair, The American Freedman, Girard, Kansas [1931?]
- 2. Late development in the Einstein interview, by Upton Sinclair, The Forum, Apr. 1, 1931.
- 3. Upton Sinclair explains, by Upton Sinclair, Bridgeport Evening Post, Mar. 12, 1931.
- 4. Miscellaneous newspaper articles relating to the Einstein interview.
Articles and Publications of Interest to Upton Sinclair.
- 5. Miscellaneous articles and pamphlets concerning Albert Abrams and the electronic method of diagnosis and treatment.
- 6. Miscellaneous annotated articles and pamphlets.
- 7. Miscellaneous materials about helicon Home Colony, Englewood, N.J.
Mary Craig (Kimbrough) Sinclair.
- 8. Mary Craig Sinclair's obituaries
- 9. Sonnets and assorted reviews.
- 10. Southern Belle-Reviews.
- 11. Miscellaneous materials by, and about, Mary Craig Sinclair.
- 12. Miscellaneous materials relating to Hunter Kimbrough, Mary's brother.
- 13. A diploma Mary Craig Kimbrough (Sinclair) received from Gardner Institute, May 29, 1900.
Mary Elizabeth (Willis) Sinclair.
- 14. Miscellaneous newspaper articles about her marriage to Upton Sinclair
BOX I
Top
American Outpost
Reviews
Another Pamela
Reviews
- 2. Miscellaneous newspaper reviews.
Autobiography of Upton Sinclair
Reviews
- 3. Miscellaneous newspaper reviews.
Bill Porter: A Drama of O.Henry in Prison
Reviews
- 4. Miscellaneous reviews and a poster.
The Book of Life
Reviews
- 5. Is this a boycott? By Upton Sinclair in the Baltimore Evening Sun, June 3, 1922. An open letter to the literary editors of several newspapers in which the author intimates that they are ignoring The Book of Life because of the controversy surrounding his previous work, The Brass Check.
- 6. Miscellaneous reviews.
Boston
Advertising
- 7. Schedule of advertising to be placed in newspaper and magazines by Albert and Charles Boni-Publishers. Prepared by the Zinn and Meyer Agency.
Sinclair and his Critics
- 8. Boston by the author, International Poetry Magazine for Dec., 1928. Short discussion of the contents of the novel.
- 9. Form letter from Upton Sinclair in appreciation of those who purchased copies of the novel as donations to public libraries, Aug. 1, 1929. Also Gottesman A1217.
- 10. Sinclair protests, by the author. Letter to the editor of The Road to Freedom commenting on the periodical's review of the novel Boston, The Road to Freedom, June, 1929. Accompanying the above is a portion of further editorial commentary on Sinclair's letter and novel in the same issue.
- 11. Upton Sinclair's "Boston" recounts the full history of the Sacco-Vanzetti case, Galveston, Texas, News, Dec. 2, 1928. Accompanying the book review is an article, Why I wrote Boston.
- 12. Upton Sinclair says, by the author, The federated Press Labor Letter, Chicago, vol. XVI, no. 5, Nov. 8, 1928. Comments on an article which appeared in Outlook about evidence in the Sacco-Vanzetti trial.
Sources
- 13. The Boston Elevated Railway Guide and Information.
- 14. The Bostonian, Oct. 1927, vol. I, no. 2
- 15. Miscellaneous articles about the city of Boston and American life of the period.
- 16. Moral law and civil law, parts of the same thing, by Eli F. Ritter, rev. ed., published by American Issue Publishing Co., Westerville, Ohio, 1910.
- 17. Two pieces of campaign literature for Thomas A. Niland, candidate for City Councillor of East Boston.
- 18. U.S. Supreme Court brief on behalf of the plaintiffs-in-error in Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman vs. The United States.
BOX II
Top
Boston (cont.)
Reviews
- 1. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 2. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
Sources--Sacco-Vanzetti Case-Periodicals
- 3. American Labor Weekly, New York, no. 19, Aug. 14, 1927, and no. 22, Sept. 14, 1927.
- 4. The Arbitrator; a Monthly Digest of News of Social Significance, New York, vol. IX, nos. 9, 10, 11, Sept-Nov, 1927.
- 5. Freedom; a Monthly Journal of Anarchism, London, vol. XLI
- 6. The Lantern, Focusing Upon Fascism and Other Dark Disorders of the Present Day, Boston, Mass., vol. I, nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5-6, Oct., 1927-April, 1928.
- 7. The New Magazine, Section of the Daily Worker, Aug., 27, 1927.
- 8. The Official Bulletin of the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee of Boston, Mass., vol. 1, nos, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8,9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18.
- 9. The Sacco-Vanzetti Dawn, published by the Sacco-Vanzetti Dawn Publishing Association, New York, vol. I, no. 1, n.d. Contains two brief statements by Upton Sinclair.
Sources--Sacco-Vanzetti
- 10. Background of the Plymouth Trial, by Bartolomeo Vanzetti, published by Road to Freedom Group, Boston, Mass., n.d.
- 11. Decision of Governor Alvan T. Fuller in the matter of the appeal of Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco from sentence of death imposed under the laws of the Commonwealth, Boston, Mass., Aug, 1927.
- 12. Defendants' Brief, Statement of the Cases, Commonwealth of Mass. V. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Supreme Judicial Court for the Commonwealth, Norfolk, ss., January Sitting, 1927, No. 5583.
- 13. An interpretation of history, speech delivered by Edward Holton James at Winter Garden in Lawrence, Mass., May 27, 1927, in behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti, published by Edward H. James, Concord, Mass., 1927.
- 14. A letter to the Honorable John G. Sargent, U.S. Attorney General, requesting access to the files of the Department of Justice concerning the Sacco-Vanzetti case from the Citizens' National Committee for Sacco and Vanzetti.
- 15. Massachusetts Reputation at State!!! Vanzetti states the case for himself and Sacco with clear logic and beauty to Governor Fuller of Massachusetts. Judge Webster Thayer revealed. Appalling affidavits expose his gross prejudice. Published by Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, Boston, Mass., 1927.
- 16. The mystery of Manley Woods, by Edward Holton James, n.d.
- 17. Outstanding features of the Sacco-Vanzetti case together with letters from the defendants by Elizabeth Glendower Evans, published by New England Civil Liberties Committee, Boston, Mass., January, 1924.
- 18. The Sacco-Vanzetti case, an advertising pamphlet for the "Transcript of the record of the trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in the courts of Massachusetts and subsequent proceedings 1920-1927," Henry Holt and Company, New York, n.d.
- 19. Sacco and Vanzetti speak to Judge Thayer…, published by Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, Boston, Mass, n.d.
- 20. Sacco & Vanzetti, The exploiter Vs. The exploited. Published by Shantaram S. Mirajkar, Secretary, The Workers' & Peasants' Party, Bombay? N.d.
- 21. A small booklet summarizing the Sacco-Vanzetti case with a preface addressing the governor of Mass., prepared by the sons of Italy of America. Title page has been removed, n.d.
- 22. Some questions and an appeal, by Dr. Michael A. Cohn, published by Independent Sacco-Vanzetti Committee, New York, n.d.
- 23. The story of a proletarian life, by Bartolomeo Vanzetti, translated from the Italian by Eugene Lyons, foreward by Alice Stone Blackwell, with an appreciation by Upton Sinclair, published by the Sacco-Vanzetti New Trial League, Boston, Mass., 1924.
- 24. The story of a proletarian life, Die Geschichte eines Proletarier-lebens, by Bartolomeo Vanzetti, edited by Dr. Herbert Muller-gutten-brunn, translated from the English by Aenne Muller-Guttenbrunn, published by Verlag "Das Nebelhorn," Vienna, in no. 71, 3rd year, December 1, 1929, of Das Nebelhorn.
- 25. Supplementary Brief for Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Supreme Judicial Court for the Commonwealth, August, 1927.
- 26. A syllabus on the Sacco-Vanzetti case prepared by Edward Holton James and Luther Emanuel Widen, published by the authors, Boston, 1927.
- 27. Two worlds; an imaginary speech delivered by Bartolomeo Vanzetti before Judge Webster Thayer: Why sentence of death should not be pronounced on him and Nicola Sacco, by Dr. Michael A. Cohn, published by Independent Sacco-Vanzetti Committee, New York, 1927.
- 28. Vanzetti's last statement, Monday, Aug. 22, 1927, a record by W. G. Thompson, by Lydia Gibson, May 1, 1924.
- 29. What do you think? Nine revealing documents, edited by Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, Boston, Mass, n.d.
- 30. Miscellaneous loose sheets and a notebook to which newspaper clippings have been pasted.
BOX III
Top
Boston (cont.)
Sources--Sacco-Vanzetti Case
- 1. Miscellaneous newspaper articles pertaining to the case.
- 2. Miscellaneous newspaper articles pertaining to the case
- 3. Miscellaneous newspaper articles pertaining to the case.
- 4. Miscellaneous newspaper articles pertaining to the case.
BOX IV
Top
Brass Check
Advertising
- 1. Miscellaneous collection of flyers and brochures.
Sources
- 2. Fakes in American journalism, by Max Sherover, published by Buffalo Publishing Company, Buffalo, N.Y. n.d.
- 3. The Federated Press Bulletin, Chicago, Ill., vol, 1. Nos. 10, 12, and 13, June 11-July 2, 1921.
- 4. The Subsidized press; a brief history of newspaper corruption in America, by Jack Pansy, 2nd ed. published by the author, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Delivered as an address before the Public Forum at Grand Rapids, Feb. 24, 1918.
- 5. Miscellaneous publications.
Reviews
- 6. W.J. Ghent-Upton Sinclair controversy.
- 7. James Melvin Lee-Upton Sinclair controversy.
- 8. The Brass Check, a study of American journalism: by Upton Sinclair, reviewed by Curice N. Hitchcock of the University of Chicago. Review torn from an unidentified periodical. See also Gottesman F69.
- 9. Miscellaneous reviews from American newspapers.
- 10. Miscellaneous reviews from American periodicals.
- 11. Miscellaneous reviews from foreign newspapers and periodicals.
BOX V
Top
Candid Reminiscences
Reviews
Cicero
Sources
- 2. Letter advertising the play Cicero, by Upton Sinclair, Monrovia, CA, Apr. 18, 1960. Mimeographed copy.
- 3. Three mimeographed letters to Upton Sinclair from John Ben Traver of the Department of Dramatic Arts of New York University plus two almost identical documents spelling out contractual arrangements, etc.
- 4. The Playbill from the Pasadena Playhouse Association production of Cicero.
Reviews
- 5. Miscellaneous newspaper reviews of the play.
Co-op
Sources
- 6. Brown manila envelope which contained the items listed in this section of the ST:. Written across its front cover is the following notation by Upton Sinclair: "Co-op (Sources)."
- 7. Four pamphlets on co-operatives published by the Co-operative League of America.
- 8. The Key, Santa Barbara, CA, vol. 1, nos. 18, 19, 21, and 22, Mar. 1-May 1, 1936.
- 9. Self-help cooperatives; an introductory study, issued by the Division of Self-Help Cooperatives, Federal Emergency Relief Administration.
- 10. The Self-help cooperatives in California, by Clark Kerr and Paul S. Taylor, reprinted from Essays in Social Economics, University of California Press, 1935.
- 11. Six pamphlets published by the Unemployed Exchange Association, Oakland, CA.
- 12. Voice of the Unemployed; a National Non-Profit Co-operative Newspaper, Berkeley, CA, etc., vol. 1, no. 5, Sept. 1, 1933.
- 13. Miscellaneous collection of articles about coopertives.
Reviews
- 14. Two reviews and two pieces of advertising for Co-op.
Cup of Fury
- 15. Excerpts from The Cup of Fury, Scientific Temperance Journal, Westervielle, Ohio, vol. 71, no. 3, Oct. 1963. Also Gottesman A2250.
Reviews
- 16. Four newspaper reviews and two pieces of advertising.
Damaged Goods
Sources
- 17. Standard statistics of prostitituion, gonorrhea, and syphilis, published by the American Social Hygiene Association, New York, 1919. An advanced proof, not for publication.
- 18. Transactions of the American Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis, new York, vol. II, 1908.
Reviews
- 19. One review from the Detroit Free Press; the other, The Butchers' Journal.
The Enemy Had It Too
Reviews
- 20. Upton Sinclair gives mankind a grim warning, by Richard Armour, Los Angeles Daily News, Sept. 16, 1950.
Faust
Sources
- 21. Dr. Edward Teller's magnificent obsession, by Robert Coughlan, Life (n.d.)
- 22. Hong Kong, by Irene Corbally Kuhn, The American Mercury (n.d.)
- 23. Inside story of the hydrogen bomb, by James R. Shepley and Clay Blair, Jr., U.S. News & World Report, Sept. 24, 1954.
- 24. The Oppenheimer story, by J.B. Matthews, The American Mercury (n.d.)
- 25. Ultrahigh temperatures, by Fred Hoyle, unidentified periodical (n.d.)
- 26. U.S. science: the troubled quest, by Theodore H. White, The Reporter, Sept. 14, 1954.
- 27. We accuse! By Joseph and Steward Alsop, Harper's Magazine, n.d.
- 28. When Lenin returned, by Edward Crakshaw, The Atlantic Monthly, n.d.
- 29. Will there be a third world war? By Theodore Granik, The American Mercury, n.d.
- 30. Miscellaneous accumulation of short articles about Robert Oppenheimer, the atomic bomb, etc.
BOX VI
Top
The EPIC Campaign and Upton Sinclair in Politics
1930 Campaign for the Governorship of California
- 1. Campaign stickers of Upton Sinclair for Governor and Chaim Shapiro for Lt. Governor on the Socialist ticket.
- 2. Sinclair to free Mooney, headline of The New Era, Los Angeles, Oct. 1930, vol. 1, no. 9. Most of the issue devoted to the campaign of Sinclair and Shapiro.
1934 Primary Campaign for the Governorship of California
- 3. The EPIC Plan; what is it? published by Upton Sinclair, Headquarters, Los Angeles, 1934. With two other brochures of the same title but in a slightly different format.
- 4. Letter to EPIC club officers and executive secretaries encouraging the nomination of EPIC candidates to the State Assembly and Senate, by Upton Sinclair n.d. May 22, 1934. Mimeographed copy.
- 5. Music, dramatic and allied arts under EPIC. Endorsed by Upton Sinclair on Feb. 15, 1934. Campaign brochure.
- 6. Printed endorsements by various well-known people for Sinclair's candidacy. Three sheets.
- 7. Organization manual, published by the End Poverty League, Inc., Los Angeles, 1934.
- 8. To the Protestant ministers of California, letter signed by Gross W. Alexander, Rosewood Methodist Episcopal Church, Los Angeles, Jan. 1934. Asks for the support of Upton Sinclair
- 9. Miscellaneous campaign publications.
- 10. Miscellaneous newspaper articles covering the campaign.
1934 Campaign for the Governorship of California as the Democratic Nominee
- 11. End Poverty in California (on cover) official campaign song, published by End Poverty league Inc., Los Angeles, 1934. End Poverty in All America and Upton Sinclair Will Show the Way (inside title).
- 12. The religious issue in California politics, by Franklin Richborn, eight typewritten pages. November 26, 1934, in pencil on first page.
- 13. Photograph of the Washington Boulevard Headquarters, Los Angels.
- 14. Scrapbook of newspaper clippings about the campaign.
- 15. To the author of the Epic Plan, an open letter to our fellow craftsmen, Berkeley, CA, Oct. 10, 1934. "93 copies printed on the Archetype Press & distributed among friend."
- 16. Unidentified copy of a letter to the editor. In ink: unrevised; 11 1/34. An election "checker" discusses mistakes in the counting of ballots.
- 17. Upton Sinclair's EPIC, 1934, by Ruben W. Borough, The Occidental Review, 1965, vol. 4. No. 7. Also Gottesman F323.
- 18. Miscellaneous campaign stickers, lapel pins, etc.
- 19. Miscellaneous newspaper articles covering the campaign.
- 20. Miscellaneous pieces of campaign literature, i.e., brochures, leaflets, advertising, etc.
- a. A.
- b. Proverbs of living, by Upton Sinclair, The American Stockholder, Sept, 1934.
- c. Oversize folder containing political broadsides.
1934 Campaign for the Governorship of California-Governor Frank F. Merriam, the Republican candidate.
- 21. E.B.I.C. -Snooze; Expose-Bunk-In-California, Los Angeles, Oct. 1, 1934, vol. 1, no. 1
- 22. Letter from Edward P. Pflingst, President of the El Panjaro Theater Company, Watsonville, CA, to the stockholders, Oct. 19., 1934.
- 23. Letter from the President of the Standard Oil Company of California, San Francisco, CA, t our stockholders in California, Oct. 26, 1934. "Sinclairism must not only be beaten but the defeat should be overwhelming.
- 24. Letter to the employees of the Los Angeles Athletic Club and Allied Clubs from Frank A. Garbutt, n.d.
- 25. Save our State News; a California Paper for Americans, Los Angeles, Oct. 1934, vol. 1, no. 1. Two copies of the same edition but annotated in pencil.
- 26. Thunder over California, by Robert C. Emery, published by the Democratic Workers' League of California, Los Angeles, 1934.
- 27. Weekly Political Opinions, Los Angeles, Oct. 20 and 27, 1934, vol. 1, nos. 23 and 24.
- 28. See Box VI A
Various Other Opposition Candidates in the 1934 Campaign for the Governorship.
- 29. See Box VI A
- 30. Democratic Sentinel, Aug. 1934, vol. 1, no. 1.
- 31. General election speeches nos. 1 and 2 by Raymond L. Haight, Columbia Broadcasting System, Sept. 2 and Oct. 2, 1934.
- 32. Presenting:- the Creel creed for the economic recovery of California; the political platform of George Creel, New Deal candidate for Governor. Campaign brochure.
- 33. The People United or T.P.U. Organization, published by the organization, Berkeley, CA, brochure.
- 34. Upton Sinclair will debate Normal Thomas on "Can production for use be established under capitalism," Olympic Auditorium, Apr. 18. Auspices Socialist Party. Advertising broadside.
1934 Campaign for the Governorship of California-Governor Frank F. Merriam, the Republican candidate.
- 34a. "How Media Politics Was Born," by Greg Mitchell. In American Heritage, vol. 39, no. 6 (Sept/Oct. 1988), p. 34-41. Illustration on back wrapper from Lilly collection.
1935 to 1940
- 35. An Advertisement for lectures, debates, and speaking engagements by Upton Sinclair, Management Ernest Briggs, Inc., New York.
- 36. Christmas greetings from Dr. and Mrs. J. Wesley Scott in the form of a mimeographed poem, Dec. 1934?
- 37. Constitution of the End Poverty League Inc., n.p., n.d. seven mimeographed pages.
- 38. Declaration of policy & procedure, adopted and authorized by the Board of Directors, End Poverty league, Los Angeles, July 20, 1935.
- 39. End Poverty League, Inc., statement of income and expenses; 10 months ended December 31, 1934.
- 40. EPIC Club Bulletins, vol. 1, nos. 15, 18, 25, and 27, vol, 2, nos. 5, 8, and 10.
- 41. Letter to the Board of Directors, End Poverty League, Los Angeles, from Upton Sinclair, Jan 27, 1936.
- 42. The Modern Forum announces a debate; George Sokolsky (affirmative), Upton Sinclair (negative), Philharmonic Auditorium, Jan. 15, 1940. Subject: "Is the American form of capitalism essential to American democracy." Leaflet.
- 43. A Personal statement, by Leonard E. Miller. Also includes: Harry W. Francis - Explains. Reproduces Oct. 8, 1935, letter from Mary Craig Sinclair. Mimeographed newsletter.
- 44. A Program of action for the Epic Convention n.p. n.d. "This statement is issued by the Epic Committee for the United Front."
- 45. Resolution passed by the Pasadena Epic Club, Pasadena, California, Nov. 14, 1936. Mimeographed leaf.
- 46. Sample ballots for the Presidential Primary Election of the Democratic Party, May 5, 1936. Three examples; two in envelopes addressed to Upton Sinclair and Mary Craig Sinclair.
- 47. Statement of Temporary Organization Committee of the San Francisco Council of the Democratic Party of California, San Francisco, CA, Dec. 14, 1934.
- 48. To all Epics!! Socialist Party of California. Printed letter.
- 49. To those who believe in democratic principles, by Charles H. Pierce, Los Angeles. Mimeographed letter.
- 50. United Front or fascism; we Epics must choose, issued by EPIC Committee for the United Front. Pamphlet has annotations in pencil.
- 51. What is production for use? What does EPIC Plan propose? On sale at the End Poverty League Headquarters, Los Angeles. "This is Sharpshooters' Leaflet, no. 1."
- 52. Miscellaneous newspaper articles concerning the EPIC Convention in May of 1935 and other issues of interest in 1935.
1938 Campaign of Raymond L. Haight for Governor of California.
- 53. Crusade! By Mary Craig Sinclair, The Progressive, Aug. 20, 1938. Newspaper column supporting Haight's candidacy.
- 54. Miscellaneous newspaper articles and a campaign brochure.
BOX VI (A)
Top
The EPIC Campaign and Upton Sinclair in Politics (cont.)
Anti-Sinclair material produced for EPIC campaigns
- 1. Upton Sinclair's attitude on Christianity. United for California league, n.d., 4 p. 3 copies
- 2. Upton Sinclair on the Catholic Church. United for California League.(n.d., 4 p. 2 copies)
- 3. Attention! Catholics of California! The Anti-Communist Society. (n.d.) 14 (2) p.
- 4. Upton Sinclair's opinion of Christian Science. United for California League. (n.d., 4 p.)
- 5. Upton Sinclair publishes his opinion of the Seventh-Day Adventists. United for California League. (n.d. 2 p.)
- 6. Sinclair slanderer of all churches and all Christian institutions. United for California league. (n.d. 4 p)
- 7. Sinclair dynamiter of all churches and all Christian institution. California Democratic Governor's league. (n.d. 4 p)
- 8. Sinclair defiler of all churches and all Christian institutions. United for California league. (n.d. 4 p.)
- 9. Upton Sinclair attacks all churches. California League Against Sinclairism (n.d. 6 p)
- 10. Upton Sinclair on The Legion, The A.E.F., The R.O.T.C, and The Boy Scouts, The Young Liberal League (n.d. 4 p. 3 copies)
- 11. To the Veterans of American Wars: Is Upton Sinclair for Americanism or Communism? Veterans' Non-Partisan League. (n.d. 4 p. 2 copies)
- 12. Upton Sinclair reviews The University of California and UCLA United for California League (n.d. 4 p. 3 copies)
- 13. Upton Sinclair discusses the home, the institution of marriage, and advocates free love. Bernice H. Johnson (n.d. 4 p. 2 copies)
- 14. So the people may know: That Upton Sinclair is opposed to all the established churches. The Young Liberal League (and) Non-Sectarian Voters League of California. (n.d. 4 p. 4 copies)
- 15. An important message to you from The Catholic Laymen's league Against Religious Intolerance (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 16. The proof that Upton Sinclair preaches revolution and Communism. United for California League (n.d. 4 p. 3 copies)
- 17. Sinclairism means the destruction of all business and property in California. California League Against Sinclairism. (n.d. 6 p)
- 18. The unmasking of Upton Sinclair, by Martin Luther Thomas. (n.d. 6 p. 2 copies)
- 19. What does Sinclairism offer me? California league Against Sinclairism (n.d. 6 p)
- 20. Can the leopard change his spots? Spots on the coast of Upton Sinclair. Better America Federation. (n.d. 15 p)
- 21. The menace of Sinclairism, by C.C. Young. California League Against Sinclairism. (n.d. 4 p)
- 22. Property owners-Beware. California Real Estate Association (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 23. Reasons why Upton Sinclair should not be elected Governor of California (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 24. Defeat Sinclairism!! California league Against Sinclairism. (n.d. 4 p)
- 25. End Sinclairism in California. California League Against Sinclairism. (n.d. 6 p)
- 26. Are you a Knight of the Golden Calf? Are you with Sinclair or Roosevelt? By Franklin F. Johnson. (n.d. 4 p)
- 27. The Septic Plan and Santa Claus for Governor of the State of California. By Uptax Sanscare. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 28. What Sinclair's Epic means to you. The Young Liberal League. (n.d. 8 p. 2 copies)
- 29. For whom are you going to vote? By Dr. Aurelia Henry Reinhardt. California League Against Sinclairism (n.d. 4 p)
- 30. We appeal to the exploited masses! Help us save the state. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 31. Sinclair scheme held dangerous to holders of insurance policies. California League Against Sinclairism. Reprint from San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, October 15, 1934. 1 sheet.
- 32. Has California gone Crazy? California League Against Sinclairism (newspaper clipping)
- 33. N.U.T.S. National Union of Technocrats and Socialists. Loyal League of Nutcrackers. (n.d. 4 p)
- 34. What a man, what a plan. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 35. American Democracy of California. Los Angeles, California. Vol. 1, no. 3, 18 October 1934. (one issue of an anti-Sinclair newspaper)
- 36. What Upton Sinclair thinks of the Townsend Plan. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 37. Attention California voter. The Progressive League for Merriam. (n.d. 4 p)
- 38. Is this a free California? Northern California Merriam for Governor. (n.d. 6 p. 2 copies)
- 39. Notice to voters. (printed letter from the William R. Staats Co. of Pasadena, investment securities, advising clients to vote for Frank F. Merriam against state socialism. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 40. Vote "no" against Sinclairism. California League Against Sinclairism. (gummed sticker for window mounting. (n.d. 1 sheet).
- 41. Cost analysis of Sinclair's Epic Plan. United for California League. (n.d. 8 p. 2 copies)
- 42. Vote your choice. Veterans' Non-Partisan League of Northern California. (n.d. 4 p. 2 copies)
- 43. The Red Flag, by Upton Sinclair. Non-Partisan Merriam-for-Governor Club (reprint from Current Literature, 1909, September number. 1 sheet)
- 44. For thirty years Upton Sinclair posed as a Socialist. Democratic Merriam for Governor Campaign Committee. (n.d. 6 p. 2 copies)
- 45. Under which flag? American Institutions League. (n.d. 4 p)
- 46. A challenge to church women. Women's Non-Partisan Committee-Merriam for Governor. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 47. Upton Sinclair active official of Communist organizations. Issued by A.B. Peluso. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 48. To man or woman who holds a job now. (n.d. 1 sheet)
- 49. Republican card packet for voter in election of 6 November 1934. 3 cards)
- 50. The red currency: one Sinclair dollar. 1934. 1 sheet.
- 51. Eleven leaflets advocating election of Frank F. Merriam as Governor of California in 1934.
- 52. "Those EPIC Intolerants," Berkeley Daily Gazette, 8 September 1934, p. 4. Copies as "Current Opinion" from the Palo Alto Times.
- 53. Cartoon of Sinclair mounted backwards on a horse-Sinclair yearning toward socialism while the horse is racing toward fascism. (8" X 10" 2 copies)
BOX VII
Top
Fliver King
Reviews
- 1. Letter to the editor, by Upton Sinclair, in response to a book review by Margaret Marshall. The Nation ?? May, 1938.
- 2. Miscellaneous foreign newspaper and periodical reviews.
- 3. Miscellaneous foreign newspaper and periodical reviews.
A Giant's Strength
Sources
- 4. Arctic cradle of the atom, by Richard L. Newberger, Liberty, Nov. 24, 1945.
- 5. Typewritten extract from the New York Times of Aug. 7, 1945, of the dropping of the first atomic bomb; of the July 26 ultimatum to Japan; of Truman's radio chat of Aug. 9; of Truman in the Aug. 5 issue of the New York Times; and of radio serials on Apr. 1 1947
- 6. Miscellaneous short magazine articles about atomic destruction.
Reviews
- 7. Announcement of the fourth annual playwriting award presented by the Centron Motion Picture Corp., Lawrence, Kan., and the University Theater, The University of Kansas. In ink: submitted A Giant's Strength Sept. 30 1961.
- 8. Miscellaneous American and foreign newspaper and periodical reviews.
The Gnomemobile
- 9. Gold Key comic book adaptation of Walt Disney's movie adaptation of The Gnomemobile.
- 10. Series of publicity releases from Walt Disney Productions for the movie adaptation of The Gnomemobile.
Good Health and How We Won It
Reviews
- 11. One review from the Brooklyn, New York, Eagle.
The Goose-Step
David Sinclair and The Scorpion
- 12. The Scorpion (Uncensored), Madison, Wis., vol. 1, no. 3, Mar. 8, 1923. Contains: Is the Jew entitled to an education, by Upton Sinclair.
- 13. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about "the Scorpion incident."
Laughing horse and the University of California
- 14. Broadside advertising the laughing horse.
- 15. Laughing horse, Berkeley, CA Dec 1922, no. 4. Contains excerpts from The goose-step and a letter from DH Lawrence which reviews Ben Hoechst's privately printed novel Fantasias Malaria (the sexual terminology in the latter has been deleted by the editors, but reinserted in pencil by an unidentified hand).
- 16. Miscellaneous newspaper articles concerning the uproar over the publication of the laughing horse.
Reactions to its publication
- 17. Sinclair sends reply to letter on 'Goose-Step,' The Plain Dealer, Cleveland, Ohio, Apr. 14, 1923. Reprints a letter by Upton Sinclair to the Yale News.
- 18. Sinclair talk date canceled, Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1923. Reprints a telegram written by Uptown Sinclair to Mr. William J. Burns, Chief of the Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice.
- 19. Upton Sinclair protests, New Haven, Conn. Union, Apr. 8, 1923. Letter by Upton Sinclair to the literary editor.
- 20. Miscellaneous newspaper articles.
Sources and Related Items
- 21. Articles concerning David P. Barrows, the Dean of the University of California.
- 22. Berkeley Divinity School Bulletin, Middletown, Conn., no. 42, June, 1921.
- 23. The Bulletins of several schools and colleges.
- 24. Bulletins of the American Association of University Professors, Boston, MA vol. III, no. 4, Apr. 1917, vol. V, nos. 7-8, Nov-Dec. 1919; and vol. VI no,. 5, May 1920.
- 25. The Critical attitude of the public toward higher education, School and Society, vol. XX, no. 505, Aug. 30, 1924.
- 26. College students and politics, reprinted from School and Society, vol. XVI, no. 416, Dec. 16, 1922.
- 27. "Education in its broader phases," address delivered by Hon. Arthur E. Holder to the sixteenth convention of the International Association of Machinists, Rochester, NY, Sept. 24, 1920.
- 28. Extra-curricula activities and academic freedom, by Wallace W. Atwood, Publications of the Clark University Library, vol. 6, no. 5, Mar. 1922.
- 29. Federal laws, regulations, and rulings affecting the land-grant colleges of agriculture and mechanic arts, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, DC, 1916.
- 30. The first hundred years of Amherst College, by John Mason Tyler, and What does the college hope to be during the next one hundred years, by Alexander Meiklejohn, reprints of two addresses delivered at the centennial celebration, by courtesy of Amherst Graduates Quarterly.
- 31. Harvard train 1881 remarks of Howard Elliott, Chairman, Northern Pacific Railway Company, at the dinner of the fortieth anniversary of the class of 1881 of Harvard, reprinted Sept. 15, 1921.
- 32. Harvard News for Release to morning papers, June 20, 1921.
- 33. Labor education in Pennsylvania, prepared by the department of Education and Labor Research of the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor, Harrisburg, PA (n.d.)
- 34. Large classes given diplomas at Pitt today; principal address is made by President of Indiana University (Dr. William Lowe Bryan). Unidentified newspaper article.
- 35. My dismissal from the Carnegie Institute of Technology (causes and effects), by George Frederick Gundelfinger, Ph.D. published by the New Fraternity, Sewickley, PA 1922.
- 36. Miscellaneous items pertaining to the Board of Overseers of Harvard University, including an official ballot.
- 37. The New Student, New York, vol. 1, nos. 1-3, Apr. 19-May 17, 1922.
- 38. An Old seminary with a new life, the Berkeley of today, by Guy Emery Shipler, reprinted from the Mar. 11, 1922, issue of The Churchman.
- 39. A Plan for the new type of university, from The Michigan Alumnus, Mar. 23, 1922
BOX VIII
Top
The Goose-Step (cont.)
- 1. Preliminary report of the Committee on Academic Freedom and Academic Tenure, Dec. 1914.
- 2. The Portfolio, published by the students of Parsons College, Fairfield, IA, Noc. 1922, vol. 43, no. 9.
- 3. A Question of academic freedom being the official correspondence between Nicholas Murray Butler and J.E. Springarn during the academic year 1910-1911 with other documents, printed for distribution among the alumni, New York, 1911.
- 4. Report of Committee on Academic Freedom and Academic Tenure, by the American Association of University Professors, Dec. 1915. Proof.
- 5. Report of the Committee of Inquiry on conditions at the University of Utah, by the American Association of University Professors, July, 1915.
- 6. Report of the Committee of Inquiry on conditions in Washburn College, reprinted from Bulletin of the American Association of University Professors, vol. VII, nos. 1-2, Jan-Feb, 1921.
- 7. Report of the Committee of Economists on the dismissal of professor Ross from Leland Stanford Junior University, n.p. n.d.
- 8. Scholarship and criticism in the United States, by J.E. Springarn, reprinted from Civilization in the United States: an Inquiry by Thirty Americans, Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1922.
- 9. A statement by Dean Ladd, reprinted from The Hartford (Conn) Courant, n.p. n.d.
- 10. Statement made by Dr. Charles H. Thurber, President of the Board of Trustees, to the members of the alumni of Clark College and Clark University, Worcester, MA, June 7, 1923.
- 11. Statement of Clark controversy for free speech, The Clark College Monthly, Worcester, MA, n.d. Torn from the issue.
- 12. A Statistical study of American men of science, by J. McKeen Cattell, reprinted from several issues of Science, 1906-1910.
- 13. Statistics of state universities and state colleges, for the year ended June 30, 1921, by the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, DC, Bulletin, 1921, no. 53, 1922.
- 14. The Status of the land-grant college, reprinted from the Educational Review, New York, June, 1918.
- 15. To teachers and the general public, a mimeographed letter from the Office of State Superintendent, Madison, WI, Nov. 21, 1911.
- 16. To the members of the faculty, a mimeographed letter from Stratton D. Brooks, President of the University of Oklahoma, Sept. 16, 1922.
- 17. To the President and members of the Local Organization of the American Association of University Professors, a mimeographed letter from Mr. Catell, University of Oklahoma, Norma, OK, May 11, 1922. Revised and annotated in ink and in pencil.
- 18. Washburn College, (in ink) "statement prepared for School & Society, by Dr. Hefelbower, Mr. J.P. Troxell, & Dr. J.E. Kirkpatrick, April, 15/22, 1922."
- 19. What are the prospects of the university professor, by David P. Barrows (in pencil) "from the University of California Chronicle of April 1922 (the Chronicle is a Quarterly)."
- 20. What are the prospects for the university professor's wife? By Dorothy Hart Bruce and others. Reprint from the University of California Chronicles, Oct. 1922.
- 21. Why labor schools and colleges? By James H. Maurer reprinted from Life and Labor for the Workers Education Bureau of America, New York, n.d.
- 22. The World, Oakland, CA, July 25 and Aug. 15, 1919, nos. 696 and 699.
- 23. Yale dollars; whence they come and where they go, Yale University New Haven, Conn, n.d. Brochure.
- 24. A Year of Progress; the League for Industrial Democracy (1921-1922), by Harry W. Laidler, Sec. Sept. 1922.
- 25. Miscellaneous newspaper articles about education in the United States.
- 26. Miscellaneous periodical articles about education in the United States.
BOX IX
Top
The Goose-Step (cont.)
Reviews
- 1. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 2. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 3. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and periodicals.
The Goslings
Sources
- 4. The American Federation of Teachers, reprinted from the
Educational Review, Sept., 1920, vol. 60, no. 2.
- 5. American Federation of Teachers; Semi-Monthly Bulletin,
Chicago, Nov. 20, 1921, vol. 1, no. 5.
- 6. American school histories altered and anglicized, by
Charles Grant Miller published by the Sons of the Revolution in
the State of California, Los Angeles, leaflet.
- 7. Brief and argument of Gilbert E. Roe in behalf of Benjamin
Glassberg, teacher, published by the Teachers' Union, New York,
n.d.
- 8. The Bulletin of the School Women's Club, Oakland, CA, Sept.
1923, vol. VI, no. 1.
- 9. A Case of federal propaganda in our public schools,
published by the National Industrial Conference Board, Feb.
1919.
- 10. Catalogue of the Phillips Exeter Academy, 1922-1923,
Exeter, NH, Dec. 1922.
- 11. A Catechism of Catholic education, by Reverend James H.
Ryan, published by the National Catholic Welfare Council, Bureau
of Education, Washington, DC, 1922.
- 12. A Cautionary tale, review of Europe and the Faith by H.
Belloc, The Nation, Oct. 9, 1920.
- 13. Chicago Teachers' Pension Law as amended and in force July
1, 1923, printed by order of the Board of Trustees of the public
School Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of the City of
Chicago.
- 14. "Crime and the civic cancer-graft," by Judge M.L. McKinley
published by the Chicago Daily News, 1923.
- 15. Education of adult working classes, extract from Monthly
Labor Review, June, 1921, vol. XII, no. 6.
- 16. The Finances of the Minneapolis schools, by David F.
Swenson, published in the present form by authority of the Board
of Education, Dec. 1919.
- 17. Franklin Hichborn's legislative Bulletin, Sacramento, CA,
April, 21, 1917, vol. II, no. 11-1917 series.
- 18. Free textbooks and state uniformity, by A.c. Monahan,
United States Bureau of Education, Bulletin, 1915, no. 36, whole
no. 663.
- 19. Granville Cubage, candidate for Superintendent of Public
Instruction (Ark) Campaign brochure.
- 20. Greetings to those who love this flag and these ideals; an
appeal to all who have the welfare of the public schools at
heart. Published by the Society to keep the Schools Safe for
Democracy, Denver, CO. n.d.
- 21. Laws of New York, Chapters 666, and 667. Torn from a
booklet.
- 22. Lessons in the history and civics of citizenship; civic
liberty-Lessons V and VI, prepared by a Citizenship Commiteee in
Co-operation with the Director of Citizenship, Minneapolis Public
Schools.
- 23. The looters, by George A. Connell, n.p. n.d.
- 24. Miscellaneous brochures prepared by the American
Federation of Teachers.
- 25. Miscellaneous brochures prepared by the National Education
Association.
- 26. Miscellaneous documents concerning the public schools,
prepared by the Public Schools Defense Association of San
Francisco, Oct. 10, 1921-June 1, 1922, nos. 2-7.
- 27. Official attitude of the Catholic Church on education,
published by the National catholic Welfare Council, Bureau of
Education, Education Bulletins, Feb. 1923, no. 1.
- 28. The Open shop controversy, "news sheet" of the National
Catholic Welfare Council, n.d.
- 29. Overcrowding in the schools and the proposed zoo,
resolutions adopted by the Chicago Teachers' Federation on Oct.
16, 1923, at Drill Hall, Masonic Temple.
BOX X
Top
The Goslings (cont.)
- 1. The Parochial school vs. The melting pot, by Franklin
Hichborn, 1920. "This pamphlet is the second of a series, issued
by California Liberals Committee."
- 2. The Platoon school in Detroit, by Charles L. Spain, The
Detroit Educational Bulletin, Jan. 1923, no. 2.
- 3. The Press on the Lusk Laws, from the New Republic, Feb. 1.
1922, published by the Teachers Union of New York, Dec. 11,
1922.
- 4. Private high schools and academies, 1917-18, Department of
the Interior, Bureau of Education, Bulletin, 1920, no. 3.
- 5. The Problem of adult education in Passaic, N.J. Department
of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Bulletin, 1920, no. 4.
- 6. Program Los Angeles City Teachers' Institute, Mon-Wed, Dec.
17-19, 1923.
- 7. Report of the Better Schools Services of the American
Federation of Teachers, Jan. 1, 1921.
- 8. Report of the Committee on Education of the New York State
Federation of Labor, Rochester, Aug. 23-26, 1921. Adopted by the
58th Convention.
- 9. Report of the Special legislative Committee on Education,
as authorized by Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 21, by the
Forty-Third Session of the Legislative of California, printed by
the California State Printing Office, Sacramento, CA, 1920.
- 10. Report on investigation of pro-British history text-books
in use in the public schools of the City of New York, by David
Hirshfield, May 25, 1923.
- 11. Report on the workers' educational classes in Pennsylvania
during 1920-21, submitted by James H. Maurer to the Pennsylvania
Federation of Labor to the 20th Annual Convention of the
Federation, Harrisburg, PA, May 10-12, 1921.
- 12. Save the schools by Peter J. Brady, President, Allied
Printing Trades Council of New York State. Leaflet.
- 13. Should the schools teach labor problems, reprinted from
the Educational Review, May, 1921, vol. 61, no. 5.
- 14. Sleepers awaken! Brochure which warns of the danger to San
Francisco's schools from Catholic schools.
- 15. Tabulations of superintendents' and teachers' replies. Two
large oversize sheets.
- 16. Terrorizing our public schools prepared by the Teachers
Union of The City of New York, Jan. 1, 1920. Leaflet.
- 17. Toward the new education; the case against autocracy in
our public schools, by the Teachers' Union of The City of New
York n.d.
- 18. The Trial of the three suspended teachers of the DeWitt
Clinton High School, published for The Teachers' Defense Fund,
New York, 1918.
- 19. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
pre-college education in the United States.
BOX XI
Top
The Goslings (cont.)
Sources--Washington, DC, Schools
- 1. Increase in teachers' pay in the District of Columbia,
hearing before the Committee on the District of Columbia, United
States Senate, 67th Congress, 2nd Session, on S. 3136, Apr. 3,
1922.
- 2. Public schools of the District of Columbia, hearings before
a Subcommittee of the Committee on the District of Columbia,
United States Senate, 67th Congress, 1st Session, relative to the
building program, May 5, 6, and 13, 1921.
- 3. Public-School system of the District of Columbia, hearings
before the Select Committee of the United States Senate, 67th
Congress, 2nd Session, pursuant to S.Res. 310, 1920.
- 4. Reorganization of the public schools of the District of
Columbia, joint hearings before the Subcommittee on the District
of Columbia, Congress of the United States, 67th Congress, 2nd
Session, relative to schools and playgrounds in the District of
Columbia. Two pamphlets.
- 5. Reorganization of the schools of the District of Columbia,
report of the Subcommittee submitted to the Committees of the
Senate and House of Representatives on the District of Columbia,
relative to the reorganization…, presented by Mr. Capper,
Feb. 26, 1923.
- 6. Special report on schoolhouse accommodations submitted to
the Board of Education of the District of Columbia by the
Superintendent of Schools, Dec. 1, 1920.
Reviews
- 7. Miscellaneous book reviews and advertisements from American
newspapers and periodicals.
- 8. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
Hell
Reviews
- 9. Miscellaneous book and theater reviews in American and
foreign newspapers and periodicals.
I, Candidate for Governor, and How I Got Licked
Advertising
- 10. Two pieces of advertising literature. One consists of a
short statement by Upton Sinclair. Short statement is A1642.
I, Governor of California, and How I Ended Poverty
Reviews
- 11. Miscellaneous book reviews and campaign advertisements in
American newspapers and periodicals.
BOX XII
Top
Indignant Subscriber
Reviews
- 1. Sinclair arraigns purchased press in plays, by Bessie Beatty.
It Happened to Didymus
Reviews
- 2. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and periodicals.
Jimmie Higgins
Reviews
- 3. Cover of the Gustav Kiepenheuer (Potsdam, Germany) edition of Jimmie Higgins.
- 4. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and periodicals.
- 5. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
John D
Reviews
- 6. Seeking double of Rockefeller, San Francisco Chronicle, Jan. 18, 1909. Also an illustration of Mr. C.M. Lynton as "John D."
The Jungle
Advertising
- 7. A Book jacket and two pieces of promotional literature.
Also Gottesman A759 and A760.
Motion Picture Adaptation
- 8. Miscellaneous reviews and advertising.
Reactions to its Publication
- 9. Miscellaneous newspaper clippings, including an article by
Upton Sinclair entitled "The Condemned Meat Industry."
Reviews
- 10. Miscellaneous book reviews in American newspapers and
periodicals.
King Coal
Sources
- 11. Anarchy in Colorado; who is to blame? By H.E. Bartholomew,
Bartholomew Publishing Company, Denver, CO, 1905.
- 12. Articles of agreement and scale of wages between the coal
operators in the Northern Colorado coal fields and District No.
15, U.M.W. of A., dated July 14, 1908.
- 13. The Church and industrial warfare; a report on the labor
troubles in Colorado and Michigan, by Rev. Henry A. Atkinson,
issued by Social Service Commission of the Congregational
Churches, Boston, Mass.
- 14. Coal-mine accidents in the United States, 1896-1912, with
monthly statistics for 1912, compiled by Frederick W. Horton,
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1913.
- 15. The Colorado industrial plan, by John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
including a copy of the plan of representation and agreement
adopted at the coal and iron mines of the Colorado Fuel and Iron
Company, 1916.
- 16. Congressional Record, 63rd Congress, 2nd Session, The
Colorado coal strike-enforce the law. Extension of remarks of
Hon. George J. Kindel, of Colorado, in the House of
Representatives, June 13, 1914.
- 17. Fifteenth Biennial Report of the State Inspector of Coal
Mines, 1911-1912, Denver, CO, 1913.
- 18. Harper's Weekly, New York, May 23, 1914, vol. LVIII, no.
2996.
- 19. Labor laws enacted, 1913, State of Colorado, Offices
Bureau of Labor Statistics, issued by Edwin V. Brake, Deputy
Labor Commissioner.
- 20. Labors' greatest conflicts, by Emma F. Langdon, 1st ed.,
Denver, CO, May, 1908.
- 21. Lawson case; a brief history based on court records and
incontrovertible facts, issued by Statistical Department, U.M.W.
of A. n.d.
- 22. Militarism in Colorado, report of the committee appointed
at the suggestion of the Governor of Colorado to investigate the
conduct of the Colorado National Guard during the coal strike of
1913-1914, printed by authority of the Colorado State Federation
of Labor, 1914.
- 23. Only an armed truce in Colorado, now they're hitting below
the belt, by Upton Sinclair, Los Angeles Record, June 11,
1914.
- 24. Opinion of Supreme Court of Colorado, No. 8712, rendered
June 4, 1917, Louis Zancanelli, plaintiff in error, vs. the
people of the State of Colorado, defendant in error.
- 25. Sinclair criticizes report, letter to editor of the
Herald, New York Herald, June 10, 1914. Also Gottesman SA37.
- 26. Strike war in Colorado, by W.T. Davis, special
correspondent, The Outlook, n.d.
BOX XIII
Top
King Coal (cont.)
- 1. The Struggle in Colorado for industrial freedom, Sept. 16,
1914, Bulletin no. 6. "Character assassins."
- 2. The Survey, Chicago, Aug. 21, 1915, vol. XXXIV, no. 21.
- 3. Upton Sinclair writes of Colorado "war" guns store in
fashionable Denver home, St. Paul (Minn) News, June 3, 1914.
- 4. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
Ludlow Massacre of 1914.
Reviews
- 5. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and magazines.
Letters to Judd
Reviews
- 6. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 7. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
Little Steel
Advertising
- 8. A Book jacket from the firm of Werner laurie and a
promotional brochure.
Reviews
- 9. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and a promotional flyer.
Love's Pilgrimage
Reviews
- 10. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and a promotional flyer.
Mammonart
Advertising
- 11. Leaflet announcing Mammonart, by Max N. Maisel, New
York.
- 12. Notice that a copy of the book has been purchased for the
receiver as a Christmas gift. Gottesman A1007.
- 13. Poster proclaiming the publication of Mammonart.
Sources
- 14. Miscellaneous book reviews of biographies, and character
sketches, of famous literary personalities, e.g., Robert Burns,
Jane Austen, Henry James, etc., from various American and foreign
newspapers and periodicals.
Reviews
- 15. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and periodicals.
Manassas
Reviews
- 16. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign newspapers and periodicals and one peice of promotional literature.
Mental Radio
Reactions to its Publication
- 17. One newspaper article and a mimeographed leaflet by Stan
lee Kapustka.
Sources and Related Items
- 18. Announcing lectures and demonstrations covering brain
reflexes and cell activity, by Dr. Wm. D. Hoffman, Ph.D.
Brochure.
- 19. Athanasia; my witness to the soul's survival-III, by F.
Bligh Bond. Torn from an unidentified magazine.
- 20. Ghost layer, Newsweek, Apr. 12, 1948.
- 21. The Journal of Parapsychology, Durham, NC, Mar, 1945, vol.
9, no. l.
- 22. Machine to reveal hidden emotions. Torn from an
unidentified newspaper.
- 23. Mind made visible, by Roman Ostoja, with a foreword by
Mary Craig Sinclair (1938)
- 24. Neuere Forschungen auf dem Gebiete der Telepathie, by Dr.
Gerda Walther, Zeitschrift fur Parapsychologie, Nov. 1932, ll
Heft.
- 25. The Possibilities of "E S P" to which is attached a
shorter notice entitled: An extraordinary opportunity (by Dr.
J.B. Rhine of Duke University)
- 26. The Psi phenomena; new world of the mind by J.B. Rhine,
reviewed by Edmund W. Sinnott, New York Times Book Review, Dec.
27, 1953.
- 27. Scientific American, Mar. 1932.
- 28. Slater, probably from Life magazine. Incomplete
article.
- 29. Telepathy happens, by Mrs. Hewat Mckenzie, Quarterly
Transactions B.C.P.S. (n.p., n.d.)
- 30. Voros, demonstrating genuine telepathy, explanatory
lecture by Dr. Cecil E. Reynolds, Pasadena Civic Auditorium, CA,
Apr. 8-9, Program.
- 31. When the body sleeps, by Charles A. Applebee, Jr., Mystery
of psychometry, by Thelva B. Ellis, Mind Magic Magazine (n.p.,
n.d.)
- 32. Your rendezvous with destiny, by Walter M. Germain, The
Police Journal (n.d.) Autographed by the author for Upton
Sinclair.
Reviews
- 33. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 34. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
BOX XIV
Top
The Millennium
Reviews
- 1. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals and one piece of promotional material.
The Moneychangers
Reactions to its Publication
- 2. U.S. Navy admits rotten armor; experts report 700,000
(dollars) fraud; Admiral Mason says Oregon has tons of bad armor,
The New York American, Sept. 6, 1908.
Money Writes!
Advertising
Reviews
- 4. The Conning tower, a review in verse, New York World, Dec.
20, 1927.
- 5. "Money Writes," reviewed by Abram Kautz, Views of Truth
(n.p., n.d.)There follows the poem Laughter, by Mary Craig
Sinclair
- 6. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 7. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
Mountain City
Advertising
- 8. Three pieces of promotional material, one of which is
written in Spanish.
Reviews
- 9. Letter to Werner Laurie, by Upton Sinclair, reprinted in
the Egyptian Mail, Alexandria, Egypt, May 1, 1930.
- 10. The Rail-Splitter, Milan, Illinois, Oct. 1930, vol. 15,
no. 10. Contains a review of Mountain City.
- 11. Upton Sinclair defies De la Fouchardiere when writer
brands American a nationalist, Chicago Tribune, Paris, France,
Aug. 28, 1930. Contains two letters, one to the editor of The
Tribune, and the other to the editor of L'Oeuvre, by Upton
Sinclair.
- 12. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 13. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
My Lifetime in Letters
Advertising
- 14. Fall-Winter 1959-1960 list of books from the University of
Missouri Press.
Reviews
- 15. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers.
The Nature Woman
Reviews
- 16. Newark women back newest little theatre, Newark (NJ)
Ledger, Dec. 21, 1924.
No Pasaran
Advertising
- 17. A Poster announcing No Pasaran.
Reviews
- 18. A Printed letter from Upton Sinclair which promotes his
book. Gottesman A1846 or A1859.
- 19. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers.
Oil
Advertising
- 20. Miscellaneous book jackets, leaflets, and flyers promoting
the book.
Sources
- 21. America smeared with oil in the Near East, E.H. Bierstadt
charges the United States with economic imperialism, The New York
Book Review, Sept. 14, 1924.
- 22. Behind this prohibition, by Leonard Cline, The Nation,
vol. 121, no. 3139.
- 23. California Oil Worker, Bakersfield, CA, Aug. 8 and Nov.
21, 1921.
- 24. Coalinga Daily Record, Coalinga, California, Sept. 6-Oct.
18, 1921, vol. XIII, no. 3-no. 39. Not a complete run of issues;
consists of front pages only.
- 25. International Labor Defense, a mimeographed letter to
friends of labor defense, Chicago, Aug. 19, 1926. Concerns
political amnesty in Poland, Upton Sinclair appears as a member
of National Committee.
- 26. International Press Correspondence. Four undated sheets
from this periodical.
- 27. It's a hell of a game, by James (Slim) Martin, New Masses,
June, 1926.
- 28. Memoranda of terms governing the relations of operators
and work-men in oil and gas producing companies, oil and gas
pipe-line companies operating cleaning, topping, dehydrating and
gasoline plants, contracting drillers and refining companies, in
the State of California, as determined by the President's
Mediation Commission, and the committee of such workmen. Two
brochures.
- 29. Memorandum on the conditions in the polish prisons based
on the report of the Parliamentary Investigation THUGGUTT
Committee. A mimeographed report.
- 30. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles concerning
the Teapot Dome scandal.
- 31. Muscular action in work and play; some of the factors
involved in the simplest series of bodily movements, by Guy Otis
Brewster, Scientific American, Aug. 1924.
- 32. The New religions of America, by Jules Bois, The Forum,
Feb. 1925, vol. LXXIII, no. 2.
- 33. New-rich and new-poor on the riviera, by Valentine
Williams, The Living Age (n.p. n.d.).
- 34. Poland, the country of systematic white terror. A
mimeographed study in which the title page and most of p. 9 are
missing.
- 35. Politics of oil, studies in labour and capital no. VII
prepared for the Labour Research Department, by R. Page Arnot
(The Labour Publishing Company Limited, London, 1924).
- 36. The tactics of the third international, by Alexei Pilenco,
from the Revue Universelle, Nov. 15, reprinted in The Living Age
[n.p., n.d.]
- 37. The Tragedy of waste, by Stuart Chase, The New Republic,
Aug. 5, 1925.
- 38. Wage schedules and working conditions effective Sept. 1,
1921. Two brochures.
- 39. White terror in Europe! Can America be far behind? By Rose
Karsner, The Workers Monthly, Dec. 1924.
- 40. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles relating
to themes dealt with oil.
Reviews
- 41. One article from the Copenhague Politiken, July 15,
1928.
BOX XV
Top
100 Percent; the Story of a Patriot
Reviews
- 1. A Newspaper clipping which reproduces a letter sent by
Upton Sinclair to the literary editor (?) Cut from an
unidentified newspaper.
- 2. "100 protsentsa," 25 parts of a serialization of Upton
Sinclair's novel in the Bulgarian newspaper Trud, published in
Sofia, Nov. 12-Dec. 12, 1946. Only installments 50-74 (chapters
53-73) are here included.
- 3. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 4. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
Our Lady
Reviews
- 5. A Letter from Carl G. Jung, Zurich, Switzerland, which
analyzes the novel in some detail; this is in turn introduced by
another from Upton Sinclair, New Republic, Feb. 21, 1955.
- 6. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 7. One foreign newspaper review.
Personal Jesus
Advertising
- 8. A Book jacket from the Evans Publishing Company.
- 9. A Mimeographed testimonial letter from Albert Einstein.
Reviews
- 10. Upton Sinclair on Christ, A Personal Jesus, by Upton
Sinclair, reviewed by Granville Hicks, New Leader, New York, Nov.
10, 1952.
- 11. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspaper.
The Pot Boiler
Reviews
- 12. A Play program from the Savoy Theater, Pasadena,
California, and one review from an unidentified newspaper.
Prince Hagen
Reviews
- 13. One newspaper and one periodical review.
Profits of Religion
Reviews
- 14. A Leaflet outlining the plot of the book along with
purchase information.
- 15. Three pieces of material which discuss the Profits of
Religion in relation to Upton Sinclair's candidacy for the
Governorship of California, 1934.
- 16. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 17. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
Roman Holiday
Advertising
- 18. A Flyer from Duttons, Inc., New York.
Reviews
- 19. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 20. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 21. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
- 22. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign periodicals.
Samuel the Seeker
Reviews
- 23. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign periodicals.
The Second Story Man
Reviews
- 24. A Notice in the New York Call, Feb. 8, 1923.
- 25. A Play program which includes The Second Story Man.
Singing Jailbirds
Advertising
- 26. Three pieces of promotional material.
Reactions to its Publication and Performance
- 27. le Chant dans la prison, sponsored by the Phalange
artistique, Mar, 1928.
- 28. From the New Leader mailbag, a letter to the editor, by
Upton Sinclair (22 Dec. 1928).
- 29. From Upton Sinclair, to the dramatic editor, a letter,
Dec. 10, 1928. Clipped from an unidentified newspaper. Gottesman
A1197 and E239.
- 30. In every way, by Roy L. McCardell, The Morning Telegraph,
New York, Aug. 25, 1924. Contains the Song of the I.W.W. from the
play.
- 31. Miscellaneous articles concerning the staging of the New
York production.
- 32. Politics on the stage; a study of some recent plays
interpreting our public life, by a political reporter, Theatre
Guild Magazine, Feb. 1929.
- 33. "Singing Jailbirds," a letter to the editor of The Nation,
by Upton Sinclair, Sept. 15, 1926.
- 34. Two play programs.
- 35. The Week on stage, by Joseph T. Shipley, The New Leader
(n.d.) Three individual columns which touch upon the play.
Reviews
- 36. Miscellaneous reviews from American newspapers.
- 37. Miscellaneous reviews from American periodicals.
- 38. Miscellaneous reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
Box XVI
Top
The Spokesman's Secretary
Review
- 1. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 2. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
Sylvia
Reviews
- 3. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
Terror in Russia
Reviews
- 4. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
They Call Me Carpenter
Advertising
- 5. One page of promotional material from the Chicago Daily
Tribune, June 20, 1922.
Reviews
- 6. Mr. Upton Sinclair protests, a letter to the editor of The
Jewish Tribune, New York, July 28, 1922, by Upton Sinclair.
- 7. A Play program of the EPIC Drama League, presented at the
Masonic Auditorium, Glendale, California, May 3, 1935.
- 8. A Printed page from an unidentified periodical, May, 1918.
Inscribed in pencil: What do you think of this for (?) book? (A
possible source item?)
- 9. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 10. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 11. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
Upton Sinclair Presents William Fox
Advertising
- 12. Advertising on the verso of the title page of Rob Wagner's
Script Weekly, Beverly Hills, California, Feb. 18, 1933, vol. IX,
no. 210.
- 13. One galley proof of an advertisement in Current History,
Apr. 1933, another in the Review of Reviews, Apr. 1933.
- 14. A poster which promotes the book.
- 15. A printed one-page information/promotion sheet.
Reactions to its Publication
- 16. A printed letter from Upton Sinclair to the editor of the
Bridgeport (Conn) Herald allowing him to serialize the book in
his newspaper. Included is part of the first serialization in the
May 4, 1933, issue of the newspaper.
- 17. Press heard William Fox was insane; it was his inflamed
imagination, by Glendon Allvine, Variety, Jan. 8, 1958. A
photocopy.
- 18. Miscellaneous newspaper articles concerning William Fox
and the machinations of other "Wall Street" investors and
bankers.
Sources
- 19. United States of America, petitioner, against Fox Theatres
Corp., Fox Film Corp., and William Fox, defendants. Answer of Fox
Theatres Corp. Stamped in upper right-hand corner: Conformed to
original.
- 20. United States of America, petitioner, against Fox Theatres
Corp., Fox Film Corp., and William Fox, defendants. Answer of Fox
Film Corp. Stamped in upper right-hand corner: Conformed to
original.
- 21. United States of America, petitioner v. Fox Theatres
Corp., Fox Film Corp., and William Fox, defendants. Petition.
Reviews
- 22. Comrade Upton Sinclair protests, Call of youth (n.p.,
n.d.) A letter to the editor of the Call of Youth by Upton
Sinclair. Also Gottesman A1490.
- 23. An unidentified typewritten review of the book annotated
in ink to which is attached a clipping with a photograph of Upton
Sinclair. On the clipping in pencil: Indianapolis Times
3.3.33.
- 24. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 25. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 26. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 27. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
BOX XVII
Top
The Way Out
Reviews
- 1. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
We, People of America: and How We Ended Poverty
Reviews
- 2. Violets and vitriol, by Al Sesh, The Kern County Union
Labor Journal, Bakersfield, CA, June 21, 1935.
The Wet Parade
Advertising
- 3. Two clippings from an unidentified newspaper promoting a
movie version of the book.
- 4. An Unidentified play poster.
Reactions to it Publication
- 5. Noted drama is offered on stage, by the Star-News Critic,
Pasadena (CA) Star-News, May 16, 1932.
- 6. A Play program from the First Methodist Church, Pasadena,
CA, May 15, 1932.
- 7. The Play's the thing!… Not the ballyhoo, by Tom
Wanamaker, Rob Wagner's Script, May 2, 1931.
Sources and Related Items
- 8. Academy heads deny drinking among youths, The American
Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 9. Alcohol and crime by Dr. J. Gonser, American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio, (n.d.)
- 10. The Alcohol question, by Dr. G. Von Bunge, American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 11. The Alcohol question in the light of social ethics, by Dr.
B. Stehler, American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 12. The Attitude of the Socialist Party toward the alcohol
question, by Emile Vandervelde, American Issue Publishing
Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 13. Bench vs. bar or judicial answers to saloon arguments, by
Lemeul D. Lilly, The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio, 1910.
- 14. Booze and a boy, reprinted from progress, Monthly News
Bulletin of the Knickerbocker Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church,
Brooklyn, N.Y., by The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 15. The Bowery, New York City, a survey of that notorious
district comparing present conditions with those of
pre-prohibition days, compiled by Robert E. Corradini, The World
league Against Alcoholism, Washington, DC (nd.)
- 16. Broadway, the greatest street in America under
prohibition, a survey of this great thoroughfare comparing
present conditions with those of pre-prohibition days, compiled
by Robert E. Corradini, The World league Against Alcoholism,
Washington, DC (n.d.)
- 17. Canada and liquor sale or control? The answer of facts, by
Ben H. Spence, published for The World league Against Alcoholism,
by The American Issue Publishing Co., Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 18. The Canadian liquor system, evils of government control,
by Alfred Edward Cooke, reprinted by special permission of the
Current History Magazine (Oct. 1929), the World League Against
Alcoholism, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 19. The Causes of alcoholism, by Dr. A. Cramer and H. Vogt,
American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 20. The Developing children of the nation, by Cora Frances
Stoddard, The American Issue Publishing Co., Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 21. The Dray decade, by Charles Merz, Outlook and Independent,
Oct. 1, 15, and 22, 1930. A four-part (?) series of which the
Oct. 8 segment is missing.
- 22. The Effects of alcohol on resistance to disease and
offspring, by Taav Laitinen, American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 23. The Eighteenth Amendment-its validity-public opinion, by
E.A. Harper, The American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville,
Ohio (n.d.)
- 24. Evangeline Booth blasts "good old days" myth, from an
unidentified newspaper, Sept. 28, 1930.
- 25. Father's Day at the baby show, by E.L. Transeau (American
Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio, n.d.)
- 26. A Father's mistake (a true story for children) by Dr. W.
Steward Whittemore, The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio, 1912.
- 27. Fifteen years of the drink question in Massachusetts, by
Cora Frances Stoddard and Amy Woods, reprinted from the
Scientific Temperance Journals, Winter, 1928 and Spring 1929,
published by The American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville,
Ohio (n.d.)
- 28. Government liquor control in Canada, prepared by the
Association Against the Prohibition Amendment, Washington, D.C.
Oct 1, 1929.
- 29. Handbook of modern facts about alcohol, by Cora Frances
Stoddard, The American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville,
Ohio (n.d.)
- 30. Industrial phases of the alcoholic question, by Alfred H.
Stehr, American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 31. The Influence of alcohol upon the functions of the brain,
by Dr. Rudolf Wlassak, American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 32. The Influence of alcohol upon the race, by Dr. Alfred
Ploetz, American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 33. Inside facts about liquor smuggling; amazing tricks
employed by American rum-running and narcotic gangsters, by
William J. McNulty, TNT, April 1931.
- 34. Labor & drink; the case of nationalization against
prohibition, by R.S. Ross, printed for the Union Voice by Fraser
& Jenkinson, Melbourne, Australia (n.d.)
- 35. Light wines and beer, by Samuel Wilson, The American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio, 1917.
- 36. Liquor control in Canada, by Ben H. Spence, Canadian
prohibition Bureau, Toronto, Canada (n.d.)
- 37. Massachusetts' experience with exempting beer from
prohibition, by Cora Frances Stoddard (The American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 38. Miscellaneous leaflets advocating temperance, American
Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio. Sources for the
leaflets and their copyright dates vary considerably.
- 39. No just claim for compensation, by Edward B. Dunford
(reprinted by permission from Current History, Feb. 1929,
published by the American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville,
Ohio)
- 40. Opportunity and obligation of the world movement against
alcoholism, by Ernest H. Cherrington, The World league Against
Alcoholism, The American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville,
Ohio (n.d.)
- 41. Our duty in regard to the liquor laws, by Horace D. Taft,
reprinted by permission by The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 42. Policy and program, The Temperance Education Foundation,
Inc., Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 43. prohibition and its early results, by Commander Evangeline
Booth, (courtesy of The War Cry, Westerville, Ohio, n.d.)
- 44. Prohibition as a promoter of prosperity from a
manufacturer's point of view, by Patrick Henry Callahan, address
delivered at the Congress of the World League Against Alcoholism,
Winona Lake, Indiana, Aug. 19, 1927, The American Issue Press,
Westerville, Ohio n.d.)
- 45. Prohibition as a promoter of prosperity from a
manufacturer's point of view, by Patrick Henry Callahan, address
delivered at the Congress of the World league Against Alcoholism,
Winona Lake, Indiana, August 19, 1927, The American Issue Press,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 46. Prohibition as the sociologist sees it, by Edward Alsworth
Ross, reprinted by courtesy Harper's magazine, 1921, published by
The American Issue Publishing company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 47. Prohibition enforcement; its effect on courts and prisons,
prepared by the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment,
Washington, DC, 1930.
- 48. Prohibition facts; questions and answers, compiled for the
Allied Forces for Prohibition, by W.G. Calderwood (New York,
n.d.)
- 49. Prohibition in Kansas, by William Johnson, American Issue
Publishing Co., Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 50. Prohibition quiz book; vexing questions about prohibition
asked and answered, why let the wets bluff you, be informed,
compiled and edited by Boyd P. Doty, 2nd ed (The American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio, n.d.)
BOX XVIII
Top
The Wet Parade (cont.)
- 1. Quebec liquor control system proves failure, The Christian
Science Publishing Society, Boston, Mass. (n.d.)
- 2. Race welfare, by Dr. Max Gruber, American Issue Publishing
Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 3. The Responsibility of knowledge; an address to the medical
profession, by F.E. Ridgeway, National Temperance League, London,
1912.
- 4. The Revolt of the wet millionaires, from an unidentified
periodical, August 21, 1930.
- 5. Saloon survey New York City; changes in saloon property
after the first three years and after five years of prohibition,
survey prepared by the Research Department of the World League
Against Alcoholism, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 6. The Salvation Army appraises prohibition, by Commander
Evangeline Booth, National Headquarters, New York (n.d.)
- 7. Science and human life in the alcohol problem, by Cora
Frances Stoddard, The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio, May 1, 1930.
- 8. Scientific Temperance Journal (Westerville, Ohio) vol. 63,
no. 2.
- 9. The Social Service Bulletin, New York, Jan. 1, 1932, vol.
22, no. 1.
- 10. Some accomplishments of the Eighteenth Amendment, by
Ernest H. Cherrington, The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio, July, 1930.
- 11. The South Carolina liquor dispensary, by William E.
Johnson, The American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 12. The Supreme Court and the Eighteenth Amendment, address
delivered by Edward B. Dunford before the Congress of the World
League Against Alcoholism, August 20, 1927, Winona Lake, Indiana,
American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 13. The Supreme Court decision on national prohibition,
reprinted from New York Christian Advocate, July 1920, published
by American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
(n.d.)
- 14. A Survey of the world alcohol problem with proposed
program for universal prohibition, including plans for expanding
the work of the Anti-Saloon League of American, by Ernest H.
Cherrington, address delivered before the conference called by
the Board of Directors of the Anti-Saloon League of American,
Columbus, Ohio, November 20, 1918.
- 15. Three important messages from the President of the United
States on law enforcement, law observance and the solution of our
crime problem, The American Issue Publishing Company,
Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 16. Wet and dry map record of the United States, The American
Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio (n.d.)
- 17. The Wests give me a pain in the neck, by Arthur Briggs,
The Forum, November 1930.
- 18. What became of the distilleries, breweries, and saloons in
the United States of America, by Ernest H. Cherrington (The World
League Against Alcoholism, Westerville, Ohio, n.d.)
- 19. What of the battle tomorrow? (The American Issue
Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio, n.d.)
- 20. What they say about the Temperance Education Foundation
and its work, The Temperance Education Foundation, Inc.,
Westerville, Ohio n.d.)
- 21. The World, New York, Sept. 21-23, 1930, vol. LXXI, no. 25,
233-25, 235. Mainly front pages.
- 22. The University man and the alcohol question, by Emil
Kraepelin, American Issue Publishing Company, Westerville, Ohio
n.d.
BOXES XIX to XXIV
Top
In listing the source materials in Boxes XIX to XXIV an effort
was made to maintain as nearly as possible the divisions which
were conceived by Upton Sinclair in the preparation of the
World's End Series. In some instances this has required unusual
departures from a strictly logical treatment of the source
material. The following original headings of Sinclair (the new
headings in the Short Title List, to which they correspond, are
listed in parentheses), and the sources which are entered under
each, quite faithfully preserve the author's intentions and
organization:
- Art (World's End Series-Sources-Art);
- Cartels (World's End Series-Sources-Cartels), from which was
separated the whole section entitled World's End
Series-Sources-Post-World War II-Germany;
- Gold (World's End Series-Sources-Gold);
- Hitler Attempts (World's End Series-Sources-World War
II-Holland and Belgium);
- Invasions of France and Germany (World's End
Series-Sources-World War II-Invasion of France and Germany);
- North Africa-Early (World's End Series-Sources-World War
II-North Africa);
- Norway, Sweden, and Denmark (World's End Series-Sources-World
War II-Scandinavia);
- Riviera (World's End Series-Sources-Riviera, France-Maps and
guidebooks), from which was removed a map of the D-Day beaches,
now in BOX XX, no. 12.
- Smart Set (World's End Series-World War II-Smart Set);
- Technology (World's End Series-Sources-Technology), from
which was removed two newspaper reviews of The Cup of Gold
(1915);
- War and Brutality (World's End Series-Sources-Political
Prisoners), from which was removed Gottesman A586 and A643.
The main exceptions to the above principles of organizations
occurred initially with six envelopes of source materials with
the following Sinclair labels: Corrections, Europe Misc,
Finished, LB Misc, Lanny used, and orig notes used Lanny Budd
notes used (sic). All of this material was integrated into three
new headings: World's End Series-Sources-World War II, World's
End Series-Sources-World War II-Social Life and Customs. Because
of the nature of the source material in the six envelopes and the
lack of any apparent rationale in their disposition and
arrangement it was not feasible to attempt to regroup the
materials under their original Sinclair headings after their
significance was ascertained.
Also, the materials labelled by Sinclair as Atomic Bombs and
Los Alamos were combined under the new heading World's End
Series-Source-Post-World War II-Atomic Energy.
Envelope(s) with an original label(s) have been used wherever
possible to house the last item(s) under the major divisions in
the Short Title List to which they refer.
BOX XIX
Top
World's End Series
- 1. "Lanny Budd,' screen hero, New York Herald Tribune, April
26, 1949.
- 2. What travels of Lanny Budd reveal, by Upton Sinclair. From
an unidentified newspaper. Chicago Sun Books, 1 December
1946.
Advertising
- 3. A Page of advertising from the New York Herald Tribune
Weekly Book Review, June 20, 1943.
Sources--Gold
- 4. Meet Mr. French and Mr. Goldhammer, Life Magazine, December
14. The year of publication is not available.
- 5. Red wreckers in Russia, by John D. Littlepage, The Saturday
Evening Post, January 1, 1938.
- 6. Taming the Artic: a visit to Russia's new empire, by H.P.
Smolka, New York Times Magazine, November 1, 1936.
- 7. Two holes in the ground, November 17, 1938. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 8. What good is gold? By Bernard Kilgore, September 26, 1936.
From an unidentified periodical.
- 9. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
gold.
Sources--Political Prisoners
- 10. "Crucifixions" in the twentieth century; the cases of
Jacob Wipf and the three Hofer brothers; religious objectors of
war; two of whom died from the effects of military atrocities in
American prisons, published by the American Industrial Company,
Chicago (n.d.)
- 11. Defense of Erling H. Lunde; conscientious objector to war,
made before a court martial at Camp Funston, Kansas, October 15,
1918, American Industrial Company, Chicago (n.d.)
- 12. Examples of brutalities, tortures and deaths to political
prisoners under military regime, tabulated for congressman Dent,
Chairman House Committee on Military Affairs, January 1919.
Mimeographed sheets.
- 13. The Facts about conscientious objectors in the United
States, published by the National Civil Liberties Bureau, New
York, June 1, 1918.
- 14. Letter from Kate O'Hara (in pencil), Jefferson City, Mo.,
August 17, 1919, letter no. 16. Mimeographed.
- 15. Political prisoners in federal military prisons, published
by the National Civil Liberties Bureau, New York, November 21,
1918.
- 16. Speech of Hon. Charles H. Dillon; introducing examples of
brutalities, tortures, and deaths, to political prisoners under
military regime; tabulated at the request of Hon. S. Hubert Dent,
Jr., Chairman House Committee on Military Affairs, Government
Printing Office, Washington, DC, January 1919.
- 17. Kate Richards O'Hara in prison, The Bulletin of the
People's Council of America (n.d.) Extensively annotated in
pencil.
Sources--Riviera, France-Maps and Guidebooks
- 18. Alpes-Maritimes Department: a map.
- 19. Antibes, Juan-les-Pins, and Cap d'Antibes: four tourist
brochures with maps. One entitled Cap d'Antibes contains a
lengthy message in ink from Barry.
- 20. Avignon: two tourist brochures.
- 21. Aix-en-Provence: three tourist brochures.
- 22. Cannes: six tourist brochures and maps.
- 23. La Cote d'Azur: four tourist brochures and maps.
- 24. France: two tourist brochures.
- 25. Grasse: three tourist brochures.
- 26. Hyeres et les Iles d'Or: one tourist brochure.
- 27. Manton: one tourist brochure.
- 28. Monaco: one tourist brochure.
- 29. The New Riviera, by Charles J.V. Murphy, Life Magazine
(n.d.)
- 30. Sainte-Maxime-sur-Mer: one tourist brochure.
- 31. St. Raphael: one tourist brochure.
- 32. St. Tropez: one tourist brochure.
- 33. Venice: one tourist brochure.
Sources--Technology
- 34. Technokratie, die neue Hoffnung, von Upton Sinclair,
Lubecker Volksbote (?), Lubeck, Germany, Beilage 1, Nummer
30.
- 35. Technokratie, die neue Hoffnung, von Upton Sinclair,
Zeitschrift Allgemeine Nahrpflicht, Vienna, March 1933, XVI Jahr,
Nr. 69.
- 36. Two identical articles on the great "technocracy" illusion
from two English newspaper.
BOX XX
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Sources--World War II
- 1. America's fifth column in Europe, by Cecil Brown, Liberty,
June 27, 1942.
- 2. Axis papers won't copy! By Bennett Cerf, The New York Times
Magazine, December 27, 1942.
- 3. Bad strategy has made Axis and Japan sure to lose, by Sam
Adkins, The courier-Journal, Louisville, Kentucky, July 4,
1943.
- 4. Big Berthas of the air, condensed from articles by Camille
Rougeron in La Science et La Vie, Paris, March 1939, and by Paul
Valery, in Je Sais Tout, Paris, March 1939. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 5. Blueprint for hell, by Ira Jewell Williams, Jr., The
Saturday Evening Post, April 22, 1939.
- 6. Bombs over Genoa; more letters from overseas. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 7. Can Hitler take Central America? By Cornelius Vanderbilt,
Jr., Liberty, November 23, 1940.
- 8. Chronology of the Nazi period, 1933-1943, Office of War
Information (n.p., n.d.)
- 9. Chronology of the war, Los Angeles Times (n.d.)
- 10. Comes now a fine hero, by Michael Elkins, February 1940.
From an unidentified periodical.
- 11. Crescendo in Detroit, by R.L. Duffus, The New York Times
Magazine, December 20, 1942.
- 12. D-Day in Normandy (published by Ministere des Traveau
Publics et des Transports, Commissariat General au Tourisme,
n.p., n.d.) A map.
- 13. Death march in a French courtroom, by George Slaff, The
Saturday Evening Post, March 31, 1945.
- 14. LE Debacle, by Annette Dolb, Decision, Nov-Dec 1941.
- 15. Decadence of Paris, by Albert J. Guerard, Tomorrow
(n.d.)
- 16. "The Decline of the West;" the first of the series, "books
that changed our minds," by Lewis Mumford, The New Republic,
January 11, 1939.
- 17. Diary of an escape from Europe, by Vasleriu Marcu, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 18. The Diary that escaped from France, by B.S. Townroe,
Magazine Digest (n.d.) Condensed from The Fortnightly,
London.
- 19. Do you know what fascism is? An unidentified page torn
from a periodical.
- 20. Dr. G.M. Gilbert, psychologist, American Lecture Bureau,
New York. An advertising leaflet.
- 21. Doomsday for the guilty, by George Tucker, Collier's
September 22, 1945.
- 22. Doubts rise, but Hitler's power holds, by Harold
Callender, The New York Times Magazine, January 29, 1939.
- 23. Escaping the German hell, The Nation, April 26, 1933.
- 24. Five years of "Munich peace," by Emile Bure, The Nation,
October 2, 1943.
- 25. France from the inside, by C.J. Fernand-Laurent, Harper's
Magazine, June 1943, vol. 187, no. 1117.
- 26. France's "femme fatale," by L.F. Bustamente, Magazine
Digest (n.d.) condensed from The Contemporary Review, London
(August 1940).
- 27. Frenchmen defeated France, by George Peel, Magazine Digest
(n.d.) Condensed from Jueves, Mexico City.
- 28. Freedom came slowly, by Guy T. Nunn, Collier's April 13,
1946.
- 29. Georges Mandel, by Emile Bure, The Nation, June 19,
1943.
- 30. Gestapo, by Paul Maerker Branden, Lore, June 1939.
- 31. The German scene, The Living Age (n.d.). Translated from
the Telegraaf, Amsterdam Independent Daily.
- 32. Germans against Hitler, The New Republic, May 17,
1939.
- 33. Government by persecution, by William E. Dodd, reprinted
by Reader's Digest, 1938, no. 197. Condensed from The Nation.
- 34. Guerilla warfare: lessons in Spain, by William Aalto and
Irving Goff, Soviet Russia Today, October 1941.
- 35. Guerilla warfare in USSR and Spain, by William Aalto and
Irving Goff, Soviet Russia Today (n.d.)
- 36. The Hero, by John Worth, Column Review and Editorial
Digest (n.d.) From "The Post Impressionist" in Washington
Post.
- 37. Hitler and Goebbels' wife, by Curt Riess, Liberty,
November 22, 1941.
- 38. Hitler and Goring's wife, by Curt Riess, Liberty, November
29, 1941.
- 39. Hitler has not conquered Norway, by Marjorie McFarland,
The Living Age, January 1941.
- 40. Hitler over Russia, by Ernst Henri, The Living Age,
November 1936.
- 41. Hitler will fail! By Emil Ludwig, Look, June 20, 1939.
- 42. Hitler's planned chaos for Reich leaves AMG frightening
task, Newsweek, April 9, 1945.
- 43. Hitler's rival armies, by Albert Grzesinski and Charles E.
Hewitt, Jr., Liberty, November 30, 1940.
- 44. How to be torpedoed-and live, by Phil Richards, Magazine
Digest (n.d.) Condensed from Spot, New York.
- 45. How we took Crete, by Ernst Kleinlein (Life?, n.d.)
- 46. I fight with the mosquito fleet, by W.D. Ryan, The
American Magazine, November 1942.
- 47. I saw France fail, by C. Bertrand Thompson, The New
Republic, December 9, 1940.
- 48. I was a Hitler agent in the USA by Joachim F. Paffrath,
Liberty, March 30, 1940.
- 49. In Fact, New York, miscellaneous issues from August 12,
1940, vol. I, no. 7, to October 11, 1943, vol. III, no. 1.
- 50. In Hitler's chalet, by C. Brooks Peters, The New York
Times Magazine, March 16, 1941.
- 51. It'd better be good, Benito, Colliers's, March 1, 1941,
Incomplete.
- 52. A Last conversation with Karel Capek, by Erika Mann, The
Nation, January 14, 1939.
- 53. The Last days in Berlin, by Percy Knauth (Life? 1945?)
- 54. The Last days of Hitler, by H.R. Trevor-Roper (Life?,
1945?)
- 55. Life and earth of "Simplicissimus," by Franz Schoenberner,
Tomorrow (n.d.)
- 56. Living in Germany today, by William Bayles, The American
Mercury, January 1941, vol. III, no. 205.
- 57. Man with a million dollar price on his head, by Jan
Valtin, July 20, 1939.
- 58. Mars rules the air waves, by Jacques Meegeren, The Living
Age, April 1939. Translated from Paris-Soir, Paris Liberal
Daily.
- 59. Men without faces, by W.A.S. Douglas, Column Review and
Editorial Digest (n.d.) From his column, "On the sun beam," in
The Chicago Sun.
- 60. More women in Hitler's life, by Curt Riess, Liberty,
December 27, 1941.
- 61. My favorite assassin, by George W. Herald, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 62. Nazi film propaganda, by John Altmann, Tomorrow (n.d.)
- 63. Nemesis? The Story of Otto Strasser, by Douglas Reed, The
Reader's Digest, June 1940. A condensation from the book.
- 64. News flashes from Czechoslovakia under Nazi domination,
Czechoslovak National Council of America, Chicago, April 17,
1944, release no. 233.
- 65. News from Czecho-slovakia, American Friends of
Czechoslovakia, New York, April 1, 1942, and May 1 1943, vol. 3,
no. 55, and vol. 4, no. 77.
BOX XXI
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Sources--World War II
- 1. Notes from a concentration camp diary, by Stefan Lorant,
excerpt from "I was Hitler's prisoner," published by Penguin
Books. Taken from an unidentified periodical.
- 2. Les Nouvelles du matin (Paris?) Aug 14, 1945, no. 168. The
front page of the newspaper.
- 3. Occupied Europe fights back, by Barnet Nover, The American
Mercury (n.d.)
- 4. Occupied Holland-resistance, June 11/June 25, 1942.
Incomplete.
- 5. Out of the night; the life story of a German revolutionist
in the service of the Communist International, by Jan Valtin
(Life?) (n.d.)
- 6. Pity is not their dictionary, Medical Bureau and North
American Committee to Aid Spanish Democracy, New York (n.d.). Two
mimeographed sheets.
- 7. Portrait of a traintress, by Odette Keun, Magazine Digest
(n.d.) Condensed from Lilliput, London.
- 8. Revenge in Poland, by Mr. B, as told to George Creel,
Collier's Oct. 30, 1943.
- 9. Revolt in Germany, by Richard O. Boyer, U.S. Week, May 17,
1941.
- 10. The Rising tide of treason, The Living Age, Feb. 1939.
Translated from the Deutsche Volkszeitung, Paris Emigre
German-Language Weekly.
- 11. Sandalwood Herald, West Falmouth, Mass, July 1939,
Falmouth, Mass., July, 1939, vol. 5, no.
- 12. The Scales of history, by Ilya Ehrenburg, Information
Bulletin of the Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics, Washington, D.C., February 8, 1944, vol. IV, no.
16.
- 13. The Secret history of the war, by Waverly Root, Liberty,
May 19, 1945.
- 14. The Secrets of No. 20; Daladier's straight warning to Mr.
Chamberlain, The Tribune (London?) May 6, 1938, no. 71.
- 15. Spotlight on the Russian bear, by Demaree Bess, The
Saturday Evening Post, December 24, 1938.
- 16. Stalin plotted a separate peace, by Donald B. Sanders, The
American Mercury, November 1947, vol. LXV, no. 287.
- 17. Stalin's hand in Spain, by W.G. Krivitsky, The Saturday
Evening Post, Philadelphia, Pa., April 15, 1939, vol. 211, no.
42.
- 18. Stefan Zweig and ourselves, by Franz Schoenberner, The New
Republic, March 9, 1942.
- 19. Strangling, starving, falsifying, Porter Sargent, February
2, 1940.
- 20. Supporting facts that Hitler's in the Argentine, by
Vincent de Pascal, Magazine Digest, November 1945. Reprinted from
International News Service, New York.
- 21. Swiss "hospitality," by Helveticus, Free World, October
1945.
- 22. Ten scenes in Europe's tragic drama, by Harold Callender,
The New York Times Magazine, August 4, 1940.
- 23. They drain Hitler's marshes, by Alexander (n.p. n.d.).
Condensed from Die Neue Weltbuhne, Paris, (September 15, 1938).
From an unidentified periodical.
- 24. They who live by the sword…. By Erika Mann,
Liberty, October 27, 1945.
- 25. Too many Germans? By Wallace R. Deuel, The Saturday
Evening Post, May 25, 1940.
- 26. The Tory dialectic: II, by Frederick L. Schuman, The New
Republic, January 4, 1939.
- 27. Twenty who fed a nation, by George Kent, The Reader's
Digest, 1945. Condensed from Farm Journal.
- 28. Union now with Germany, by Hubertus zu Loewenstein (n.p.,
n.d.) From an unidentified periodical.
- 29. Upstairs and down in Hitler's house, by Pauline Kohler,
Liberty, June 15, 22 and 29, July 6, 13, and 20, 1940.
- 30. Voice of Spain, London, miscellaneous issues from August
12, 1939, to March 8, 1941, no. 19 to no. 101. Includes one
fragment, April 22, 1939.
- 31. War by refugee, by Samuel Lubell, The Saturday Evening
Post, March 29, 1941.
- 32. We blundered Hitler into power, by Hermann Ullstein, The
Saturday Evening Post, July 13, 1940.
- 33. The Week, London, November 3 and June 7, 1939, nos. 291,
318, and 324. The last two numbers are in a fragmentary
condition.
- 34. What really happened in North Africa, by Betty Gaskill,
Liberty, June 26, 1943.
- 35. What you can believe about the undergrounds, by Joe Alex
Morris, The Saturday Evening Post, September 18, 1943.
- 36. "When I saw Hitler-" by Fred Hogue, Los Angeles Times
Sunday Magazine, June 30, 1940.
- 37. Who betrayed France, an editorial review, Magazine Digest
(n.d.)
- 38. Who betrayed France, by Heinz Pol, The Nation, February
15, 1941.
- 39. Who was Hitler? By St. Clair McKelway, The Saturday
Evening Post, July 20, 1940.
- 40. Why Hitler hasn't blitzed the Swiss, by Joseph Wechsberg,
Liberty, December 12, 1942.
- 41. Why Hitler hesitates, by Freda Kirchway, The Nation,
February 15, 1941.
- 42. Why Stalin shot his general, The Saturday Evening Post,
April 22, 1939.
- 43. Women in Hitler's life, by Curt Riess, Liberty, December
13, 1941.
- 44. The World's biggest newspaper owner, by Curt Eiess,
Decision, August 1941.
- 45. Miscellaneous book reviews of works dealing with World War
II from newspapers and periodicals.
- 46. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
World War II.
BOX XXII
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Sources--World War II-Art
- 1. Aesthetes' stock market, by Lee Simonson, The Atlantic
Monthly (n.d.)
- 2. Goring's art treasures (Life? n.d.)
- 3. History's greatest art theft, by Eugene Tillinger. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 4. The Man who swindled Goering, by Irving Wallace, The
Saturday Evening post, January 11, 1947.
- 5. Old masters and a new market, by Lee Simonson, The Atlantic
Monthly (n.d.)
- 6. Old masters to order: forgery as a fine art, by David
Anderson, The New York Times Magazine, December 23, 1945.
- 7. Rosenberg's den of royal thieves holds key to looted art of
Europe, by Joseph S. Evans, Jr., Newsweek, May 28, 1945.
- 8. The World's greatest treasure hunt, by Ray Josephs. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 9. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
stolen art.
Sources--World War II-Cartels
- 10. Arms-makers' holiday, by Frank C. Hanighen, The Nation,
February 18, 1939.
- 11. Cartels; the menace of worldwide monopoly, The New
Republic, March 27, 1944. Part two of a two-part series.
- 12. German cartel-kings, by Albert Norden, Free World
(n.d.)
- 13. Hitler's slave plan worked, by Ernest O. Hauser, The
Saturday Evening Post, July 14, 1945.
- 14. Let Germany work for Europe and Nazi business barons on
spot, by William Shirer. From an unidentified newspaper.
- 15. Merchants of sudden death, by Edmond Demaitre. From an
unidentified periodical. Condensed from Vu, Paris,
- 16. Millionaires of the Second World War, by Albert Norden,
Magazine Digest (n.d.). condensed from the Thugs of Europe, New
York.
- 17. The Truth about cartels, by Walter Kraus, Reader's Scope
(n.d.)
- 18. Text of speech, by Harry. C. Oppenheimer before the
meeting of the American Veterans Committee, March 17, 1948.
- 19. World events, analyzed and interpreted, by Scott Nearing,
June, 1944, vol. 1, no. 2.
- 20. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
cartels.
Sources--World War II-Hitler Plots
- 21. The Bomb in the brief case, by Walter Theimer, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 22. Our two tries to kill Hitler, by Fabian von
Schlabrendorff, The Saturday Evening Post, July 20 and 27,
1946.
- 23. When they almost got Hitler, by Juliet Bridgman, Liberty,
October 26, 1946.
- 24. Miscellaneous newspaper articles and a newsletter about
attempts on the life of Hitler.
Sources--World War II-Holland and Belgium
- 25. Escape. Two pages from an unidentified periodical or
newsletter.
- 26. Hatchet day for the Dutch, by Martha Gellhorn. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 27. Men behind the underground press, The Netherlands
Information Bureau, New York, May11/May 25, 1945.
- 28. A Story for free men, by Emile X, The New York Times
Magazine, May 17, 1942.
- 29. Vengeance is my business, by the chief of the Belgian
underground in America, as told to Don Eddy. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 30. The White brigade, by Robert Goffin, March 25, 1944. A
Liberty book condensation.
- 31. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Holland and Belgium.
Sources--World War II-The Invasion of France and Germany
- 32. "Advertising" paid off at Cherbourg, by Cecil Carnes, The
Saturday Evening Post, August 12, 1944.
- 33. Army in the sky, by W.B. Courtney, Collier's November 11,
1944.
- 34. Battle of the rails, by Beverly Smith, The American
Magazine, February 1943.
- 35. Break-through for Paris, by W.B. Courtney, Collier's
September 16, 1944.
- 36. Comrades of the great invasion, by Alain de Pralle de la
Nieppe, Free World (n.d.)
- 37. The Far shore, by Max Miller, Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 38. Great guns, by Beverly Smith. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 39. How we trained for D-Day, by Bruce Bliven, Jr., The New
Republic, August 21, 1944.
- 40. The Incredible patrol, by Russ Engel. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 41. The Inside story of Italy's surrender, by David Brown, The
Saturday Evening Post, September 9, 1944.
- 42. Invasion, by Quentin Reynolds, Collier's April 8,
1944.
- 43. The Invasion, by Allan A. Michie, The Reader's Digest,
August 1944.
- 44. Invasion, by Charles Christian Wertenbaker, November 25,
1944. A Liberty book condensation.
- 45. "It's gonna be tough-but we can do it!" by Drew Middleton,
Liberty, April 22, 1944.
- 46. The Lamp, Standard Oil Company (New Jersey), New York,
December 1945.
- vol. 27, no. 6.
- 47. Liberation at Amiens, by W.B. Courtney and Betty Winkler,
Collier's, March 24, 1945.
- 48. The Longest hour in history, by Martin Sommers, The
Saturday Evening Post, July 8, 1944.
- 49. Marvin was there on D Day, by Cecil Carnes, The Saturday
Evening Post, July 22, 1944.
- 50. Miscellaneous columns by Ernie Pyle. Mainly from the Los
Angeles Daily News.
- 51. The 100 hours, by W.B. Courtney, Collier's August 12,
1944.
- 52. The Red devils got what they wanted, by Mike Rinehart, The
Saturday Evening Post, April 27, 1946.
- 53. The Signpost said Berlin, by Cecil Carnes, The Saturday
Evening Post, December 2, 1944.
- 54. They hit the beach in swim trunks, by Harold Bradley Say,
The Saturday Evening post, October 13, 1945.
- 55. They kept the army rolling, by Irwin Ross, Liberty, May
19, 1945.
- 56. They'll fight again, by Quentin Reynolds, Collier's
October 21, 1944.
- 57. Traffic cops of invasion, by Matthew P. Cantillon. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 58. Trucks and trains in battle, by Irwin Ross, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 59. Two Yanks made an army, by Gordon Gaskill (the American
Magazine, n.d.)
- 60. Untitled article on the invasion of France, by Hanson W.
Baldwon (Life? n.d.)
- 61. We're on our way, by Doris Fleeson, Woman's Home Companion
(n.d.)
- 62. 'The World must not forget,' by Harold Denny, The New York
Times Magazine, May 6, 1945.
- 63. The Wounds of Paris, by Martha Gellhorn, Collier's,
November 4, 1944.
- 64. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
invasion.
BOX XXIII
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Sources--World War II-North Africa
- 1. American workers, by Don Eddy. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 2. The Army's grasshoppers, by Richard Thruelsen and Elliott
Arnold, Liberty, October 14, 1944.
- 3. The Backstage story of our African adventure, by Demaree
Bess, The Saturday Evening Post, July 10, 1943.
- 4. "But we expected you at Dakar," by Frederic Sondern, Jr.
And Donald Q. Coster, The American Legion Magazine, August
1946.
- 5. Eisenhower's African gamble, by Julius C. Holmes, Collier's
January 12, 1946, and January 19, 1946.
- 6. General Clark's secret mission, by Godfrey B. Courtney
(Life? n.d.)
- 7. 'I escaped from a Sahara Desert work camp,' by Peter Michel
as told to Eugene Tillinger. From an unidentified periodical.
- 8. Murphy will out, by Peter Stevens, The Nation, January 27,
1945.
- 9. Our secret diplomatic triumph in Africa, by Demaree Bess,
The Saturday Evening Post, December 26, 1942.
- 10. Secret mission to North Africa, by Frederick C. Painton,
The Reader's Digest, May 1943, vol. 42. No. 253.
- 11. Tunis expedition, by Darryl F. Zanuck, June 19, 1943. From
a Liberty book condensation.
- 12. Unrevealed facts about Robert Murphy, by Kingsbury Smith,
The American Mercury (n.d.)
- 13. The War in the Middle East, a review of Retreat to Victory
by Allan A. Michie, by Percival Knauth, The New York Times Book
Review, August 16, 1942.
- 14. WE had to play the game, by Demaree Bess, The Saturday
Evening Post, May 22, 1943.
- 15. Yanks abroad: North Africa, by Stanley H. Koch, Liberty,
January 8, 1944.
- 16. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
North Africa.
- 17. Dawn over Denmark, by Walter Taub, Collier's, July 7,
1945.
- 18. Iron ore flows at Narvik port (Life? n.d.)
- 19. News of Norway, Royal Norwegian Government's Press
Representatives, Washington, DC, miscellaneous issues. The May
15, 1942, issue is in a fragmentary condition.
- 20. The Wild flight of Norway's gold, by Webb Waldron,
Liberty, October 30, 1943.
- 21. Miscellaneous periodical articles about Scandinavia.
Sources--World War II-Smart Set
- 22. Babylon on the Potomac, by Jane Eads, International Digest
(n.d.)
- 23. Duke of Alba's daughter is married, Life, October 27,
1947, vol. 23, no. 17.
- 24. He rose from the rich, by Jack Alexander, The Saturday
Evening Post, Philadelphia, Pa., March 11, 1939, vol. 211, no.
37.
- 25. How to woo Washington, by Margaret Case Harriman, Harper's
magazine (n.d.)
- 26. The Invisible Colonel, by John dos Passos, Liberty, March
15, 1944.
- 27. Los Angeles Times Annual midwinter, January 2, 1945. Part
2 only.
- 28. Refugee gold rush, by S.F. porter, The American Magazine,
October 1942.
- 29. Subdebese (Life? n.d.)
- 30. Vanity-on-the Potomac: 'a very great fair,' by Page H.
Doughtery, The New York Times Magazine, January 19, 1947.
- 31. The Waldrof-Astoria (Life? n.d.)
- 32. Washington, by George Sessions Perry, The Saturday Evening
Post, October 5, 1946.
- 33. Washington's social hothouse, by Hugh and Elise Morrow,
The Saturday Evening Post, March 23, 1946.
- 34. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
Smart Set.
- 35. The Demands of religion, by Arthur H. Compton, The
Churchman, September 1, 1940.
- 36. Fashions to the queen's taste, by Charles Pound, The New
York Times Magazine, March 26, 1939.
- 37. Golden boy; the story of Jimmy Cromwell, by Jack
Alexander, The Saturday Evening Post, Philadelphia, Pa., March
23, 1940, vol. 212, no. 39.
- 38. The Law factories, by Ferdinand Lundberg, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 39. Nervous ice; the world's diamond trade flees the war, by
Jack Alexander, The Saturday Evening Post, April 19, 1941.
- 40. Pimpernel ltd., by H.P. Smolka, The Living Age, December
1938.
- 41. The Plastic car is here, Magazine Digest (n.d.) Condensed
from Time, Chicago, C.I.L. Oval, Montreal, Canada, and from
Future, Chicago.
- 42. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
social life of the World War II era.
BOX XXIV
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Sources--Post-World War II-Atomic Energy
- 1. The A-bomb's invisible offspring, by Edward Morgan,
Collier's, August 9, 1947.
- 2. American's most radical law, by James R. Newman, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 3. Behind the scenes of American science, by M. Rubinstein,
New Times, 1947, no. 1.
- 4. December 2, 1942-the birth of the Atomic Age, by William L.
Laurence, The New York Times Magazine, Dec. 1, 1946.
- 5. Electronics, Life (n.d.)
- 6. The Future of atomic energy; science and the spirit of man,
by David E. Lilienthal and Soviet Russia and the Baruch Plan, by
Abram V. Martin, The New Leader, April 30, 1949.
- 7. If we should have to fight again, by Carl Spaatz (Life?
n.d.)
- 8. Invisible electrons, by Howard W. Blakeslee. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 9. needed: Magellans of the oceans above, by Waldemar
Kaempffert, The New York Times Magazine, November 9, 1947.
- 10. Nuclear fission; splitting nucleus releases enormous
amount of energy, Life (n.d.)
- 11. Oak Ridge (Life? n.d.)
- 12. Raymond Swing broadcast, American Broadcasting Co., August
24 and 31, September 7 and 14, 1945.
- 13. Washington Bulletin, Americans United for World
Government, Inc., Washington, DC, September 16, 1946, vol. 3, no.
13.
- 14. We enter a new era-the Atomic Age, by Harry M. Davis, The
New York Times Magazine, August 12, 1945.
- 15. Who should control the atomic bomb? Speakers: Raymond
Swing, Hanson Baldwin, Owen Brewster, and Edward R. Murrow, Town
Meeting; Bulletin of America's Town Meeting of the Air, September
20, 1945.
- 16. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
atomic bombs and atomic energy.
- 17. Back to Berlin under siege, by Emmet Hughes (Life?
n.d.)
- 18. Berlin; Americans find enemy's capital bears the marks of
Allied destruction and Red army's occupation, Life, July 23,
1945, vol. 19, no. 4.
- 19. Berlin under siege, by Emmet Hughes (Life? n.d.)
- 20. The German people, by Percy Knauth (Life? n.d.)
- 21. Germany between war and peace, by David J. Dalllin, The
New Leader, December 22, 1945, vol. XXVIII, no. 51.
- 22. Germany's real rulers, by G.s. Jackson, New Masses,
February 11, 1941.
- 23. In Berlin, by L. Bezymensky, New Times, 1946, no. 21.
- 24. Intelligence Digest; a Review of World Affairs, February
1948, vol. 10, no. 111.
- 25. Leaves from the diary of a military governor, by Gordon
Gaskill. From an unidentified periodical.
- 26. Our mistakes in Germany, by S. Miles Bouton, The American
Mercury (n.d.)
- 27. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
postwar Germany.
- 28. The Battle for postwar France, by Claude Bourdet, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 29. The Battle of Palestine, by Ladislas Farago, UN World,
November 1947.
- 30. Behind the scenes in Berlin, by Frank L. Kluckhohn, The
American Mercury, November 1948, vol. LXVII, no. 299.
- 31. Britain's bid to rule the air waves, by John Chabot Smith,
The Saturday Evening Post, November 16, 1946.
- 32. A Dam at Gibraltar, UN World, May 1948.
- 33. Europe's most frightened country, by Ernest O. Hauser, The
Saturday Evening Post, Dec. 29, 1945.
- 34. Europe: the new dark continent, by C.L. Sulzberger, The
New York Times Magazine, March 28, 1945.
- 35. France after de Gaulle, by J. Alvarez del Vayo, The
Nation, March 30, 1946.
- 36. Hate-with Russian dressing, by Alexander Kendrick,
Collier's, May 8, 1948.
- 37. Hitler's experts work for us, by Harry F. Byrd. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 38. In Fact, New York, Nov. 25, 1946, and June 14, 1948, vol.
XIV, no. 8, and vol. XVII, no 11.
- 39. Intelligence Digest; Review of World Affairs, Sept. vol.
7, no. 82.
- 40. James F. Byrnes discloses; a Review of World Affairs,
Sept. vol. 7, no. 82.
- 41. Mr. Truman, by Ben Ray Redman, The American mercury
(n.d.)
- 42. M. Jean Monnet of Cognac, by John Davenport. Fortune, vol. XXX, no. 2, August, 1944. [Information on the source of the article provided by the Memoirs of Jean Monnet]
- 43. Observations on Europe, by Devere Allen, Unity, Jan-Feb,
1948.
- 44. Old and new, by N. Gruzdev, New Times, 1947, no. 1.
- 45. The President's speech (Life? n.d.)
- 46. program for France, by Marcel Livian, The New Leader,
Sept. 22, 1945.
- 47. The Starving playground of power politics, by Ernest O.
Hauser, The Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 26, 1946.
- 48. This brain of mine, by Joachim Joesten, The Nation, Jan.
11, 1947.
- 49. The Truth about Truman, by Frank Gervasi, Collier's, Jan.
22, 1949.
- 50. Turkey lives on borrowed time, by Ernest O. Hauser, The
Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 28. 1948.
- 51. Two-party gal, by Eulalie McDowell, Collier's, June 12,
1948.
- 52. Who's going to spy for us now? By Stacy V. Jones, Liberty,
Dec. 15, 1945.
- 53. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
problems and life in the postwar world.
BOX XXV
Top
World's End Series (cont.)
Reviews
- 1. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
series in general.
The World's End Series: World's End (vol. 1)
Adverising
- 2. An Apology from T. Werner Laurie Ltd. And Upton Sinclair to
Mr. Leopold Hubert George Walford and family. A clipping from an
unidentified English newspaper.
- 3. A Printed note from H.G. wells to Upton Sinclair praising
his book.
- 4. World's end; a novel, by Upton Sinclair, T. Werner Laurie
Ltd., London. A brochure which is unlike Gottesman A1959 and
A1964.
- 5. Four pieces of miscellaneous advertising.
Reviews
- 6. One book review from a newspaper and another from a
periodical.
The World's End Series: Between Two Worlds (vol. 2)
Reviews
- 7. Du "cycle de Lanny:" "entre deux mondes" par Upton
Sinclair, by Frederic Denis, le Peuple, Brussels, July 24-25,
1949.
- 8. Two book reviews from the periodicals Decision and the
Southwest Review.
The World's End Series: Dragon's Teeth (vol. 3)
Reviews
- 9. Dans le "cycle de Lady Budd;" les griffes du dragon par
Upton Sinclair, by Frederic Denis, Le Peuple, Burssels, Feb. 28,
1950.
- 10. Through gentile eyes, by John Hayes Holmes. A reprint from
"Opinion," New York, April, 1942.
- 11. Miscellaneous book reviews from newspapers and a
periodical.
The World's End Series: Presidential Agent (vol. 5)
Reviews
- 12. Miscellaneous book reviews from newspapers and
periodicals.
The World's End Series: Dragon Harvest (vol. 6)
Reviews
- 13. Dragon harvests, reviewed by Thais M. Plaisted, The Roman
Forum, Los Angeles, Oct. 1945, vol. 14, no. 7. A very extensive
review.
- 14. Letter from Upton Sinclair to the literary editor of the
Pasadena (Calif) Star-News & Post, Sept. 22, 1946.
- 15. Upton Sinclair: a summary, by Leo Lerman, Books (n.d.)
- 16. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 17. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 18. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers.
The World's End Series: A World to Win (vol. 7)
Advertising
- 19. Three pieces of advertising from newspapers and
periodicals.
Reviews
- 20. Mr. Sinclair protests-and a rejoinder, from Upton
Sinclair, Monrovia, Calif. A four-page leaflet with comments from
many noteworthy people.
- 21. New fiction in review, by Donald Barr, Tomorrow (n.d.)
- 22. Opinions concerning the Lanny Budd series, by Upton
Sinclair, Monrovia, Calif. A four-page leaflet with comments from
many noteworthy people.
- 23. Two-page mimeographed review from an unidentified
newsletter.
- 24. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers.
- 25. Miscellaneous book reviews from American periodicals.
- 26. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
BOX XXVI
Top
The World's End Series: Presidential Mission (vol. 8)
Sources--China
- 1. China life line, by Ardis Smith. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 2. Heart of Asia, life, Dec. 6, 1944, vol. 15, no. 15.
- 3. Inside Jap-held Shanghai, by Bernard Covit, Liberty, Jan.
29, 1944.
- 4. Life in free China cities, by Lena J. Jolliffe, China at
War (n.d.)
- 5. Miscellaneous columns written by Lowell Thomas. From
unidentified newspaper.
- 6. "Tomorrow we will be free," by Carl and Shelley Mydans
(Life? n.d.)
- 7. Vinegar Joe and the reluctant dragon, by Samuel Lubell, The
Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 24, 1945.
- 8. White man's folly, by Vanya Cakes, Apr. 17, 1943. From a
Liberty book condensation.
- 9. Who's fighting who in China, by Harrison Forman, Liberty,
May 19, 1945.
- 10. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
war in China.
- 11. (Airplanes) by Upton Sinclair. A short paragraph written
in pencil by the author.
- 12. All aboard for everywhere, by Beverly Smith, The American
Magazine, Nov. 1942.
- 13. Are your feet wet, son? By C.D. Frazer, Liberty, Mar. 31,
1945.
- 14. Army (planes) From an unidentified periodical.
- 15. Blood, sweat, and glory, by Hugh O'Connor, The American
Magazine, Nov. 1941.
- 16. Bomber doctor, by Pete Martin, The Saturday Evening Post,
May 1, 1943.
- 17. Bomber over Germany, by an R.A.F. Gunner, The New York
Times Magazine, June 22, 1941.
- 18. Bomber pilot, by Quentin Reynolds, Collier's Mar, 29,
1941.
- 19. Bomber to Britain, by James L.H. Peck, Harper's Magazine
(n.d.)
- 20. The Crystal gazers and their night chicks, by Harold H.
Martin, Liberty, Nov. 10, 1945.
- 21. "D" day's back room, by Jim Bishop, Collier's, Aug.
1944.
- 22. The Decision that killed the Luftwaffe, by Wesley Price,
The Saturday Evening Post, Sept. 1, 1945.
- 23. The Dying and the buying, by W.L. White, The Saturday
Evening Post, Oct. 18, 1941.
- 24. Fishers of men, by Holmes Alexander, The Saturday Evening
Post, Jan. 13, 1945.
- 25. Flying through hell, by George Patterson Christie,
Liberty, Nov. 1, 1941.
- 26. I am a flying sniper, by Lieutenant X. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 27. I bomb Germany by daylight (Life? n.d.).
- 28. I rode the fireball, by David G. Wittels, The Saturday
Evening post, July 1, 1944.
- 29. I took the sky road, by Norman M. Miller as told to Hugh
B. Cave, Aug. 25, 1945. From a Liberty book condensation.
- 30. Ice in the Moscow pipe line, by Wesley Price, The Saturday
Evening post, Jan. 13, 1945.
- 31. If Hitler and Tojo could see them! By Hanson W. Baldwin,
The New York Times Magazine, Dec. 5, 1943.
- 32. Los Angeles Times Midwinter, Jan. 2, 1945. Part I
only.
- 33. Men of the Royal Air Force, by Hector Holitho, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 34. Never-ending thunder over the channel, by Drew Middleton,
The New York Times Magazine, Dec. 5, 1943.
- 35. Our navy's flying weapons, by Morris Markey, Liberty, Jan.
6, 1945.
- 36. Pimpernels of the air, by Allan Michie, Skyways, Nov.
1945.
- 37. Some got away, by Per Fjell, Collier's, Sept. 2. 1944.
- 38. Squadron 71, scramble! By Byron Kennerly, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 39. Surrender to air power, compiled by M. LeFevre Smith,
Skyways (n.d.)
- 40. Tallyho! By Arthur G. Donahue, The Saturday Evening Post,
May 3, 1941.
- 41. They also serve…, by Corey Ford and Alastair
MacBain, Collier's Dec. 11, 1943.
- 42. They put wings on the impossible, by John J. Lees,
Liberty, Apr. 22, 1944.
- 43. The Truth about air power, by Keith Ayling, Harper's
Magazine, Feb. 1942, vol. 184, no. 1101.
- 44. We put the flattops on the night shift, by Turner F.
Caldwell, The Saturday Evening Post, Aug. 11, 1945.
- 45. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
flying.
- 46. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
flying.
BOX XXVII
Top
The World's End Series: Presidential Mission (vol. 8) (cont.)
Sources--France
- 1. Big noise in little Luxembourg, by William Harlan Hale,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 2. Blood bath in France, by Donald B. Robinson, Apr. 1946,
vol. LXII, no. 268.
- 3. Cloak and dagger, by Corey Ford and Alastair MacBain,
Collier's, Oct. 6 and 20, 1945.
- 4. Liberation, glory be! By Gertrude Stein, Collier's, Dec.
23, 1944.
- 5. A News letter from Waverly Root, May 7, 1944, no. 6.
- 6. OSS, by John Chamberlain (Life? n.d.)
- 7. The Ordeal of Paris, by Georges Duhamel, The New York Times
Magazine, Sept. 17, 1944.
- 8. Paris in the Reich, The Nation, Jan, 18, 1941.
- 9. Paris under the Germans, by Bernard Ragner, The American
Mercury, Fe. 1941, vol. LII, no. 206.
- 10. Putting the 'grr" in the guerrilla, by Bert Levy, Magazine
Digest (n.d.) Condensed from the book "Guerrilla Warfare."
- 11. They saved the children, by Meyer Levin, The Saturday
Evening Post, Jan. 30, 1945.
- 12. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
France.
Sources--Germany
- 13. Adolf Hitler's rise to power (Life? n.d.)
- 14. The American Freeman, Girard, Kansas, Jan. 1945, no.
2068.
- 15. Black money, by Martin proctor, Harper's Magazine
(n.d.)
- 16. Chief of the German conspiracy staff, by Arthur Hartmann,
Magazine Digest (n.d.)
- 17. Collective neurosis of Germany, by Raymond de Saussure,
Free World (n.d.)
- 18. Dachau: foundation of the Third Reich, by Martin Andersen
Nexo, New Masses, Feb. 21, 1939.
- 19. Divide and conquer, Office of Facts and Figure,
Washington, D.C. A Booklet.
- 20. Europe's underground war on Hitler, by John Maloney, The
American Magazine, June, 1941.
- 21. Four years under the Nazi shadow, by Lansing Warren, The
New York Times Magazine, Apr. 2, 1944.
- 22. Fritz Thyssen's letters (Life? n.d.) An incomplete
article.
- 23. The Great Nazi gold rush, by Sylvia Porter, Collier's,
Sept. 15, 1945.
- 24. The History of the Mannesmann Concern, by Albert Norden,
Free World (n.d.)
- 25. Hitler, by William S. Schlamm (Life? n.d.)
- 26. Hitler: a post-mortem portrait, by H.R. Trevor-Roper,
International Digest (n.d.)
- 27. Hitler's gentleman of intrigue, by S.L. Solon, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 28. Hitler's last general, by Joachim Joesten, The Nation,
Mar. 31, 1945.
- 29. Hitler's Reich: a one-man concept, by Joseph C. Harsch,
The New York Times Magazine, May 18, 1941.
- 30. Hitler's slave spies in America, by Donald E. Keyhoe and
John Jay Daly, The American Magazine, Apr. 1941.
- 31. Hitler's way with business, by Fernand Alva-Tore. A
seven-page typewritten manuscript.
- 32. I.R.A. Bulletin, New York, Jan-Feb. 1939, vol. 5. Nos.
9-10.
- 33. I paid Hitler's way to power, by Fritz Thyssen, Liberty,
Sept. 13, and 27, 1941.
- 34. I saw hell in Germany and Russia, by Kenneth Brown
Collings, Liberty, Mar. 16. 1940.
- 35. I was a German hostage, by W.B. Starski, Free World
(n.d.)
- 36. In Fact, New York, Jan 25 and Feb. 1, 1943, vo. VI, nos.
16 and 17.
- 37. The Interrogation of Albert Speer, by John Kenneth
Galbraith and George W. Ball (Life? n.d.)
- 38. A Long way from home, by Jacqueline Clarke, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 39. The Making of a Nazi saboteur, by John Martin, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 40. Nazi army of civil war, by Karl O. Paetel, Free World
(n.d.)
- 41. The Politics of destruction; a review of Die Revolution
des Nihilismus by Hermann Rauschning, by Elizabeth Wiskemann, The
Living Age, Apr., 1939. Annotated to some degree in pencil.
- 42. Prisoners of war, by John Maloney, The Saturday Evening
Post, Dec. 20, 1941.
- 43. The Super-empire-every nation's enemy, by Guenter Reimann,
Magazine Digest (n.d.) condensed from the book Patents for
Hitler.
- 44. The Treblinka hell, by Vassily Grossman. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 45. The "Unbelievable" Nazi blueprint, by Joseph C. Harsch,
The New York Times Magazine, May 25, 1941.
- 46. Victims of fascism; Carl von Ossietzky, by Hilda Walter,
Free World (n.d.)
- 47. What about Germany, by Louis P. Lochner, Jan. 16, 1943.
From a Liberty book condensation.
- 48. Wings; the Literary Guild Magazine, Apr. 1944.
- 49. Udet, world war air ace and today Nazi parachutist
organizer, as airplane manufacturer, by Fernand Alva-Tore. A
nine-page type-written manuscript.
- 50. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Germany.
- 51. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Germany.
- 52. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Germany.
BOX XXVIII
Top
The World's End Series: Presidential Mission (vol. 8) (cont.)
Sources--Hess, Rudolf
- 1. In Fact, New York, June 30, 1941, vol. III, no. 12.
- 2. The Inside story of the Hess flighty, by Anonymous, The
American Mercury, May, 1943, vol. LVI, no. 233.
- 3. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Rudolf Hess.
Sources--North Africa
- 4. Action in Morocco, by Stanley H. Koch as told to Alan Hynd,
Liberty, Mar. 6, 1943.
- 5. Les Cahiers francais, Aug, 1943, no. 47.
- 6. Coningham's cats, by Quentin Reynolds, Collier's, Dec. 20,
1941.
- 7. Convey to Malta, by Edwin J. Randall, The American
Magazine, Jan. 1943.
- 8. Desert tank battle, by Quentin Reynolds, Collier's, Jan.
10, 1942. Part II only.
- 9. 82nd Airborne, master of the hot spots, by Martha Gellhorn,
The Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 23, 1946.
- 10. 15 feet above hell, by Gordon Gaskill, The American
Magazine, Feb. 1942.
- 11. Grease monkeys are her-worshipers, by George L. Perlin,
The Saturday Evening Post, Jan. 29, 1944.
- 12. Heading for the new front, by John Steinbeck. A column
from an unidentified newspaper.
- 13. Hitting Hitler's oil barrel, by Frank Gervasi, Collier's,
Sept. 18, 1943.
- 14. How Corsica was liberated, by Andre Maurois, Collier's,
Nov. 27, 1943.
- 15. I escape, by H.F. Marting. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 16. Invasions Sunday punch, by Paul Hendren, The Saturday
Evening Post, Apr. 1, 1944.
- 17. The Massawa miracle, by Biddle Dorcy as told to Barrett C.
Kiesling, Collier's, Nov. 13, 1943.
- 18. Miscellaneous columns written by Ernie Pyle. From
unidentified newspapers.
- 19. Miscellaneous columns written by Tome Treanor for the Los
Angeles Times.
- 20. Paratroops behind Nazi lines, by Robert Devore, Collier's,
Sept. 18, 1943.
- 21. Seagoing cigar box, by Philip Harkins, Liberty, Jan. 22,
1944.
- 22. Scouting party, by Hassoldt Davis, The Saturday Evening
Post, Apr. 24, 1943.
- 23. Shepheard's Hotel (Life? n.d.)
- 24. This is where I came in, by Robert J. Casey, Omnibook
(n.d.)
- 25. To all hands, by John Mason Brown, Feb. 5, 1944. From a
Liberty book condensation.
- 26. The War on Cordell Hull, by George Creel, Collier's, Mar.
11, 1944.
- 27. We chase the desert fox, by J.A. Brown, The Saturday
Evening post, Feb. 13, 1943.
- 28. We dynamite a Nazi airfield, by Douglas M. Smith, The
Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 23, 1943.
- 29. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
war in North Africa.
Sources--Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
- 30. Darlan; second secret speech, by Winston Churchill (Life?
n.d.)
- 31. In Fact, New York, Nov. 4, 1946, vol. XIV, no. 5.
- 32. Portrait of Mr. Roosevelt's Mr. X, by John H. Crider, The
New York Times Magazine, Mar. 4, 1945.
- 33. The President's palace favorites, by Charles Michelson.
From an unidentified periodical.
- 34. Roosevelt; a first appraisal by those who knew him, The
New Republic, Apr. 15, 1946. Part II only.
- 35. Roosevelt; as I see him, by several authors, Liberty, Aug.
29, Sept. 12, and Oct. 10, 1942.
- 36. Roosevelt-man and statesman, by Jonathan Daniels, Liberty,
Sept. 8, 1945.
- 37. Roosevelt the enigma, by Charles Michelson. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 38. Roosevelt: the master of politics, by Eliot Janeway (Life?
n.d.)
- 39. Roosevelt's world blueprint, by Forrest Davis, The
Saturday Evening Post, Apr. 10, 1943.
- 40. Secret war speech, by Winston Churchill, Jan. 28, 1946,
vol. 20, no. 4.
- 41. They keep the president safe, by Merriman Smith, Liberty,
Oct. 23, 1943.
- 42. "They told me," by Leonard Lyons. From an unidentified
peridoical.
- 43. Unconquerable spirit, by Ross T. McIntire, Collier's, Feb.
2, 1945.
- 44. Why Russia got the drop on us, by Martin Sommers, The
Saturday Evening post, Feb. 8, 1947.
- 45. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
BOX XXIX
Top
The World's End Series: Presidential Mission (vol. 8) (cont.)
Sources--Used Notes
- 1. Action, Jan. 1943.
- 2. Baltimore; a map of the city.
- 3. Do the Nazis know they're going to be licked? By Alex
Dreier, The American Magazine, Apr. 1942.
- 4. Dukes (Life? n.d.) An incomplete article.
- 5. Dust jacket of the Viking edition of the Presidential
Mission.
- 6. The Fascist Weygand, byPierre van Paassen, The Protestant,
Feb-Mar, 1942.
- 7. The Five fatal mistakes of the Axis, by Albert Carr,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 8. German song gets out of hand, by John Steinbeck, Los
Angeles Examiner, July 5, 1943.
- 9. In Fact, New York, Dec. 16, 1940, and Feb. 11, 1946, vol.
II, no. 3, and vol. XII, no. 19.
- 10. A Last look at Europe, by Henry J. Taylor (Life? n.d.)
- 11. The Facts about Lindbergh, by C.B. Allen, The Saturday
Evening Post, Dec. 28, 1940.
- 12. London fire, 1940, by William L. White, The Reader's
Digest, Mar, 1941.
- 13. Miscellaneous newspaper articles about the American
Nationalist Party.
- 14. The Pattern of underground resistance, by Wladyslaw R.
Malinowski, reprinted from The Annals of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science, Mar. 1944, vol. 232.
- 15. Shot the works: by Boyden Sparkes, The Saturday Evening
Post, Dec. 26, 1942.
- 16. "So many owe so much to so few," by Vincent Sheean, The
Saturday Evening Post, Dec. 21, 1940.
- 17. The Truth about Toulon, by J.C. Fernand-laurent,
Collier's, May 8, 1943.
- 18. The True story of Swedish neutrality, by Ralph Wallace,
The Reader's Digest, Sept. 1946. Condensed from The Minneapolis
Tribune.
- 19. World Events Interpreted by Scott Nearing, vol. IV, no.
10, letter 53.
- 20. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
Second World War and its personalities.
- 21. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
Second World War and its personalities.
Sources--Used (Notes, Part II)
- 22. General Patton's war letters, by the author, The Atlantic
Monthly (n.d.)
- 23. Goring, by Douglas Reed (Life? n.d.)
- 24. Loot for the master race, by James S. Plaut, The Atlantic
Monthly (n.d.)
- 25. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
Second World War and its personalities.
Reviews
- 26. Miscellaneous book reviews from American newspapers and
periodicals.
- 27. Miscellaneous book reviews from foreign newspapers and
periodicals.
BOX XXX
Top
The World's End Series: One Clear Call (vol. 9)
Sources--Britain
- 1. Business in Britain, by William Benton (Life? n.d.)
- 2. The Coming battle of fighter planes, by Keith Ayling,
Liberty, Mar. 27, 1943.
- 3. I doubled for General Montgomery, by Clifton James,
International Digest (n.d.) condensed from The Sunday Express,
London.
- 4. John Bull is willing, by Johan J. Smertenko, Liberty, Nov.
20, 1943.
- 5. In Fact, New York, May 31, 1948, vol. XVII, no. 9.
- 6. London calling-Goebbels jamming, by William D. Bayles, The
Saturday Evening Post, Apr. 11, 1942.
- 7. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about Great
Britain.
Sources--Far East
- 8. The Battle of Bloody Hill, by William J. McKennan, The
Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 20, 1943.
- 9. Contemporary China; a Reference Digest, New York, Jan. 8,
1945, vol. IV, no. 17.
- 10. Doctors aweight, by Charles M. Oman, Oct. 16, l943. A
Liberty book condensation.
- 11. 18 men and a boat, by John Morrill, The Saturday Evening
Post, Dec. 26, l942.
- 12. Exchange ship, by Max Hill, Apr. 3, 1943. A Liberty book
condensation.
- 13. I fly for vengeance, by Clarence E. Dickinson, The
Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 10, 17, and 31, 1942.
- 14. Netherlands News, New York, Aug. 1944.
- 15. Nimitz's secret weapon, by George L. Crossley. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 16. Our good friends, the head-hunters, by Eric Severeid. From
an unidentified periodical.
- 17. The Pacific is my beat, by Keith Wheeler, Mar. 11, 1944. A
Liberty book condensation.
- 18. Tarawa, the story of a battle, by Robert Sherrod, June 17,
1944. A Liberty book condensation.
- 19. Torpedo junction, by Robert J. Casey, Feb. 20, 1943. A
Liberty book condensation.
- 20. A Wac in Shangri-La, by Margaret Hastings, The Reader's
Digest, Nov. 1945, vol. XLVII.
- 21. What our submarines are doing, by Frank Gervasi,
Collier's, Apr. 3, l943.
- 22. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
war in the Far East.
Sources--France
- 23. De Gaulle the prophet, by Noel F. Busch (Life? n.d.)
- 24. The Fascist ghost stalks Europe, by Percy Winner, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 25. France: the literary situation, by Philip Toynbee, The New
Republic, Jan. 29, 1945.
- 26. The Future of liberated France, by Richard de Rochemont
(Life? n.d.)
- 27. Our undeclared war in France, by Demaree Bess, The
Saturday Evening Post, Jan. 3, l942.
- 28. Three years of it, by Frederick Lewis Allen, Harper's
Magazine, Dec. 1944, vol. 190, no. 1135.
- 29. Upton Sinclair note, by Upton Sinclair. A torn piece of
paper with an inscription in pencil.
- 30. What Riom won't hear, by henry Torres, Collier's, Mar. 28,
l942.
- 31. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
France.
Sources--France-Maquis
- 32. Army of shadows, by Joseph Kessel, Oct. 7, l944. A Liberty
book condensation.
- 33. Fascist finale, by James E. Roper and John Chabot Smith,
Collier's, June 16, l945.
- 34. The French underground, by Richard de Rochemont (Life?
n.d.)
- 35. I visit the French underground, by Ralph Heinzen, The
Saturday Evening post, June 10, l944.
- 36. Underground to freedom, by Walter Davenport, Collier's,
Mar. 6, l943.
- 37. Wine of freedom, by Morris Markey, Liberty, May l6,
l942.
- 38. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
French Maquis.
BOX XXXI
Top
The World's End Series: One Clear Call (vol. 9) (cont.)
Sources--Germany
- 1. Berlin under bombing, by N. Joglus as told to Kurt Singer,
Liberty, June l0, l944.
- 2. The Chimneys of Leipzig, by Barbara, Christina and Sybilla
Knauth (Life? n.d.)
- 3. Hitler-new light on a dark career, by H.R. Trevor-Roper,
The New York Times Magazine, Mar. l7, l946.
- 4. I saw Regensburg destroyed, by Beirne Lay, Jr., The
Saturday Evening Post, Nov. 6, l943.
- 5. In Fact, New York, Dec. 31, l945, vol. XII, no. 13.
- 6. The Last days of the fascist empire, by Lev Slavin. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 7. Masters of slash and surprise, by Thomas R. Henry, The
Saturday Evening Post, Oct. l9, l946.
- 8. The Mystery of Haushofer, by Edmund A. Walsh (Life?
n.d.)
- 9. A News Letter from Waverly Root, Oct. 2, l944, no. 20.
- 10. The Rhine (Life? n.d.)
- 11. A World at war, Life (n.d.)
- 12. We went through the Nazi murder mill, by
three…prisoners…, Magazine Digest (n.d.)
- 13. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Germany.
Sources--Italy
- 14. Balconey empire, by Reynolds and Eleanor Packard, Feb. 6.
L943.
- 15. The Countercurrent against all Fascism Everywhere, Apr.
and Dec. l943, vol. IV, no. 10, and vol. V, no. 6.
- 16. The Decline and fall of Edda Ciano, by Andrea Niccoletti,
The Saturday Evening Post, Sept. l, l945.
- 17. Eyewitness story of Italy at war, by E.J.W., The Living
Age, Jan, l94l.
- 18. The lst of the many, by Roger P. Flaherty, The Saturday
Evening Post, Apr. l946.
- 19. The Last four days of Mussolini, by Laszlo Bush-Fekete
(Life? n.d.)
- 20. The Secret history of a surrender, by Forrest Davis, The
Saturday Evening Post, Sept. 22, l945.
- 21. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Italy.
Sources--Lanny
- 22. The Bridge, by Morley Cassidy, Liberty, May 12, l945.
- 23. I guarded FDR, by Michael F. Reilly as told to William J.
Slocum, The Saturday Evening Post, Sept. 28, 1946.
- 24. Inside France, by Gabriel Hacket. From an unidentified
periodical.
- 25. The Inside story of the Munich bomb, by Werner Knop, The
Saturday Evening Post, Nov. 2, 1946.
- 26. Lord love you, captain, by Amy Porter, The Saturday
Evening post, Nov. 2, 1946.
- 27. Our secret war in Scandinavia, by Bernt Balchen,
Collier's, Mar. 9 and 16, 1946.
- 28. Samples of the army mind, by J. Frank Dobie, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 29. Squeal, Nazi, squeal! By Douglas M. Kelley as told to
Howard Whitman, Collier's, Aug. 31, 1946.
- 30. The Spy who double-crossed Hitler, by J. Edgar Hoover, The
American Magazine, May 1946.
- 31. Washington, Mecca of lost nations, by Hans Herb, The
American Magazine, may 1946.
- 32. What about our foreign air bases? By Ray W. Bonta. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 33. What really happened at Teheran, by Forrest Davis, The
Saturday Evening Post, May 20, 1944.
- 34. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles pertaining
to Lanny.
BOX XXXII
Top
The World's End Series: One Clear Call (vol. 9) (cont.)
Sources--Russia
- 1. The Battle of the Warsaw Ghetto, by S. Mendelsohn, The
Yiddish Scientific Institute, New York, 1944.
- 2. The Goal of Soviet policy, by James Burnham, The American
Mercury, Apr. 1947, vol. LXIV, no. 280.
- 3. Guerilla (sic) warfare flames higher and higher, by
Vladimir Stavsky. A five-page typewritten manuscript.
- 4. Has colonialism a future? By Paul M. Sweezy and Lewis S.
Feuer, The New Republic, Nov. 25, l946.
- 5. Intelligence Digest, London, Oct. vol. 7, no. 83.
- 6. Miscellaneous issues of Information Bulletin for the
Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics for the war
years. Includes at least one undated fragment.
- 7. The New Leader, May 4, l946, vol. XXIX, no. 18. Section 2
of two parts.
- 8. News of Czechoslovakia, New York, May 15, l945, vol. 6, no.
117.
- 9. Oswiecim; camp of death, sponsored by National C.I.O. War
Relief Committee, New York, lst ed., Mar. l944.
- 10. Poland fights, Apr. 20, l944, vol. 4, no. 60.
- 11. Revenge in Poland, by Mr. B as told to George Creel,
Collier's, Nov. 6, l943.
- 12. Russia's strategy in the Pacific, by Erwin Lessner,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 13. The Silent Soviet revolution, by Bertram D. Wolfe,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 14. Strong men around Stalin, by Edgar Snow, The Saturday
Evening Post, Mar. 24, l945.
- 15. Strategic objective, by M. Galaktinov. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 16. These are the Russians, by Richard E. Lauterbach. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 17. Will Russia fight Japan? By Alexander Kendrick, The
American Magazine, Apr. l945.
- 18. Will Russia rule the air? By W.B. Courtney, Collier's,
Feb. l, l947.
- 19. Why make Russia run amok? By Karl Polanyi, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 20. "Your mission is to contact the Russians," by William A.
Knowlton, The Reader's Digest, Aug. l945.
- 21. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
Russia.
Sources--Special Listed (?)
- 22. At an alarming rate, by James M. Minify, The Saturday
Review of Literature, Oct. l9, l946.
- 23. Blips on the Christmas tree, by Bernard Wicksteed,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 24. Dr. Carl G. Jung-Nazi collaborationist, by Albert D.
Parelhoff, The Protestant, June-July, l946.
- 25. The Man with the invisible light, by Milton Silverman, The
Saturday Evening post, Sept. l4, l946.
- 26. Norway out from under, by Walter Taub, Collier's, July 14,
l945.
- 27. With General Eisenhower at SHAEF, by Clifton Daniel, The
New York Times Magazine, Mar. 4, l945.
- 28. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
Sources--Spies
- 29. G-2 men, by Kenneth Downs, Collier's, Aug. 30, l941.
- 30. In Fact, New York, July 13, l942, and Sept. 27, l943, vol.
V, no. 14 and vol. VII, no. 25.
- 31. Sabotage in the U.S.A., by Alan Hynd, Liberty, Nov. 7,
l942. Also Nov. l4.
- 32. The Treasury traps spies, by Francis Rufus Bellamy, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 33. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
spies.
BOX XXXIII
Top
The World's End Series: One Clear Call (vol. 9) (cont.)
Sources--U.S.A.
- 1. Eisenhower in victory, by Charles Christian Wertenbaker,
Life (n.d.)
- 2. In Fact, New York, Mar.20, l944, and Oct. 28, l946, vol.
VIII, no. 24 and vol. XIV, no. 4.
- 3. A Little mistake in Washington, by Marshall Morgan,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 4. 'Last stop, U.S.A.,' by James W. Wadsworth, The New York
Times Magazine, Dec. 24, l944.
- 5. No prissy is cissy, by Dickson Hartwell, Collier's, Nov.
30, l946.
- 6. San Francisco retrospect, by Frederick Lewis Allen,
Harper's Magazine (n.d.)
- 7. Taft and Vanderberg, by Joseph and Stewart Alsop (Life?
n.d.)
- 8. The U.S. State Department, by Joseph M. Jones. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 9. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
U.S.A.
Sources--U.S.A.-Manufacturing, Gadgets, and Industry
- 10. Aberdeen proving Ground, l9l7-l945. From an unidentified
booklet.
- 11. America's secret weapons, by William Bradford Huie, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 12. Commando of the skies, by Charles J. Rolo, The Saturday
Evening post, Mar. 3, l945.
- 13. Fighting steel, by Morris Markey, Liberty, Mar. l8,
l944.
- 14. Gadget of destruction, by Lionel L. Van Deerlin, Liberty,
June 9, l945.
- 15. Here's your horsepower, by W.B. Courtney, Collier's, May
l, l943.
- 16. The Mysterious Mr. Gibbs, by Alva Johnston, The Saturday
Evening Post, Jan. 20, l945.
- 17. New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn, l80l-l945. From an
unidentified booklet.
- 18. Proximity fuzes: a challenge to air power, by James
Phinney Baxter, The Atlantic Monthly (n.d.)
- 19. Three men in a DUKW, by Milton Silverman, The Saturday
Evening Post, Apr. 20, l946.
- 20. The War is a a race to make things, by Samuel Lubell, The
Saturday Evening Post, Jan. 31, l942.
- 21. We outsmarted them on radar, by Dexter Masters, The
Saturday Evening Post, Sept. l5, l945.
- 22. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
Sources--U.S.A.-Sea Power
- 23. Corvette in action, by Nicholas Monsarrat, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 24. Life in a destroyer, by Douglas Macdonald Hastings,
Magazine Digest (n.d.) Condensed from Picture Post, London, (Aug.
3, l940).
- 25. Lifeboats from the sky, by Gordon Gaskill. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 26. The Queens, by Hilary St. George Saunders (Life? n.d.)
- 27. The Silent, invisible war under the sea, by Ira Wolfert,
The Reader's Digest, Nov. l945.
- 28. What happened to the 50 old destroyers, by Leslie Roberts,
Magazine Digest, Nov. l945.
- 29. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about sea
power.
Reviews
- 30. Miscellaneous American and foreign book reviews and one
dust jacket.
Box XXXIV
Top
The World's End Series: O Shepherd Speak (vol. 10)
Sources--France (Immediate)
- 1. Army, Navy, Marine Corps insignia. A supplement to the Mar.
l943, Reader's Digest.
- 2. European Digest; Selected Items from Press and Radio,
Office of War Information, May 16, l944, no. 147.
- 3. I was advance agent for the invasion, by Sonia D'Artois as
told to Anne Fromer, Magazine Digest, May, l945.
- 4. Slickest trick of the war, by William Bradford Huie, The
Saturday Evening post, Apr. 29, l944.
- 5. They'll never forget Mark Clark, by Sid Feder, The Saturday
Evening Post, May l8, l946.
- 6. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
France.
Sources--N.T Trial & Berlin
- 7. 4 ways to beat a dictator, by Louis Lochner. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 8. Germany's underground arsenal, by Edwin Muller, The
American Mercury (n.d.)
- 9. The Last days of Berlin, by Jack Fleischer and Seymour
Freidin, Collier's, Aug. 25 and Sept. l, l945.
- 10. Raoul Wallenberg; fighter for humanity, Fredens Forlag,
Stockholm, l947. A pamphlet.
- 11. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
Sources--Postwar Europe
- 12. America in Germany, by Julian Bach, Jr., Collier's, Feb.
23, l946.
- 13. The Czechs take the big step, by Demaree Bess, The
Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 23, l946.
- 14. How we botched the German occupation, by Demaree Bess, The
Saturday Evening post, Jan. 26, l945.
- 15. Journey to a shattered world, by Ben Hibbs, The Saturday
Evening post, June 9, l945.
- 16. Kiestler finds a 'Trojan horse' in France, by Arthur
Koestler, The New York Times Magazine, Jan. 5, l947.
- 17. The New Leader, Nov. l6, l946, vol. XXIX, no. 46.
- 18. Our failure in Germany, by William Harlan Hale, Harper's
Magazine (n.d.)
- 19. Patrolling the Iron Curtain, by Gordon Gaskill. From an
unidentified periodical.
- 20. The People make their choice, by Dorothy Thompson,
Liberty, Oct. 20, l945.
- 21. Scripps-Howard newspaper expose danger of new "nationalist
party," reprint of articles which appeared July 16-21, l945. A
booklet.
- 22. Stalin's choice to rule Germany, by Joachim Joesten,
Liberty, Oct. l3, l945.
- 23. UNRRA: first gravestone of peace, by W.B. Courtney,
Collier's, Oct. 12, l946.
- 24. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about
postwar Europe.
Sources--Shepherd
- 25. Battlefields of Europe, Life (n.d.)
- 26. Big jump into Germany, by Richard C. Hottelet, Collier's,
May 5, l945.
- 27. "Colonel Abe," by Will Lang (Life? n.d.)
- 28. Over the river, by Howard K. Smith, Liberty, Apr. 28,
l945.
- 29. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
Sources--U.S.
- 30. Byrnes grows up to his job, by Beverly Smith, The Saturday
Evening Post, Jan. 4, l947.
- 31. Farley and FDR-an inside story, by Cornelius Vanderbilt,
New York Post Week-End Magazine, July 12, l947.
- 32. In Fact, New York, May 24, l948, vol. XVII, no. 8.
- 33. Must we have another depression? By Leon H. Keyserling,
The New York Times Magazine, June 8, l947.
- 34. The White House doghouse, by Eliot Janeway, The Saturday
Review, Jan. l7, l948.
- 35. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
BOX XXXV
Top
The World's End Series: O Shepherd Speak (vol. 10) (cont.)
Sources--Used
- 1. Art for Hitler's sake, by Stacy V. Jones, Liberty, Apr. 6,
l946.
- 2. The Backstage battle at Nuremberg, by Ernest O. Hauser, The
Saturday Evening post, ja. L9, l946.
- 3. The Flapper's children, by Robert G. Ruark, Collier's, Dec.
28, l946.
- 4. Flight into terror, by Leon Blum. Miscellaneous articles
from The New Leader.
- 5. Hermann Goering, amiable psychopath, by G.M. Gilbert,
reprinted from the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology,
vol. 43, no. 2, Apr. l948.
- 6. The House at Hyde Park, by Milton Lehman, Collier's, Apr.
l0, l948.
- 7. The Man who made Manhattan, by Robert de Vore, Collier's,
Oct. l3, l945.
- 8. The Paths of glory, by Martha Gellhorn, Collier's, Nov. 9,
l946.
- 9. Roosevelt's death (Life? n.d.)
- 10. The Story behind the Nazi defeat, by William Bayles, The
American mercury (n.d.)
- 11. Three roads to war, by A.A. Berle, Jr., The American
Magazine, Aug. l948.
- 12. Time, Nov. 8, l948, vol. LII, no. l9. Several pages from
this one issue.
- 13. We captured Hermann Goering, by Harold L. Bond, the
Saturday Evening post, Jan. 5, l946.
- 14. The World Community, Tucumari, New Mexico, Oct. l945, vol.
VI, no. 4.
- 15. Miscellaneous newspaper and periodical articles about the
above topic.
Reviews
- 16. Two pieces of advertising.
- 17. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and periodicals.
The World's End Series: The Return of Lanny Budd (vol. 11)
Reviews
- 18. Three pieces of advertising.
- 19. Miscellaneous book reviews from American and foreign
newspapers and periodicals.
Miscellaneous pieces of Upton Sinclair material
- 20. American literature in Russia, by Robert Magidoff, The
Saturday Review of Literature, Nov. 2, l946.
- 21. 1908 Intercollegiate Socialist Dinner;
Stanford-California-Ruskin, in honor of Upton Sinclair of New
York. A program.
- 22. Suggestion for people's classics. Includes Upton
Sinclair.
- 23. The Star, Wilmington, Delaware, Aug. 13, l911. A front
page.
- 24. "Upton Sinclair and the Writing of The Jungle," by
Christine Scriabine. Chicago History, Vol. X, no. 1, Spring,
l981, p. 26-37. Includes a full page picture of Sinclair from
Lilly Library. Subhead of article begins "When Sinclair Lewis'
novel The Jungle, sic…" 2 copies.
BOX XXXVI In map case on 7th floor
Top
Sinclair Broadsides
- 1. Boston
- J.S. Bixler, Prof. Am. Smith College U.S.A.
spricht uber American types in Upton Sinclair's Boston
- 2. "Cred in Victoria Spiritului asupra Frotei Brutale"
spune Marele scritor American Upton Sinclair
in interview ue acordatziarului Nostru.
- 3. Dragon's Teeth
- Dragon's tander
Americas Basta Romen l943
[Poster produced from the paper wrappers of the book]
- ["Diploma" from Columbia (l943) in recognition of
Pulitzer Prize for Dragon's Teeth]
- And now for the Pulitzer Prize to Upton Sinclair
for his breathtaking novel Dragon's Teeth. [Poster]
- [Poster with text in Japanese characters. Marked in English: Upton Sinclair "Dragon's Teeth"]
- 4. The Jungle
- "Come be Sensible you Need the Money"
- The Death of Ona
- Doctoring Hams
- "Go back to the man who Ruined you!"
- The Hams are Ready for Sale
- "I don't Believe a Word of Your Story, Go!"
- "It's the Meat that Made her Sick"
- Inspection of a Filthy Factory
- Jurgis Damands Better Conditions
- "Quick Jurgis, We Must Recover the Body from the Lard Vat."
- "Tell me Where you Got the Money!"
- 5. No Pasaron
- Editorial Masas presenta:
La primera y sensacional novela sobre la Espana del gran escritor americano:
Upton Sinclair
…No Pasaron (two copies)
- Masas
Una Editorial mas?
En preparacion:
…No Pasaron (two copies)
- 6. One Hundred Percent
- 100%
…a partir de 8 Novembre
Le chef - d'Oeuvre
Upton Sinclair
publie par
L'Humanite
- 7. The Singing Jailbirds
- H.H. Maharaja's Birthday Celebrations
…The Forward Art Theatre
Will Stage Upton Sinclair's
"Singing Jailbirds"
- Le chant dans la prison, 12 tableaus d'Upton Sinclair [Poster]
- 8. Wide is the Gate
- Fortappelsens Vag
levande Samtids historia
[Poster produced from the paper wrappers of the book]
- 9. World's End
- De Sadde Vind
En brusande kavalkad "over forsta varldskriget"
[Poster produced from the paper wrappers of the book]
- 10. EPIC Campaigns
- Vote for Upton Sinclair, Governor, End Poverty
An Open Letter to our Fellow Craftsmen
BOX XXXVII
Top
Recording Tapes
Interviews on recording tapes
- *1. EPIC Campaign, Press Club, l934.
- *2. EPIC Campaign and readings, Press Club, l934.
- 3. Statement of Upton Sinclair for 'This I Believe program
April 22, l957.
- *4. Press Club interview with comments on: Background to Guild
Award; UAW award; Eleanor Roosevelt; Carl Sandburg; Mary H.
Vorse; Ford story; Diet; EPIC; public awareness, telepathy, April
27, l962.
- 5. Press Club interview with comments on: Lanny Budd;
religion; ancestors; contemporary situation, May l962.
- 6. Club Bulletin for the EPIC program [by] W.Luther Bailey,
October 26, l936.
- 7. Interview with leftwich D. Kimbrough and Upton Sinclair on
April 10, l960 in Monrovia, California; questions concern
political affiliations of Sinclair with Socialist party.
- 8. Interview with Joe Toyoshima with comments chiefly on
California history, Jan. 22, l966.
- 9. Interview, interviewer unknown, with comment on: political
parties, alcohol and prohibition, poverty, The Jungle, Cup of
Fury, and his personal wealth, Feb. 2. 1959.
- *10. Interview concerning l934 election (2 tapes)
- For additional tapes see Gottesman. . . Checklist - section
B
- *Cassettes available 4/29/92 sp
BOX XXXVIII
Top
Recording Tapes (cont.)
Recording tapes
- 1. Dictation from Sinclair to Secretary.
- a. letter to John M. Swomely Jr.
- b. letter to Dr. Otto Woltmann
- 2. Dictation by Sinclair of novel or story.
- 3. Dictation of verse by Sinclair to Mrs. Richards.
- 4. Dictation of letter concerning libel suit by Sinclair.
- 5. Dictation by Sinclair of novel/story.
- 6. Music-symphony
- 7. Dictation by Sinclair of novel/story
- 8. Dictation of Mary Sinclair of letters.
BOX XXXIX
Top
Recording Tapes (cont.)
Recording Tapes First Words
- 1. From Germany he wrote me….
- 2. Mrs. Richards this is for page 44a where the other wasn't
well recorded…
- 3. ….he could stand up to it; he asked his
friends….
- 4. Instead of telling me, Tom told ….
- 5. "that had been happening for a long time in the world under
the assumption that it would continue happening…" (cold
war, infiltration, witch hunting)
- 6. We start from the basic fact that you have only one life to
life…
- 7. In the first ten or fifteen minutes every seat was
taken.
- 8. Didenius, "Who were these fishers of men?"
- 9. "I have been asked to talk about my books, and I will begin
with the last one, My Lifetime in Letters… Sinclair
continues to describe how the letters for the volume were chosen,
and then discusses letters from many famous people included
within the volume. April 26, l960.
- 10. …and they formed a line extending all the way
around the block…
- 11. "He was jingled, spiflicated…"
- 12. Mother will tell me that…
- 13. First part of this tape is broken. Begins with statement
about exgardner. Early in tape: "Mr. Armitage, I want to know all
about religion?" (paragraph) "That is a large subject, Tom."
BOX XL
Top
Recording Tapes (cont.)
Recording Tapes
- 1. Article dictated to secretary entitled, "A War of Words
over Words" The correspondence of Frederik von Aden and Lady
Victoria Welby. Reviewed by Upton Sinclair (Mededelingen
XIV).
- 2-5. Letters dictated by Sinclair to secretary.
- 6. Dictation by Sinclair of novel/story.
BOX XLI
Top
Recording Tapes (cont.)
Speeches on Recording Tapes
- 1. Speech to delegates at U.A.W. 18th Constitutional
Convention. May l962.
- 2. Speech to California Library Association Conference,
Coronado, California, October 24, l962.
- 3. Speech to Los Angeles State College, l963.
- 4. Talk to British workers about the "Jungle" and conditions
in the United States (n.d.) 2 cops.
- 5. Six unidentified tapes.
Folder XLII
Top
Recording Tapes (cont.)
Broadsides
- 1. Advertisement for novels of Upton Sinclair. Axel Holmstroma
Verlag, Stockholm, l928. In Swedish.
- 2. Advertisement for Dragon's Teeth, by Upton Sinclair. In
Swedish.
BOX XLIII
Top
Photographs of Sinclair
- 1. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Beal Sinclair at 8
years l886," standing, full figure, 4" x 6"; total of two copies
based on this likeness; with negative.
- 2. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair at 8 yrs,"
full face view, 8" x 10"; total of 4 copies based on this
likeness; with 2 negatives.
- 3. Photograph of Sinclair as a boy, inscribed "Upton Beal
Sinclair," standing, full figure, 4" x 6"; total of 5 copies
based on this likeness; with negative.
- 4. Photograph of Sinclair as a child, seated, full figure, 2
½" x 4."
- 5. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "Upton
Sinclair in l905, when 'The Jungle' was written", seated with dog
in garden, full face view, 4" x 5"; total of 5 copies based on
this likeness; with negative.
- 6. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. l9l3 in London,"
seated, full face view, 8" x 10".
- 7. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "taken at Helicon Hall
l907," seated, left half profile, 6 ½" x 9".
- 8. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "l9l3 in London," seated,
full face view, 4 ½" x 6 ½".
- 9. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. in l9l3," full face
view, 4" x 5,"
- 10. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, full face view, 4
½" x 7"; total of two copies based on this likeness.
- 11. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "U.S.
London l9l3," standing, full face view, 4" x 6"; total of 4
copies based on this likeness; with negative.
- 12. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "Upton
Sinclair at Princeton on the farm," full face view, sitting on a
horse, 6 ½" x 8 ½"; total of 4 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 13. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "Upton
after our wedding U.S. London date l9l3," seated, right profile,
4" x 6"; total of 2 copies based on this likeness; with
negative.
- 14. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "Mr.
Upton Sinclair London c. l9l3," standing by a tree, full face
view, 5" x 7"; with negative.
- 15. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, seated on porch,
full face view, 8" x l0"
- 16. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, inscribed "London
c. l903," full face view, 4" x 6"; total of 2 copies based on
this likeness.
- 17. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Before The Jungle was
written (l903) Upton Sinclair ('Too poor to get a hair cut' he
told me, MCS)," seated, holding book, full face, 5 ½" x
7"; with negative.
- 18. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, seated, holding
paper, full face view, 5" x 7"; total of 2 copies.
- 19. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Beal Sinclair l905
at 27 years," full face view, 4" x 5 ½"; total of 6 copies
based on this likeness; with negative.
- 20. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, full face view, 5
½" x 9 ½"
- 21. Photograph of Sinclair as a young man, seated, full face
view, 4" x 5 ½"
- 22. Photograph of a bust of Sinclair, middle years, full face
view, 11" x 14", total of 2 copies.
- 23. Photograph of a bust of Sinclair, middle years, right
profile, 11" x 14"; with negative.
- 24. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Russian magazine Ogonek,
l928 with U.S. on cover, 'Boston' printed inside," seated,
reading magazine, full face view, 4 ½" x 7"
- 25. Photographs of a bust of Sinclair, middle years, 6 views,
8" x 10"; total of 12 copies of the varying views. [Bust perhaps
by Carl Eldh, see Southern Belle, p. 275]
- 26. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing with
tennis racquet in hands, right profile, 3 ½" x 4"
- 27. Photograph of Sinclair, in middle years, on tennis court
with arms reaching up, standing, full face view, 3 ½" x 4
½"
- 28. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, playing violin out
of doors, full face view, 1" x 2"; total of 2 copies based on
this likeness; with negative.
- 29. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, inscribed "So.
Cal. Tennis Championship Tournament Long Beach, Cal.," playing
tennis, left profile, 8" x 10"; total of 4 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 30. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, wearing hat, full
face view, 8" x 10"; total of 11 copies based on this likeness;
with negative.
- 31. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton in l9l9" full face
view, 7" x 9"; total of 4 copies based on this likeness; with
negative.
- 32. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed, "c. l9l9" seated, full
face view, 7 ½" x 9 ½".
- 33. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair about
l920," seated, right profile, 7" x 9"; total of 2 copies based on
this likeness; with negative.
- 34. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c. l9l9," standing at
garden pool, right profile, 7 ½" x 9 ½"; total of 2
copies based on this likeness.
- 35. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair Hollywood
in l923," standing in garden with hat in right hand, full face
view, 6" x 9 ½"; total of 2 copies based on this likeness;
with negative.
- 36. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "US Bermuda winter
l9l5-6," standing among palms with hoe in right hand, full face
view, 7 ½" x 9 ½"; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 37. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "US in Bermuda l9l4,"
lying on blanket on lawn, paper in hands, full face view, 7" x
9".
- 38. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, right half
profile, 9 ½" x l4 ½"; total of 2 copies.
BOX XLIV
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed 'To Little Mother with
love from Upton," left profile, 4" x 6 1.2" total of 3 copies
based on this likeness.
- 2. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, right profile, 8
½" x 11".
- 3. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, seated in rocking
chair on lawn wearing robe and holding newspaper, 9 ½" x
6", total of 2 copies based on this likeness.
- 4. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing on lawn,
full face view, 2" x 3".
- 5. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing, holding
framed broadside concerning one of his books, right profile, 8" x
10".
- 6. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," lying on lawn reading, right profile, 4" x 5"; total of 2
copies based on this likeness.
- 7. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing with right
arm on tree, 8" x 10"; with negative.
- 8. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing with right
foot on porch, full face view, 8" x 10"; total of 2 copies; with
negative.
- 9. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, seated on bench,
right profile, 8" x 10"; with negative.
- 10. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing with left
hand on open car door, 8" x 10"; total of 2 copies; with
negative.
- 11. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, seated at desk,
pen in right hand, full face view, 8" x 10"; total of 2 copies
based on this likeness.
- 12. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing out of
doors, left profile, 8" x 10"; total of 5 copies.
- 13. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, seated, full face
view, 7" x 9".
- 14. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U S about l934," seated
on sofa, full face view, 8" x 10", total of 4 copies based on
this likeness.
- 15. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, seated at desk
reading, right profile 8" x 10"; total of 2 copies of this
likeness.
- 16. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Mr. Upton Sinclair 114
Consul Street Corona, Calif," standing reading book in front of
bookcase, full face view, 8" x 10"; total of 3 copies.
- 17. Photograph of Sinclair imprinted "Upton Sinclair,
Democratic Candidate for Governor," right profile, 7 ½" x
11"; total of 11 copies based on this likeness.
- 18. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Mr. Upton Sinclair 114
Consul Street Corona, Calif., " full face view, 8" x 10"' total
of 3 copies.
- 19. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "Received from Sinclair
Aug. 2, l962," seated with telephone receiver in left hand, full
face view, 8" x 10".
- 20. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing, feeding
dog, right profile, 7" x 9"; total of 2 copies; with
negative.
- 21. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, standing in front
of bookshelves, full face view, 8" x 10".
- 22. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, full face view, 8"
x 10"; total of 9 copies based on this likeness.
- 23. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair l930,"
seated at desk writing, left profile, 8" x 10"; total of 5
copies.
- 24. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U S & 'Dutchie' about
l935" standing on porch leaning on column, left hand on dog's
head, right profile, 8" x 10"; total of 3 copies based on this
likeness.
- 25. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "l93l" standing, left
profile, 1 ½" x 3".
- 26. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills Home
l933," seated at typewriter, right profile, 4" x 5" with
negative.
- 27. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, out of doors, left
profile, 3" x 4".
- 28. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," seated at microphone KHJ-CBS, full face view, 4" x 5".
- 29. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "Beverly Hills home
l933," seated at microphone KHJ-CBS, left profile, 3 ½" x
4 ½" total of 4 copies; with negative.
- 30. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," reclining on lawn reading paper, right profile, 4" x 5";
total of 2 copies.
- 31. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," reclining on lawn with papers, full face view, 4" x 5";
with negative.
- 32. Photograph of Sinclair imprinted "Upton Sinclair author of
The Return of Lanny Budd (Viking)," seated at desk reading, 5" x
7"; total of 2 copies, with negative.
- 33. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. about l930," seated
on sofa, full face view, 5" x 7"; total of 4 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 34. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," seated typing, right profile, 4" x 5"; with negative.
- 35. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," seated on lawn holding up ball in left hand and holding
dog's collar with right hand, left profile, 4" x 5".
- 36. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Bills home
l933," seated at typewriter reading paper, right profile, 4" x
5"; with negative.
- 37. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," lying on lawn reading, 3 ½" x 4 ½", with
negative.
- 38. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Beverly Hills home,"
seated on lawn, full face view, 3 ½" x 5".
- 39. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Beverly Hills home
l933," seated on lawn reading paper, full face view, 4" x 5";
total of 2 copies.
- 40. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Beverly Hills home
l933," seated at typewriter, right profile, 4' x 5".
- 41. Photograph of Upton Sinclair inscribed "U S in Beverly
Hills home l933," standing on lawn in front of home, dog lying on
his right, right profile, 4" x 5".
- 42. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Beverly Hills home
l933," seated at typewriter with paper in hands, right profile,
4" x 5"; with negative.
- 43. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "l959" seated out of
doors, right profile, 4" x 5".
- 44. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, seated in lawn chair,
reading newspaper, 3 ½" x 3 ½".
- 45. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, seated in lawn chair,
reading paper, right profile, 3 ½" x 3 ½".
- 46. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, standing in front of
building, full face view, 1 ½" x 2".
- 47. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, seated on sofa, full
face view, 5" x 7"; with negative.
- 48. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c. l957," seated with
lady's portrait in background, full face view, 5" x 7".
- 49. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, seated on sofa, full
face view, 5" x 7"; with negative.
- 50. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "not me! U.S.," later
years, left profile, 3 ½" x 3 ½".
- 51. 5 colored 3" x 5" slides of Sinclair, later years.
- 52. Photograph of Sinclair, later years, seated, full face
view, 5" x 7"; total of 3 copies; with negative.
BOX XLV
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "To John Dryer with all
affection Upton Sinclair March 27, l965," full face view, 4" x
6"; total of 2 copies based on this likeness.
- 2. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "With best Wishes Upton
Sinclair," middle years, seated, left profile, 11" x 13".
- 3. Photograph of Sinclair, right profile, in middle years, 11"
x l3".
- 4. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c. l959," seated, holding
copy of his book World' End, full face view, 7" x 9".
- 5. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, walking across room,
7 ½" x 9 l/1".
- 6. Photograph of Upton Sinclair in later, full face view, 7
l/2" x 9 l/2".
- 7. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated, writing,
background, right profile, 7 l/2" x 9 l/2".
- 8. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated with a stack
of magazines, reading The New Republic, left profile, 7 l/2" x 9
l/2".
- 9. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated, with paper
and pencil, full face view, 7 l/2" x 9 l/2".
- 10. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated at
typewriter, typing, left profile, 7 l/2" x 9 l/2".
- 11. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, imprinted "Old
Campaigner-Upton Sinclair, at 88, left profile, 5" x 8",
- 12. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, standing in front
of window holding copy of My Lifetime in Letters, left profile,
8" x 10"; total of 2 copies.
- 13. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated, holding
copy of My Lifetime in Letters, left profile 8" x 10"; total of 3
copies; with negative.
- 14. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "81st birthday picture
Upton Sinclair," standing in front of door way, full face view,
8" x 8".
- 15. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, inscribed "Upton
Sinclair sitting at home in his cradle rocker, Calif.," reading
paper, Einstein's photograph on table, left profile, 8" x 10";
total of 2 copies.
- 16. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, full face view, 8"
x 10".
- 17. Photograph of Sinclair, standing in front of bookcase,
holding photograph of Albert Einstein, full face view, 8" x
10".
- 18. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated in easy
chair, full face view, 8" x 10".
- 19. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c. l953", seated at desk
showing books in foreign languages, right profile, 8" x l0:;
total of 2 copies.
- 20. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "c.l953," seated at desk
with row of books in foreign languages, right profile, 8" x
10".
- 21. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair on his
81st birthday, Sept. '59," seated in lawn chair, reading
newspaper, right profile, 3 l/2" x 3 l/2""; total of 7 copies
based on this likeness.
- 22. Photograph of Sinclair , inscribed "c.l953," standing in
front of bookshelves, left hand on books, right profile, 8" x
l0"; with negative.
- 23. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated, right
profile, 8" x 10".
- 24. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated at
typewriter with paper in left hand, full face view, 8" x l0";
total of 4 copies based on this likeness; with negatives.
- 25. Photograph of Sinclair, inscribed "c.l959", seated
out-of-doors, holding book, paper and pencil, full front view, 7"
x 9".
- 26. Photograph of Sinclair, in later years on a brochure for
an exhibit at Lilly
- 27. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, imprinted "Upton
Sinclair," full face view, 5" x 7"; total of 7 copies based on
this likeness.
- 28. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair in the
Arizona sunlight Sept. '59. He is 81 this month" seated in lawn
chair, holding newspaper, full face view, 3 l/2" x 3 l/2"; total
of 4 copies based on this likeness.
- 29. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "8lst birthday picture
Upton Sinclair" standing, picking flower, right profile, 7 l/2" x
7 l/2"; total of two copies based on this likeness; with
negative.
- 30. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, standing in front
of building, newspaper in right hand, right profile, 5" x 5";
total of 2 copies based on this likeness.
- 31. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, standing
out-of-doors, left half profile, 8" x 8".
- 32. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c.l959," full face view,
7" x 9".
- 33. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, 2 strips, 3 poses
each, full face view, 2" x 7".
- 34. Color negative of Sinclair in later years, sitting at desk
holding paper, full face view, 8" x l0".
- 35. Color negative of Sinclair in later years, standing at
desk, full face view, 8" x l0".
- 36. Color negative of Sinclair in later years, sitting at
desk, reading paper, right profile, 8" x l0".
- 37. Color negative of Sinclair in later years, sitting at desk
reading paper, right profile, 8" x l0".
- 38. Photograph of Sinclair inscribed "c.l959," standing,
showing two portraits (Albert Einstein and Bernard Shaw) full
face view, 7" x 9".
- 39. Two photographs of Upton Sinclair taken June 19, l965,
full face view, 3 l.2" x 5"; includes letter from
photographer.
- 40. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, left profile, 9" x
12".
- 41. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, right profile, 9"
x l2".
- 42. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, full face view, 9"
x l2".
- 43. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, full face view, 9"
x l2".
- 44. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, right profile, 9
l/2" x l2"; total of 4 copies.
- 45. Photograph of Sinclair in later years inscribed "taken
3-23-65," sitting at a desk, holding pen and paper, left profile,
ll" x l4"; with negative.
- 46. Photograph of Sinclair in later years inscribed "taken
3-23-65," sitting at a desk, holding a sheet of paper, left half
profile, ll" x 14"; with negative.
BOX XLVI
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
Photographs of Sinclair with others
- 1. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "arrival of 200,000
copies of Flivver King The Story of Henry Ford at the office of
the Ford Organizing Committee Detroit Oct. 22. L937"; Sinclair
and 8 unidentified men standing beside van adverting the book, 8"
x 10"; total of 3 copies; with negative.
- 2. Photograph of Sinclair standing between two women inscribed
"L. to R. Elizabeth Abbott, Upton Sinclair, June Douglas, U.S. in
Hollywood; c. l934, 8" x 10".
- 3. Photograph of Sinclair standing between two unidentified
men beside car, full face view, 8" x 10".
- 4. Photograph including Sinclair as a youth inscribed "Upton
Sinclair in the dunce cap (the tall cone shaped cap)," mounted on
board, 6" x 8", total of 2 copies based on this likeness.
- 5. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair
3-27-'65," Sinclair seated with unidentified man whose arm is
around Sinclair's shoulders, full face view of Sinclair, 8 x
10"
- 6. Photograph of Sinclair seated with unidentified woman in
front of book The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair; full face
view, 5" x 8".
- 7. Photograph of Sinclair seated with unidentified woman with
book The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair, partial right profile
of unidentified man at left, left profile of Sinclair, 5" x
8".
- 8. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Dr. Albert Abrams
(center) C. chaplin, Upton Sinclair, c.1930"; the three standing
with unidentified man and woman, 7 ½" x 9"; with
negative.
- 9. Photograph of Sinclair in later years, seated with lady at
his right, full face view of Sinclair, 7" x 9".
- 10. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "City College of
N.Y. Oct. l963" Sinclair speaking from podium to group of young
people, 7" x 9".
- 11. Photograph of Sinclair speaking to seated group, sign on
podium "Los Angeles Ambassador, 8" x 10".
- 12. Photograph of Sinclair standing with Douglas Fairbanks,
Sr., third man standing in background, inscribed "c. l930 U.S.,
Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.," right profile, 3" x 4"; total of 2
copies based on this likeness.
- 13. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair,
Nona Stahl, Chico State College May 11, l965," Sinclair standing
with Stahl on his right, left profile of Sinclair, 8" x 10".
- 14. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "L-R Wm. Allen
White, ? Upton Sinclair," full face view of three men standing in
front of vine-covered wall, 8" x 10".
- 15. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "William Allen
White, Upton Sinclair," both men standing in front of
vine-covered wall, reading paper, Sinclair's face obscured by
cap, 8" x l0".
- 16. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Wm. Allen White,
Upton Sinclair," both standing on lawn reading newspaper, full
face view, 8" x l0".
- 17. Photograph including Sinclair, Wm. Allen White," full face
view of both standing on lawn, 8" x l0".
- 18. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "U.S. debate with
Philip la Follette about l941 under auspices of Cal. Tech.
Pasadena, subject was U.S. entrance into war," both standing, La
Follette at microphone, Sinclair's left hand in air to silence
crowd, 8" x l0"; total of 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 19. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Ronald Gattesman
Upton Sinclair Oct. l963 ( on occasion U.S.'s visit to Indiana
University)", both men standing beside row of showbills
advertising The Jungle, 8" x l0".
- 20. Photograph of Sinclair standing with Earl Mittleman,
former executive secretary of the New York Socialist Party as
they discuss gains in Labor since l900, left profile of Sinclair,
Mittleman taking notes, 8" x l0".
- 21. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "U.S. (and) film
actor Johann Miljan," both men wearing overcoats, standing beside
microphone, full face view, 8" x l0".
- 22. Photograph of Sinclair standing in row with James
Vardaman, Hunter Kimbrough, and Charles Chaplin, 6 l/2" x l0";
total of 4 copies based on this likeness.
- 23. Photograph of Sinclair seated at desk with unidentified
woman, Sinclair's book, The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair, on
desk, left profile, 5" x 8"; with negative.
- 24. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair,
Charles Chaplin, ? c. l930," full face view of all three standing
in front of curtained window, ll" x l3".
- 25. Photograph of Sinclair standing on street selling a book
to an unidentified woman; Sinclair is wearing a sign printed
"Oil! Upton Sinclair Fig leaf Edition," photograph inscribed
"Upton Sinclair Protest on police band of h is novel 'Oil' in
Boston (selling on street)," 8" x l0"; with 2 negatives.
- 26. Photograph of Sinclair shaking hands with man, inscribed
"Upton Sinclair & Judge Walter H. Evans, c. l934," 8" x l0".
- 27. Photograph of Sinclair standing with three other men,
inscribed "c. l930 L-R Johann Bojer, Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.,
U.S., ?" full face view of Sinclair, 7" x 9 ½".
- 28. Photograph of Sinclair standing between two men, inscribed
"Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., U.S. ? (Bojer Johan) c. l930," full face
view, 7" x 9".
- 29. Photograph of Sinclair standing with Walt Disney in front
of bookcase. Disney holding Upton Sinclair's book The
Gnomemobile, inscribed "Upton Sinclair with my Best Wishes, Walt
Disney," ll" x l3".
- 30. Photograph of Sinclair, Walt Disney and Mary Willis
Sinclair, all standing in front of bookcase, 8" x l0"; with
negative.
- 31. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair
(during the Epic Campaign l934 & 5) Harry Hopkins taken in
Washington, D.C. l934" both men seated at desk examining paper,
6" x 8"; total of 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 32. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Aaron Berkman,
Charles Chaplin, U.S. c, l930," 5 ½" x 8 ½" total
of 4 copies based on this likeness.
- 33. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed 'U.S. Mary S.,
Richard Armour, Dec. l96l," the three standing with an
unidentified woman, 5 ½" x 7".
- 34. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "U.S. Mrs. Erich
Gutkind & Frederick van Eeden, Bussum Holland, l9l2," the three
standing in front of grove trees, 5" x 7"; total of 4 copies
based on this likeness.
- 35. Photograph of Sinclair shaking hands with unidentified man
standing behind lectern, right profile of Sinclair, 8" x l0".
- 36. Photograph of Sinclair standing with group of 5
unidentified men, 8" x l0".
- 37. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "85th Birthday
celebration to Upton Sinclair Oct. 31. L963 at Freedom Hall,
N.Y…..Mark Starr, Nathaniel Menkoff, Roger Baldwin, Upton
Sinclair, Harry (Loedter?) Leroy Bowman, Oscal Cargill," 8" x
l0".
- 38. Photograph of Sinclair sitting at dinner table with Mary
Willis Sinclair and others, 8" x l0".
- 39. Photograph of Sinclair, Mary Willis Sinclair and others
seated around dinner table, 8" x l0".
- 40. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Participants in
meeting in honor of Sinclair's celebration of his 85th birthday
Reception held October 31, l963 at Wilkie Memorial
House…," Sinclair, Mark Starr, Nathaniel M. Menkoff, Roger
Baldwin, Harry (Laedler?) Leroy Bowman, Oscar Cargill all
standing, 8" x l0".
- 41. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "United Auto
Workers & Swedish delegation," Sinclair and Mary Willis Sinclair
standing with group of 21 men, 8" x l0".
BOX XLVII
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Sergei Eisenstein,
U.S., ? c. l930," third man identified as Berthold Virtel,
Sinclair standing between the two other men, 4 ½" x
6".
- 2. Tintype of Sinclair as a young man with 4 others, dated
l888, Upton standing on left, 2 ½" .
- 3. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "From left to right
Mary Miles Minter & Tisse, Ivor Montague, Center, Upton Sinclair,
Below, Berthold Viertel at the home of King c Gillette in the
summer of l930," group having a picnic, 4 ½" x 6", 2
copies.
- 4. Photograph including Sinclair with Miss Elizabeth Freeman,
Mrs. Upton Sinclair, and the Rev. William M. Gamble who recited
the service for the dead killed in the Colorado strike, all
standing opposite the Standard Oil Building, mounted on
cardboard, 4 ¾" x 6", 2 copies.
- 5. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Best regards from
the Catholic Magazine agents that visited you last summer,"
Sinclair standing with unidentified man, 3" x 5 ½".
- 6. Photograph of Sinclair standing with two children, a girl
and a boy, palm tree in background, 3" x 5".
- 7. Photograph of Sinclair standing with Mary Elizabeth
Sinclair, David Sinclair, and David Randall viewing exhibit of
Sinclair's books at the Lilly Library, Indiana University, 5" x
7".
- 8. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "U.S. & Harry Kemp
(Arden Del. L9ll)," 4 ½" x 6 ¼", with negative.
- 9. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair and
Count Michael Karalyi (Hungarian)," both men seated on sofa
facing camera, 4" x 5"; 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 10. Photograph including Sinclair later years, standing
shaking hands with unidentified man, left profile, 4" x 5"; 2
copies.
- 11. Photograph including Sinclair, later years, standing,
shaking hands with an unidentified man, 4" x 5".
- 12. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "An unhappy
millionaire, (Prince) Hopkins works for Upton Sinclair," Sinclair
seated in wheelbarrow held by Pryns Hopkins, 5" x 7".
- 13. Tintype of Upton Sinclair as a young man and Captain
Craig, taken in studio, seated, l888, 2 ½" x 3
½"/
- 14. Photograph including Sinclair imprinted "Upton Sinclair,
Candidate for Governor of California-addresses Inglewood Audience
at Centinella Bowl July 1st, l934," Sinclair standing under
umbrella facing camera, large crowd to his back, 4" x 5"; total
of 4 copies based on this likeness with 2 negatives.
- 15. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Cornelius
Vanderbilt Jr. & Sinclair," both men seated on bench, 2 ½"
x 3 ½".
- 16. Photograph including Sinclair standing on sidewalk with
unidentified man, 3 ½" x 5"; 2 copies.
- 17. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair,
Frederick Van Eeden, Berlin l9l2," Sinclair standing with three
men, one unidentified, 3 ½" x 4 ½".
- 18. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair,
Kate Crane Gartz, Pasadena (after 9l6)," both standing near palm
tree, 5" x 7"; with negative.
- 19. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "From left to
right George Sterling, Upton Sinclair at Carmel in l907," both
men standing with hands in pockets, full face view of Sinclair,
5" x 7"; 2 copies; with negative.
- 20. Photograph including Sinclair seated with unidentified
small boy, on his lap, full face view, 5" x 7".
- 21. Photograph including Sinclair and unidentified man playing
tennis, unidentified woman in background, 3 ½" x 4".
- 22. Photograph of Upton Sinclair playing tennis with
unidentified woman, 3 ½" x 4 ½".
- 23. Photograph including Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair &
Neil Vanderbilt in l957 at Monrovia," sitting on bench in front
of doorway, 3 ½" x 5".
- 24. Six small snapshots showing different poses of group
including Sinclair, Senator James K. Vardaman, Charles Chaplin,
and Sinclair's secretary, 3" x 5'; total of 7 copies.
- 24a. Photographs of group including Sinclair inscribed "Left
to Right: secretary, U.S. Ex. Gov. Vardaman of Miss., Hunter
Kimbrough, Charlie Chaplin"; full length view of all standing
near frame house; 8" x 10", 2 copies. C.l930.
- 24b. Photograph of group including Sinclair inscribed
"c.l930"; Sinclair standing with Hunter Kimbrough, James
Vardaman, Charles Chaplin, and Sinclair's secretary; 8" x 10", 2
copies. C.l930.
- 25. Five snapshots of Upton Sinclair and unidentified people
on cruise of California harbors, l934, 2 ¾" x 4
½".
- 26. Six snapshots, three poses of Sinclair taken with
unidentified woman standing in front of Sinclair's home in
Monrovia, Calif. C. l960, 3 ½" x 5".
Photographs of Sinclair's family
- 27. Photograph of John Summerfield Harden, maternal
grandfather of Upton Sinclair, 6" x 8 ½"; total of 2
copies based on this likeness.
- 28. Photograph of George T. Sinclair inscribed "(l8l5-l885) in
United States Navy uniform before the Civil War," seated with
sword in hands, 6" x 8".
- 29. Photograph of Emma Dyres Harden, grandmother of Upton
Sinclair, 6 ½" x 8".
- 30. Photograph of Lieut. Arthur Sinclair inscribed "Lieut.
Arthur Sinclair of the 'Alabama' uncle of U.S. author of Two
Years on the Oklahoma," standing in uniform, left profile 4" x
6"; total of 5 copies based on this likeness; with negative.
- 31. Photograph of a painting of Commodore Arthur Sinclair
inscribed "Commodore Arthur S (my great grandfather)," head and
shoulders portrait, in uniform, 4" x 5"; total of 6 copies based
on this likeness.
- 32. Photograph of Lieut. Arthur Sinclair and an unidentified
man standing on deck, 4" x 5"; total of 2 copies.
- 33. Photograph of a portrait of a young man, enscribed on the
back, "Arthur Sinclair?" 5" x 7"; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness, with negative.
- 34. Photograph of Captain George Terry Sinclair, Sr., U.S.
Navy, wearing fur trimmed cap and double-breasted coat, 2
½" x 4".
- 35. Photograph of George T. Sinclair inscribed "Most sincerely
your friend, George T. Sinclair," wearing uniform, standing in
studio setting, 2 ½" x 4".
- 36. Photograph of George Terry Sinclair, Jr. Taken March l9l9,
3 ½" x 5 ½".
- 37. Photograph of midshipman George Terry Sinclair, Jr.,
standing in uniform, color phtograph, 2 ½" x 4".
- 38. Photograph of Midshipman George Terry Sinclair, Jr.,
standing full face view, 2" x 3 ½".
- 39. Photograph of Dr. William Beverly Sinclair inscribed "Dr.
William Beverly Sinclair Born at Norfolk, Va., Died at Baltimore,
Md., l895, Surgeon U.S. Navy, C.S. Navy," 2" x 3 ½"; total
of 2 copies.
- 40. Photograph of Priscilla Harden Sinclair, sitting on beach
under striped umbrella, man with beard and in swim suit sitting
on her right, woman standing in background, 3" x 5 ¼".
- 41. Photograph of Priscilla Harden Sinclair, sitting in chair
on beach, 3 unidentified women and 3 unidentified men also in
photograph, 3 ½" x 5 ¼".
- 42. Photograph of William Sinclair, uncle of Upton Sinclair,
inscribed "Wm. Beverly Sinclair Jr.," young man in uniform,
standing, 2 ½" x 4".
- 43. Photograph of William Sinclair inscribed "Midshipman Wm
Sinclair of 'Alabama', Uncle of U.S." young man in uniform
standing by desk, 4" x 7"; total of 5 copies, with 2
negatives.
- 44. Photograph of Priscilla Harden Sinclair, mother of Upton
Sinclair, Jr., studio photograph, standing 4" x 6"; total of 2
copies based on this likeness; with negative.
- 45. Photograph of Upton Beal Sinclair, Sr. L866, standing in
uniform, 2 ½" x 4".
- 46. Photograph of Upton Beal Sinclair, Sr., studio photograph
taken in Richmond, Va., 4" x 6 ½"; with negative.
- 47. Photograph of G.T. Sinclair inscribed "G.T. Sinclair taken
sometime between l8l8 and l872," later years, 3 ½" x
5".
- 48. Photograph of Upton Sinclair's mother and father, 4" x 6";
with negative.
- 49. Photograph of lelia Montague Barnett, Sinclair's cousin,
inscribed "love from lelia Christmas l948," 5" x 7"; total of 3
copies based on this likeness.
- 50. Photograph of Lelia Sinclair inscribed "My first cousin,
Mrs. Lelia Sinclair Montague Barnett," standing, holding hand of
small girl, 4 ½" x 6 ½"; with negative.
- 51. 4 small snapshots of David Sinclair inscribed "Pioneer
youth Camp, l930," various sizes.
- 52. Photograph of David Sinclair inscribed "Palais du Senat,"
2 ½" x 3 ½".
- 53. Photograph of David Sinclair standing in woods, full face
view, 2" x 3 ½".
- 54. Photograph of David Sinclair as a young man, full face
view, 2 ½" x 3 ½".
- 55. Photograph of David Sincalir, young man, full face view,
4" x 6".
- 56. Photograph of David Sinclair inscribed "Upton Sinclair's
son, David in the l920's," full face view, 5" x 7"; with
negative.
- 57. Photograph of David Sinclair as a young man, full face
view, 2" x 2 ½".
- 58. Photograph of David Sinclair as a young man, head and
shoulders, full face view, 5" x 7".
- 59. Photograph of David and Jean Sinclair, 5"x 7".
- 60. Photograph of Diana Sinclair imprinted "May-l936," 3
½" x 5".
- 61. Photograph of Diana Sinclair imprinted "May l936," 3
½" x 5".
- 62. Photograph of Diana Sinclair inscribed "Diana takes
pleasure in visiting the Bermuda Agricultural Station, Sept.
l934," 2 ½" x 3 ¼".
- 63. Photograph of Diana Sinclair inscribed "Diana Sinclair 9
years, May 4, l942," seated, right profile, 3 ½" x 5".
- 64. Photograph of Diana Sinclair imprinted "May l936," sitting
in chair and holding doll, 3 ½" x 5".
- 65. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair, small girl with curls,
holding long-stemmed rose, 5" x 7".
- 66. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair inscribed "Mary Craig
Sincalir c.l9l2" wearing long dress and hat, parasol in left
hand, right hand holding branch of tree, 5" x 7"; total of 3
copies; with negative.
- 67. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair inscribed "Mrs Upton
Sinclair (Mary Craig Kimbrough in l900) taken at the time of her
graduation from the Gardner School for Girls, New York," 5" x 7";
total of 9 copies based on this likeness.
- 68. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair standing between two
unidentified young women in front of porch, mounted on cardboard,
3" x 5".
- 69. Photograph of framed portrait of Mary Craig Sinclair, 5" x
7".
- 70. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair, wearing hat, full face
view, 4" x 5".
- 71. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair sitting on steps with
bouquet, wearing fur trimmed dress of lace and velvet, 5" x 7";
total of 2 copies based on this likeness.
- 72. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair inscribed "Mary Craig
Sinclair at middle age," sitting at desk with pen in right hand,
full face view, 3 ½" x 5 ½"; with negative.
- 73. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair sitting at desk writing,
left profile, 5" x 7 ½"'; with negative.
- 74. Photograph of Upton Sinclair and Mary Willis Sinclair
taken at the time of their marriage at St. Ambrose Episcopal
church in Claremont, news account on back, laminated, 3 ½"
x 5".
- 75. Photograph of Upton Sinclair with Mary Willis Sinclair,
full face view, 4" x 5"; total of 2 copies.
- 76. Photograph of Upton Sinclair, standing, holding hand of
Mary Willis Sinclair, who is sitting in lawn chair holding yellow
rose, in color 3 ½" x 5".
- 77. Photograph inscribed "Upton's family and mine at the memorable occasion, Bloomington, October 19, l963," snapshot of (left to right) Craig Blakey, Mary Elizabeth Sinclair, Kathleen Willis Blakey, Mary Elizabeth Talmadge, Irving Talmadge, Mrs. David Sinclair, Upton Sinclair, and David Sinclair on Indiana University Campus, 3 ½" x
5". Kathleen Willis Blakey and Mary Elizabeth Talmadge are daughters of Mary Elizabeth Sinclair.
- 78. Photograph of David Sinclair as a young man inscribed "On
the beach at Yaounina, Sicily," 2 ½" x 3 ½"
BOX XLVIII
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. Photograph of David Sinclair inscribed "David Sinclair,
aged l9 months," also a letter from Jean Sinclair questioning the
identity of the child, mounted on cardboard, 4" x 6
½".
- 2. Photograph of Upton Sinclair and son David taken at
Princeton farm in l906, Upton sitting, David standing on porch,
6" x 8 ½".
- 3. Photograph of Upton Sinclair and son David inscribed "Upton
Sinclair & son David at Princeton farm l906 when Jungle Book was
published, 4" x 5 ½"; total of 8 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 4. Photograph of David Sinclair inscribed "David Sinclair Nov.
l950," David on left, unidentified man on right standing in front
of doorway, sign above "Denver," 8" x l0".
- 5. Photograph of David Sinclair inscribed "David Sinclair
instructing a class in Physics, Somerville High School,
Somerville, N.J. Jan l7, l957," students in foreground, 8" x
l0".
- 6. Photographs of David Sinclair standing at left, one man
seated at control panel, a third man standing behind panel in
machine room 8" x l0".
- 7. Photograph of Diana Sinclair inscribed "Diana Sinclair 9
years old, May 4, l942," seated, reading book, right profile, 6"
x 6".
- 8. Photograph of Mary Hunter Kimbrough inscribed "Mary Hunter
Kimbrough, mother of Mary Craig Sinclair photographed in New
Orleans in l890," right profile, 4" x 6"; total of 3 copies based
on this likeness; with negative.
- 9. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair as a young lady, mounted
on cardboard, 6 ½" x l0"; with negative.
- 10. Photograph of Mary Craig Kimbrough Sinclair inscribed
"Graduation class at Gardner School M.C.S. is at right end, 3rd
row from bottom," mounted on cardboard, 8" x 12 ½".
- 11. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair standing beside tree,
mounted on cardboard, 7 ½" x l0".
- 12. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair and Upton Sinclair
standing under palm tree, Mary holding bouquet, mounted on
cardboard 12" x 14"; total of 4 copies based on this likeness;
with negative.
- 13. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair inscribed "Mary Craig
Sinclair l928," left profile, 6 ½" x l0"; total of 9
copies based on this likeness.
- 14. Photograph of Clement Wood, Mary Craig Sinclair and George
Sterling inscribed "Broadway mourning pickets in front of
Rockefeller office, l9l4, U.S. was in the Tombs jail," 7" x 8";
total of 7 copies based on this likeness.
- 15. Photograph of Mary Hunter Kibrough, mother of Mary Craig
Sinclair, inscribed "My dear mother l9l4," 6 ¼" x 8
½".
- 16. Photograph of Judge Allen Kimbrough, father of Mary Craig
Sinclair, later years, seated in rocking chair, 6 ¼" x 8
½".
- 17. Photograph of Sallie Kimbrough inscribed "Sallie
Kimbrough, sister of Mary Craig Sinclair," 5 ½" x 7
½"; total of three copies based on this likeness.
- 18. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough as a young child, mounted
on cardboard, 4" x 6".
- 19. Photograph of Upton Sinclair and Mary Hard Sinclair
standing hand in hand ont he day of their marriage, 5" x 7';
total of 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 20. Photograph of Upton Sinclair sanding between Mary Willis
Sinclair and unidentified woman, outside restaurant, 7" x
10".
- 21. Photograph of Upton Sinclair with Mary Willis Sinclair,
left profile of each, 7" x 10".
- 22. Photograph of Clark Southworth's descendants taken in
l908, family group of 27 seated on lawn in front of house, 5" x 6
½".
- 23. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough as a boy inscribed "My
brother Hunter Kimbrough, M. C. S.," mounted on cardboard, 3" x 5
½".
- 24. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough as a young man, 3" x
4".
- 25. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough and a group of six young
men, 2 ½" x 4".
- 26. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough inscribed "Please excuse
the way I am dressed. One of the boys at school snapped this and
I didn't have time to put on a shirt, Hunter," 2 ½" x 4";
total of 2 poses.
- 27. Snapshot of Hunter Kimrough standing with unidentified
woman and bulldog, 3" x 4".
- 28. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough during middle years,
showing 3 different poses, 1 ¼" x 1 1/3"; total of four
copies based on this likeness.
- 29. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough standing with two other
men, all in uniform, 1 ½" x 2 ½".
- 30. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough, left profile, 2 ¼"
x 3 ¼".
- 31. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough sitting between two
children at the beach, 3' x 4 ¾".
- 32. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough as a young man in uniform,
1 ½" x 2 ½"; total of 2 copies.
- 33. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough as a young man in uniform,
1 ½" x 2 ½".
- 34. Photograph of Hunter S. Kimbrough as a young man wearing a
uniform, 4" c 4 ½"
- 35. Photograph of Hunter S. Kimbrough, 4" x 6".
- 36. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough, 4" x 6"; total of 2
copies.
- 37. Photograph including Hunter Kimbrough and two unidentified
women inscribed "This isn't bad of Eliz. Or you-except your black
beard," 3 ½" x 3 ½".
- 38. Photograph of Hunter Kimbrough and two unidentified women,
all in swomsuits, standing on steps, 3" x 6".
- 39. Snapshot of Hunter Kimbrough and five unidentified men,
all in uniform, sitting on lawn, 3" x 4".
- 40. Snapshot of Hunter Kimbrough, three unidentified women and
one man inscribed "Hunter Kimbrough to right of X in left hand
margin," 2 ¾" x 4 ½".
- 41. Photograph of Dollie Kimbrough inscribed "? Dollie
Kimbrough, sister of Mary Craig Sinclair," 4 ½" x 5
½".
- 42. Photograph including Dollie Kimbrough inscribed "The old
sailboat I sailed in as a girl, M.C.S. (some of my in-laws in the
boat with Dollie)," a second copy is inscribed "The sail boat,
'Jeffifer,' in which we sailed at our summer house at Gulfport in
the days of my youth. It was my brothers boat and in it are some
of my sisters and brothers. It is backed on our lawn for
repairs," 3 ½" x 6"; total of 2 copies.
- 43. Photograph including Mrs. Orman Kimbrough inscribed "Mrs.
Orman Kimbrough and her baby and sister and a friend," seated on
concrete wall, 3 ¼" x 6"; total of 2 copies.
- 44. Photograph of Hunter Holmes Southworth inscribed "Hunter
Holmes Southworth (Uncle of M.C.Sinclair) taken in the year of
l880," 4" x 6"; total of 3 copies.
- 45. Photograph of Fisher Southworth inscribed "My Uncle Fisher
Southworth, M.C.S.," 5" x 8"; total of 2 copies.
- 46. Photograph of Sally Morgan Green, great-aunt of Mary Craig
Sinclair, right profile, 4 ½" x 4 ½".
- 47. Photograph of Sallie Morgan Green, Mary Craig Sinclair's
great aunt, 2" x 4"; total of 5 copies based on this
likeness.
- 48. Photograph of Mary Hunter Kimbrough, mother of Mary Craig
Sinclair, 4 ½" x 7"; total of 3 copies based on this
likeness.
- 49. Photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair standing on lawn with
her father and two of his grandchildren, 4" x 4 ½"; total
of 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 50. Photograph inscribed "Uncle Jim ex-slave in Craig's
family-Greenwood, Miss. Sometime after 1900," 3" x 4 ½";
total of 4 copies based on this likeness, one mounted on
cardboard.
- 51. 4 snapshots of Upton Sinclair with (nephew?) 3 ½" x
3 ½".
- 52. Sequence of 13 snapshots of Upton Sinclair with
(newphew?).
Photographs with Sinclair association
- 53. Photograph of William R. Brunton and Earle G. Vought;
reading the "National Epic News," 5" x 7".
- 54. Photograph of Mary Burton inscribed "…this snapshot
of my 88th birthday festival, January 28, l934, Carmel," 3
½" x 4 ½".
- 55. Photograph of Mary Burton inscribed "the runaway
Grandmother…her eighty-fifth birthday greetings to her two
children, Mary Craig & Upton Sinclair-Taken January 28th, l931.
Another milestone l932," 3 ½" x 3 ½".
- 56. Photograph of a drawing of Arthur Davison Ficke inscribed
"To my friend Upton Sinclair, 4" x 5".
- 57. Photograph of Albert Rhys Williams between two
unidentified men, 3" x 5".
- 58. Photograph of Leon H. Bartos imprinted "St. Petersburg,
Florida Season l96l, The Sunshine City," 3 ½" x 5".
- 59. Photograph of Herbert Emerson Wilson, inscribed "To Mr.
Upton Sinclair, a one (tome) fellow prisoner, in a lousy jail, in
a lovely city," 3" x 4 ½".
- 60. Photograph of Mr. Gaylor Wilshire, 5" x 8".
- 61. Photograph of Albert H. Wiggin, 5" x 7".
- 62. Photograph of a portrait of Stewart Edward White inscribed
"this portrait hangs in the Bohemian Club in San Francisco," 5"
x7".
- 63. Photograph of Felix M. Warburg, 5" x 7".
- 64. Photograph of Samuel Untermyer and William Fox, 5" x
7".
- 65. Photograph of Samuel Untermyer, 5' x 7".
- 66. Photograph of James Tully inscribed "To General Upton
Sinclair yours for the 'Revolution,' Private Jim Tully, Dec. 1,
'21," 4' x 7".
- 67. Photograph of Norman Thomas, 4 ½" x 6
½".
- 68. Photograph of Bernard K. Marcus inscribed of "of Bank of
United States," 5" x 7".
- 69. Photograph of Jack London and friend, 5" x 87 ¾";
with negative.
- 70. Photograph of Jack London with George and Carrie Sterling,
sailing, 3" x 4"; total of 8 copies based on this likeness.
- 71. Printed likeness of Jack London, with two dogs, 2
¼" x 3 ½".
- 72. Photograph of Charmion London, with two dogs, 2.1/4" x 3
½".
- 73. Photograph of Charmion London inscribed "(Mrs. Jack)
l9l7," 1 ½" x 2 ½".
- 74. Photograph of Ernest Greene inscribed "To Upton Sinclair,
'blazer' of my trail. From his devoted friend and secretary,
Ernest S. Greene," standing on coast, 4 ½" x 7".
- 75. Photograph of mr. & Mrs. Felix Shay and Charlie Chaplin,
4" x 5"; total of 5 copies based on this likeness.
- 76. Photograph of Felix Shay, 3 ¼" x 4 ¼"
- 77. Photograph of George Bernard Shaw standing in front of
home, later years, 4" x 6"; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness.
- 78. Photograph of George Bernard Shaw with note, "This is me
in l948 G.B.S. to Upton Sinclair, Ayot Saint Lawrence, 6th
January l949," standing behind iron gate with words "Shaw's
Corner," 4" x 6"; total of 2 copies; with negative.
- 79. printed likeness of William Sidney Porter imprinted
"O.Henry, from a crayon drawing by heitman," 4 ½" x 7
¼".
- 80. Photograph of H. L. Mencken seated at dining table,
reading paper, 4" x 5 ½".
- 81. Photograph of Sinclair Lewis during early years, 2
½" x 3 ½"."
- 82. Photograph of Otto Kahn, 5" x 7".
- 83. Photograph of Gerrit J. Johnson imprinted "l863-l932," 3"
x5".
- 84. Photograph of T. C. Howe, Jr., 3 ½" x 5
½".
- 85. Photograph of Pryns Hopkins and unidentified woman, 3" x
5".
- 86. Photograph of Pryns Hopkins, 5" x 7 ¼".
- 87. Photograph of Pryns Hopkins inscribed "Prince Hopkins," in
kilt, 3 ½" x 5 ½".
BOX XLIX
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. Photograph of a drawing of Leo Tolstoi, 10 ½" x 14";
total of 2 copies.
- 2. Photography of Dr. Carl G. Jung inscribed "Dr. Carl G.
Jung, Zurich, Switzerland, May, l955," mounted on cardboard, 5" x
7".
- 3. Photograph of Victor L. Berger inscribed "Every century
must take care of its own problems-and the problem of the
Twentieth Century is to secure economic freedom for everybody.
New York, May 5th, l9ll. Victor L. Berger," mounted on cardboard,
6 ¾" x 9 ¾".
- 4. Photograph of Lewis Browne, 7 ½" x 9 ½".
- 5. Photograph of Witter Bynner inscribed "To Upton Sinclair
after half a century fondly," mounted on cardboard, 3 ½" x
4 ½".
- 6. Photograph of Floyd Dell inscribed "To Upton Sinclair with
the cumulative admiration, respect, and affection of nearly a
quarter of a century, 9" x 13".
- 7. Photograph of Albert Einstein with inscription in German,
ll" x 13"; total of 3 copies based on this likeness.
- 8. Photograph of George Sterling, sitting on steps, 6
½" x 9".
- 9. Photograph of George Sterling with three unidentified women
wading, 6" x 8 ½".
- 10. Photograph of George Sterling at coast with shell to his
ear, 3 ½" x 6"; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness.
- 11. Photograph of George Sterling in swimsuit on cliff, 6
½" x 9".
- 12. Photograph of George Sterling driving ostrich cart,
Cawston Ostrich Farm, South Pasadena, 6 ½" x 9
½".
- 13. Photograph of George Sterling inscribed "For Craig from
George. Aug. 20th, l9ll," right profile, 4 ½" x 6"; total
of 3 copies based on this likeness; with negative.
- 14. Photograph of George Sterling walking along a path, 6
½" x 9".
- 15. Photograph inscribed "George Sterling, author of The House
of Orchids, at Carmel," 5" x 7 ½"; total of 6 copies based
on this likeness.
- 16. Photograph of George Sterling inscribed "Taken by London
at our Bohemian Club swimming pool in the Russian River (?) Aug.
l9l5," 3" x 5 ½"; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness
- 17. Photograph of a group of 3 unidentified people along with
Charmion London, Jack London, Carrie Sterling and George
Sterling, 5" x 7"; total of 3 copies based on this likeness; with
negative.
- 18. Photograph of George Sterling standing on rocky coast,
waving, 3" x 4".
- 19. Photograph of George Sterling during early life, 5" x 7";
total of 5 copies.
- 20. Photograph of Joan London inscribed "Jack London's
daughter, Joan," 6" x 8".
- 21. Photograph of wedding party of Jennifer Hopkins and
Gilbert White mounted on a Christmas card, signed by Prynce
Hopkins, 4 ½" x 6".
- 22. Photograph of Sergein Eistenstein at the hacienda of Col.
Salager," on horseback, 6 ½" x 8 ½".
- 23. Photograph of Kate Crane Gartz, 4" x 5"; total of 2 copies
based on this likeness.
- 24. Photograph of Kate Crane Gartz, 6" x 8".
- 25. Christmas card with photograph of Dr. Rex D. Duncan, in
color, standing between two white horses, 3 ½" x 4
½".
- 26. Photograph of Mrs. William Fox with children, Mona, 8 and
Belle, 5, l9ll, seated in car, 5 ½" x 8".
- 27. Photograph of Varina Ann Davis inscribed "Winnie Davis as
Queen Comus with her honor maids, or ladies-in-waiting," 6" x 8
¼"; total of 4 copies based on this likeness.
- 28. Photograph of Luther Burbank, left profile, 5" x 7".
- 29. Photograph of Luther Burbank inscribed "Luther Burbank at
Santa Rosa," 3" x 5"; total of 3 copies based on this
likeness.
- 30. Photograph of Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. And Johan Bojer, 7
½" x 9".
- 31. Photograph of William Fox, 9" x 13"; total of 2
copies.
- 32. Photograph of King C. Gillett inscribed "To Upton Sinclair
with sincere best wishes, King C. Gillett," 5 ½" x 8
½".
- 33. Photograph of Will Hayes, 8" x 10".
- 34. Photograph of Charles Evans Hughes seated in front of CBS
microphone, 8" x 10".
- 35. Photograph of Aaron Carpenter inscribed "your sincere
friend and admirer Aaron E. Carpenter Captain U. S. I. M. O. R.
C. November 4, l920," 7 ½" x 10".
- 36. Photograph of Helen Keller and three unidentified girls 7
½" x 9 ½".
- 37. Photograph of Helen Keller and three unidentified girls
seated beside pool, 7 ½" x 9 ½".
- 38. Photograph of Dell H. Munger inscribed "Author of The Wind
Before the Dawn," 1 ½" x 2 ¾".
- 39. Photograph of William McDougall, autographed, 4 ½"
x 6 ½".
- 40. Photograph of William Allen White, 7 ½" x 9
½".
- 41. Photograph of William Allen White, 7 ½" x 9
½".
- 42. Photograph of Dr. Mirko Dus-Nikolajev, 7" x 9
½".
- 43. 8 different photographs enscribed "Ostoja."
- 44. Photograph of Aline Barnsdall, holding puppy, 3" x 4
¾"; total of 2 copies based on this likeness; with
negative.
- 45. Photograph of Fay Hopkins and child, folder with Christmas
message from Fay and Pryns Hopkins, 5" x 7".
- 46. Photograph of James Larkin Pearson inscribed "hillbilly
poet," 3" x 5".
- 47. Photograph of Walter S. Gifford, 5" x 7".
- 48. Photograph of Professor Kiang, 3" x 4 ½".
- 49. Photograph of Mahatma Gandhi, 2 ½" x 3".
- 50. Photograph of J.C. Evans inscribed "yours very sincerely,"
5 ½' x 9".
- 51. Photograph of Kate Crane Gartz, 4 ½" x 6
½'.
- 52. Photograph of Kate Crane Gartz, sitting in horse drawn
buggy, 5" x 6".
- 53. Photograph of Kate Crane Gartz, 3" x 4 ½".
- 54. Photograph of Mrs. Kate Crane Gartz, 5" x 7".
- 55. Photograph of Mrs. Kate Crane Gartz and her young son
crane Garts, 4" x 5 ½".
- 56. photograph of B. Marie Dell inscribed "B. Marie Dell, wife
of Floyd Dell," 3 ½" x 4 ½".
- 57. Photograph of Varina Ann Davis inscribed "Winnie (Varina
Ann) daughter of Jefferson Davis (as queen Comus, N. O. Mardi
Gras," 3" x 4 ¼"; total of 3 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 58. Photograph of Thomas Cochran, 5" x 7".
- 59. Photograph of Charles Chaplin during early years, 5" x
7".
- 60. Photograph of Mrs. Luther Burbank and unidentified woman,
3" x 5".
- 61. Photograph of Eleanor Grace Bennett inscribed "This was
taken in August, dear child," 2 ¼" x 4".
- 62. Photograph inscribed "Dr. Elmer Belt of L.A. in his
library with librarian," 5" x 7".
- 63. Photograph of Bernard M. Maruch, 5" x 7".
- 64. Photograph of Dr. Albert Abrams inscribed "cordial
greetings to Upton Sinclair, Dec. 25, '21," 3" x 4"
- 65. Photograph of Martha Olin with note on back "old time
secretary," 3 ½" x 5".
- 66. Photograph of Luther Burbank, 3 ¼" x 5
¼".
BOX L
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. 12 photographs, 14 copies, of unidentified men and women
pictured together, various sizes.
- 2. 18 photographs, 19 copies of unidentified men, names are
inscribed on front or back but are illegible, various sizes.
- 3. Photograph of 8 men imprinted "from the modern Sleb,
descendants of the Rechabites, a desert people of the Old
Testament," 8" x 10"; with negative.
- 4. 3 photographs of crowds standing outside of 3 different
banks that closed their doors to the public, each inscribed on
back, 7" x 9".
- 5. 14 photographs of unidentified women, various sizes.
- 6. 9 photographs of unidentified men, various sizes.
- 7. Photograph of flooded street; stranded cars, 2 ½" x
4".
- 8. 4 photographs of a soviet armed forces parade.
- 9. Photograph of 17 people inscribed "…'Cajun' family I
took several years ago down a Bayou' in Louisiana…," 5" x
7".
- 10. 3 photographs and 21 negatives of unidentified man, woman
and young boy,
- 11. Photograph of unidentified people riding on top deck of
bus on crowded street, 3" x 5".
- 12. 27 photographs of exhibits and of advertisements featuring
works of Sinclair, various sizes; total of 32 copies with 14
negatives.
- 13. 9 photographs from a packet marked "miscellaneous
photographs of Upton Sinclair's foreign translators and
publishers," various sizes.
- 14. 67 photographs and 12 postcards from a packet marked
"miscellaneous foreign photographs sent to Sinclair" many with
Russian inscriptions; various sizes.
- 15. 17 photographs related to Sinclair's EPIC campaign,
various sizes; with 11 negatives.
- 16. 52 items from the "art" file of Upton Sinclair, mostly
photograph or print reproductions, various sizes.
BOX LI
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
- 1. 5 photographs related to the Sacco & Vanzetti case, various
sizes; total of 15 copies.
- 2. 9 photographs related to exhibition of the works of Upton
and Mary Sinclair and address of Upton Sinclair at the centennial
celebration of the U.S.-Japan Amity Treaty held at Tokyo, May
l960; 14 copies, various sizes, with negatives.
- 3. 3 photographs of a castle, 5 ½" x 4".
- 4. Three photographs of a coat of arms, 5 ½" x 4".
- 5. Photograph of a monument for Alice B. and Benj. Strandstra
inscribed "Moved from the Capitalistic Anti-Christian System Into
Eternal peace," 6" x 3 ½".
- 6. Photograph of a newspaper article about Harry Kemp "who
achieved 'fame' some time ago by eloping with Mrs. Upton
Sinclair," 8" x 10"; total of 2 copies.
- 7. Photograph of a cartoon depicting the Puritans (l6l4) and
the Rockefellers (l914) going to church, all are carrying guns, 9
½" x 4 ½"; with negative.
- 8. Photograph of a poem with illustration, a note from Upton
Sinclair is included, 5" x 7"; total of 2 copies; with
negative.
- 9. Photograph of Upton Sinclair's diploma awarding him the
Pulitzer Prize for Dragon Teeth a novel published in l942, 14" x
11".
- 10. Photographs of the U.S.S. Sinclair named in honor of
Arthur Sinclair, 5" x 4"; total of two copies based on this
likeness.
- 11. Photograph of the plaque which names the U.S.S. Sinclair
in honor of Arthur Sinclair, 14" x 11"; with negative.
- 12. 3 photographs of Upton Sinclair's home at Lake Elsimore,
5" x 3 ½".
- 13. 2 photographs of the home of King C. Gillette.
- 14. Photographs of the home of Floyd Dell, 2 ½" x 3
½".
- 15. 3 photographs of Upton Sinclair's home in Pasadena
inscribed "The Pink House," various sizes.
- 16. 9 photographs and two negatives of the home of Upton
Sinclair in Monrovia, California, various sizes.
- 17. Photographs inscribed "Princeton, N.J. farm house where
Jungle was written l904-l905," 5" x 7"; with 2 negatives.
- 18. Photograph inscribed "cabin on Lake Massawippi, Canada,
where S. [Upton Sinclair] write his first serious novel,
Springtime and Harvest," 8" x 10"; with negative.
- 19. Postcard of Elks Home, Norfolk, Va. Inscribed "Formly Home
of Captain Arthur Sinclair,: 3 ½" x 5"; with negative.
- 20. Photograph inscribed "home of Judge A McC [Allan
McCaskell] Kimbrough at Gulfport, Mississippi (Summer place), "
2" x 3".
- 21. Photograph inscribed "Sacred to the memory of Captain
Arthur Sinclair of Norfolk, Virginia who perished in the wreck of
the 'Leila,' January 14th l865," 5" x 7"; with negative.
- 22. Photograph of a painting of a sailboat inscribed "the
Flying Fish of George T. Sinclair in [Wilks?] Exploring
Expedition," various sizes; total of 2 copies based on this
likeness; with negative.
- 23. Photograph of four tables inscribed "Brought by Captain
Arthur Sinclair (l8l0-l865) from Japan," 8" x 10"; total of 3
copies based on this likeness; with negative.
- 24. 30 miscellaneous negatives for which we have no
prints.
- 25. 130 photographs of scenes from films and plays based on
work of Sinclair.
BOX LII
Top
Photographs of Sinclair (cont.)
Photographs of Sinclair and others (oversize)
- 1. Photograph of Sinclair in middle years, wearing hat, full
face view, 9 ½" x 15 ½"; total of 3 copies; same
likeness as Box XLIII, Item 30.
- 2. Color photograph of Mary Craig Sinclair as a young lady,
full face view.
- 3. Photograph of Sinclair speaking to a crowd seated at dinner
tables, 10" x 20".
- 4. Photograph of Sinclair standing on stage with 3
unidentified men, crowd seated at dinner table, inscribed
"Banquet in Honor of Upton Sinclair, Candidate for Governor of
California Sunset Masonic Temple-Los Angeles, Calif. April 14,
l934," 10" x 20"; total of 2 copies.
- 5. Photograph of a group of people inscribed "Original
Official Staff of the Volunteer Army of 'EPIC' crusaders,
supporting Upton Sinclair, world-famous Author, Economist and
Humanitarian, for Governor of California, in the Dramatic
Revolution of l934, to 'End Poverty in Civilization' Photographed
before Election Day of November 6th l934."
- 6. Photograph of [Kate Crane Gartz?] inscribed to Upton
Sinclair from Elsa Eisenstein 7 ½" x 9 ½"; mounted
on cardboard.
- 7. Photograph of a painting of Leo Tolstoi, 13 ½" x 10
½"; mounted on cardboard.
BOX LIII
Top
Disc Recordings of Upton Sinclair
- 1. "Upton Sinclair address." 16 disc recording, one side only
33 1/3 RPM, Educational Recorders Inc., Pasadena, California.
Concerns the development of Sinclair as a social reformer. "53
years ago the man [Upton Sinclair] started his college
education"' thus the date of the address may be about l946.
- 2. "Address by Upton Sinclair." 16" disc recording, one side
only, 33 ½ RPM, Educational Recorders Inc., Pasadena,
California. "I have been asked to speak over the radio to the
conquered peoples of Europe."
- 3. "Upton Sinclair talk" 12" disc recording. Side one is part
one; side two is part two. 78 RPM. U.S. Dept. of State,
International Broadcasting Division, date 7/13/49. Protests
exploitation of his name by the U.S.S.R. [Reel-to-reel copy on
5th floor wooden shelves]
- 4. "Campaign Chorus for Downey and Sinclair. With Sheridan
Downey, Jerry Wilford and the Epic Trio." 10" disc recording, one
side only, 78 RPM. Titan Production Company (TR1165). Too
misshapen to play without expert correction (partial cassette
available 4/29/92).
BOX LIV
Top
Sinclair memorabilia
- 1. A desk name plate with the name "Vot. Upton Sinclair" on
it; contains an inkwell on top.
- 2. A desk name plate with Upton Sinclair's name on it,
inscribed "A 100 piece Souvenir to use on desk or (Take off
block) and use on door, hand made by an unknown man for a well
known man…Otis M. Southworth."
- 3. A Townsend Harris Medal inscribed on verso, "The Associate
Alumni of the College of the City of New York. For Notable
Achievement Upton Sinclair '97."
- 4. A plaster wall plaque of a bee with the words "E.P.I.C. I
Produce, I Defend."
- 5. A medal inscribed "Commonwealth Club of California. Founded
l903." On verso, inscription "Commonwealth Club of California,
l943 Literature Award to Upton Sinclair author 'Wide is the
Gate!.."
- 6. 5 pen and pencils of Upton Sinclair's.
- 7. 2 wooden napkin ring holders with "E P I C" inlayed on
metal.
- 8. Sea shell with a deer and Upton Sinclair's name carved on
it.
- 9. Upton Sinclair's dental x-rays.
- 10. Admission ticket to Upton Sinclair's "Jungle," on the
Screen May 9th at 8:00 p.m. in Assembly Hall, Trinity Auditorium
Building, 839 South Grand Avenue.
- 11. Upton Sinclair's membership card of The Young People's
Epic League.
BOX LV
Top
Sinclair memorabilia (cont.)
- 1. Silver cup inscribed Gulf Coast Tennis Tournament l9l5
Singles Champion Upton Sinclair.
- 2. Trophy inscribed "Page One Award in Letters to Upton
Sinclair author of hundreds of books and papers including 'The
Jungle' and 'The Brass Check' over a span of 60 years all of
which contributed immeasurably to the advancement of democracy
and public enlightenment l962."
- 3. Slate plaque inscribed "UAW Social Justice Award to Upton
Sinclair with admiration and affection and in thankful
appreciation for the great moral courage and social consciousness
that motivated your writings as you exposed the inhuman
exploitation of labor in America's industrial jungles. Your life
and your work have contributed immeasurably to the extension of
the frontiers of SOCIAL JUSTICE." (Shelved separately)
Photographs of Upton Sinclair-Detailed Listing
- N.B. the mark * preceding the description indicates possession
of corresponding negative.
- I. Photos for the period l878-l895
- A. Sinclair as a young child (approx. 5 years) 4 x 6 sepia. Standing in Scottish-type suit.
- 1. Same, with photographer's advert., bottom edge.
- 2. BW glossies, 4 x 5 (3 copies)
- B. 1886. Sepia, 4 x 6. Head and shoulders, full-face.
- 1. Same 4-1/4 x 6 ½.
- 2. BW glossy enlargement of (B), 8 x 10. Reprod. Both sides original.
- 3. BW glossy enlargement of (1) 8 x 10. Reprod. Both sides original.
- *C. 1886. Sepia, 4 x 5 ¾. Standing, full-face.
- 1. BW glossy, 8 x 10. Reprod. Both sides original.
- D. "Upton Sinclair in the dunce cap" n.d. Sepia, x8-1/2 x 6 ½. Sinclair in cone-shaped hat, back row of group photo.
- II. 1900-1913.
- A. "U.S. and David at Princeton, 1906" BW glossy, 4 x 5 5/8. Seated on porch, facing, arm around child standing at side.
- 1. BW glossy enlargement, 8 x 10.
- *B. "Too poor to get a hair-cut" c. 1903. BW glossy, 4-1/2 x 7. Seated with open book, full-face.
- *C. 1905 (N.Y.) 6-1/2 x 5, BW mounted on pasteboard, seated, full-face, at foot of tree with dog.
- 1. BW glossies, 5-1/4 x 3-7/8 (4 copies).
- *D. l905 ("Long-haired photo") 4-1/4 x 6 3/8 sepia, head and shoulders, ¾ front face.
- 1. BW glossies (4), 4 x 5.
- 2. BW glossy, 4 x 6.
- 3. Negatives (2)
- 4. BW, circular, on magazine stock, small size (2 copies).
- E. c. 1906. BW glossy, 8 x 10. Seated on porch, to waist level, ¾ front face.
- F. "Upton at Princeton on the farm" 7-1/2 x 9-5/8 sepia lithograph; copyright date l906 printed lower left border; Sinclair on horseback, facing camera.
- 1. BW glossy snapshot, 2-1.2 x 3-1.4.
- 2. BW glossy, 8-16x10.
- *H. n.d. 5 x 7 BW glossy. Seated in ornate chair, full face. (2 copies).
- I. n.d. 3-7/8 x 5-3/8 sepia. Seated, facing.
- J. n.d. 4-1/2 x 7 sepia. Head and shoulders. Marred and unclear.
- K. n.d. 4-1/2 x 7 sepia. Head and shoulders, full-face, marred and unclear.
- *L. l9l3? 5-5/8 x 9-11/16 sepia. Bust, partly shadowed.
- M. l9l3? 4-5/8 x 6-5/8 brown tinted glossy. Seated, half-length, ¾ front fact, smiling.
- *N l9l3; 4 x 6-1/4 sepia, mounted on dark stock. Seated on edge of table, slightly angled to camera (oversize)
- 1. BW glossy, 5 x 7 (2 copies)
- 2. BW glossy, 8 x 10.
- *O. l9l3; 3-3.4 x 5-7/8 sepia, mounted on dark stock. Bust, ¾ front. MS on verso indentifies as taken at time of wedding with MCS.
- P. l9l3? 4 x 6 BW, mounted on cardboard folder; shown to waist level, full face, smiling.
- Q. c.l9l3. 5 x 7 BW, mounted black cardboard. Standing, leaning on tree, in hiking clothes.
- R. 8 x 10 glossy, reproduction of page of mother's scrap-book of early printed writings-riddle and jokes.
- III. l9l4-l929.
- *A c.l9l5. BW glossy, 7-7/8 x 9-7/8. Standing, with hoe in jungle surroundings.
- 1. BW dull surface, 7-1/2 x 9-9/16, mounted on larger dark cardboard stock (oversize).
- C. l9l9. BW dull finish 7-1/2 x 9-1/2. Head and shoulders, full-face.
- *D. l9l9. BW dull finish, 7-1/2 x 9-1/2. Head and shoulders, ¾ front.
- 1. BW glossy, 8 x l0 (2 copies)
- 2. Brown-tinted glossy, 8 x 10.
- E. l9l9. Brown-tinted flat finish, 7-1/2 x 9-1/2. Standing, in garden, white suit with hat, one foot on edge of pool.
- 1. Brown-tinted glossy, 8x10.
- F. l9l9. Brown-tinted, flat finish, 7-1/2 x 9-1/2. Head and shoulders, profile.
- *1. Brown-tinted glossy, 8 x 10.
- G. n.d. BW dull finish, 7-1/2 x 11-1/4. Head and shoulders, profile.
- H. l922. Sepia, 6-13/16 x 10, smaller photo inset in larger tan background. Head and shoulders, head turned to face camera. MS dedication: "To Little Mother with love from Upton".
- 1. Same, without dedication (2 copies)
- I. n.d. sepia, 3-5/8 x 4-3/8. Serving in tennis.
- *J. l923, sepia. 6 x 9-1/2. Standing, ¾ length, ¾ front, hand on hip, in garden.
- K. n.d. BW glossy, 7 x 5. Standing, half-length, playing violin outdoors.
- L. l9l7. BW glossy, matted (9-3/8 x 7-3/8, print size) Serving in So. California Tennis Championship (0versize).
- M. c. l927. BW glossy, 8 x 10, (reprod. From autographed photo). Standing, handing book to woman, wearing sign "OIL! Upton Sinclair, Fig Leaf edition." MS on verso: Protest on police ban of "Oil" in Boston (selling on street)".
- N. l927. Cover of Russian magazine "Ogonek", BW glossy 4-5/8 x 7-1.4: Sinclair on cover, reading Ogonek, in conjunction magazine's printing "Boston".
- O. l926, sepia glossies, 6-3/4 x 10. Head and shoulders, wearing tennis clothes and hat, (14 copies).
- 1. Negative reversed, BW glossies 6-1.2 x 9-1/4 (12 copies)
- *2. BW dull finish copies of (N) 4-3/4 x 6-3/4 (6 copies)
- P. l9l7. BW glossies, 5 x 4. Serving tennis (reduced from III.K. oversize).
- IV. l930-l949.
- C. At Centinella Bowl, l934. BW glossy, 5 x 4. Standing under umbrella, audience at back (2 copies).
- 1. BW glossies, 6-1/8x5 (2 copies).
- E. Sequence at radio microphone, c. l933. Sepia, 4 x 4-7/8.
- 1. Seated, facing.
- *2-5. Reading into microphone, poses only slightly different.
- F. Sequence at typewriter, c. l933. Sepia, 4-7/8 x 3-7/8.
- *1. Typing, profile ¾ length.
- *2. Sorting papers, profile.
- *3. Sorting papers, slight change in pose.
- *4. ¾ front, holding papers
- *5. Typing, taken from behind machine, facing U.S.
- G. l933. Sequence taken at Beverly Hills hse. Sepia prints.
- 1. 3-7/8 x 4-7/8. Half-length, reclining on left elbow on grass, reading newspaper.
- 2. 4 x 6. Same position, facing, no newspaper
- *3. 4-3/4 x 3-3/4. Reclining, ¾ length, reading "Immediate Epic" surrounded by newspapers
- 4. 6 x 4. )large borders). Same position as (3) facing camera
- *5. 6 x 4. Same position, facing, pamphlet on ground
- 6. 4-7/8 x 4. Reclining, full length, reading newspaper
- 7. 5 x 4. Same as (6), paper on the ground
- 8. 4 x 4-7/8. Reclining, ½ length, reading newspaper
- 9. 4-7/8 x 3-7/8. Seated on grass, playing with dog
- 10. 4 x 4-7/8. Standing before house, reading newspaper.
- H. n.d. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. Half length, talking on telephone.
- I. n.d. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. ¾ length, facing standing before book-case, smiling
- J. l932. BW dull finish, 7 x 10. Head and shoulders, full face long hair (2 copies).
- 1. Same, glossy.
- 2. Recent BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10.
- K. l931. BW glossy, 1-1/2 x 3-3/8, clipped from postcard. Standing, ¾ length, hand in pocket, ¾ front.
- L. n.d. BW dull finish, 8 x 10. Bust, profile. (6 copies).
- 1. 2 x 2-7/8, on bookleaf.
- 2. 8 x 10, BW glossy
- 3. 8 x 11-9/16, BW handbill, as political candidate, with signature, (6 copies)
- M. c.1934. 8x10-3/16. BW glossy. Head and shoulders, full face, smiling. (3 copies).
- N. l934. BW dull finish, white mat borders, 11 13-7/8. Bust, profile
- O. l934. Sepia, 9-1/8 x 11-7/16, on large gray mat. Bust, ¾ front
- P. l934. Sepia, 9-1/2 x 11-5/8, on large gray mat. Bust, full face
- Q. l935. Sepia, 8-9/16 x 9-5/8. Standing on porch, petting dog. MS dedication R bottom.
- 1. Same, no dedication (3 copies)
- 2. BW glossy, 8 x 10-3/16 (9 copies)
- R. c. l938. BS glossy, 7 x 9. Head and shoulders, speaking, full face.
- T. n.d. BW glossy, 7 x 9. Standing in garden, giving food to dog (2 copies).
- U. Sequence, c. l945, at "Pink House".
- *1. As published in My Life in Letters: BW, book photo, 7-7/8 x 5-7/8. Seated on couch in study, arms on knees, facing
- a. BW glossy, 7 x 5 (2 copies)
- b. BW glossy, 10 x 8-3/16 (4 copies)
- 2. BW dull finish, 7-3/4 x 9-7/8. Boarding auto, facing
- 3. BW dull finish, 7-3/4 x 9-7/8. Profile, seated on bench
- 4. BW dull finish, 7-3/4 x 9-7/8. Leaning on tree, smiling, hand on hip
- 5. BW dull finish, 7-3/4 x 9-7/8. In carport, before pillar, facing;
- a. BW glossy 8 x 10. Enlarged, auto blocked out
- 6. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. Standing, hand on hip, ¾ front garden, (5 copies)
- 7. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. Standing, reading before bookcase (3 copies)
- 8. BW dull finish, 9-7/8 x 7-3/4. Seated, profile, revising book;
- a. BW glossy, 10 x 8-3/16
- b. BW glossy, 7 x 4-7/8, with publicity legend lower edge (2 copies)
- 9. BW glossy, 8-3/16 x 10. Seated, ¾ front, writing (2 copies)
- V. "After Epic" (c. l934?) BW glossies 10 x 8. Seated at desk, profile, writing. (5 copies)
- V. l950-l959
- *A. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 7. Seated on couch, arms on knees ¾ front.
- *B. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 7-1/8. Slightly different exposure from above.
- C. c. l952. BW glossy, 5 x 7. Bust, ¾ front, name in caption, lower edge (17 copies)
- D. c. l953? BW glossy, 10 x 8. Before bookcase, profile, ½ length.
- E. c. l953? BW glossy, 10 x 8. Head and shoulders, profile, holding book (2 copies)
- F. c. l953? BW glossy, 10 x 8. Head and shoulders, profile, holding book (with oriental script on cover).
- G. c. l957. BW glossy, 5-1/8 x 7. Head and shoulders, ¾ front, with portrait. Mary Craig Sinclair in background.
- *H. l959? BW glossies, 5 x 7. Head and shoulders, facing, before same portrait as in (G). (4 copies).
- I. c. l959. BW glossy, 7-1/8 x 9. Bust, full face, speaking.
- *J. c. l959. BW glossy, 5 x 7-1/16. Seated at typewriter, facing. (2 copies).
- 1. BW glossy, 8-1/16 x 9-15/16, (2 copies)
- K. c. l959. BW glossy, 7-1/8 x 9. Seated, facing, half-length, writing outdoors.
- L. Sequence at Arizona home. 81st birthday, l959. BW glossies.
- 1. 7-7/8 x 7-7/8, ¾ front, half length, standing before house
- 2. 3-1/2 x 3-1.2. Seated, facing, holding newspaper
- a. 5-3/8 x 5-1/2. Same
- b. 8-1/8 x 8. (2 copies)
- 3. 3-1/2 x 3-1/2. Seated, ¾ front, reading
- 4. 3-1/2 x 3-1/2. Seated, profile, reading
- 5. 3-1/2 x 3-1/2. Seated. Profile, reading
- a. 5-1/2 x 5-1/2 (2 copies)
- b. 8 x 8-/18. (4 copies)
- 6. 5 x 4-1/8. Seated, ¾ front, hands on knees.
- 7. 5-3/8 x 5-3/8. Standing, full length, at corner of house
- M. n.d. BW dull finish, 8 x 10. Seated, ¾ front, reading the book, "My lifetime…." (3 copies)
- N. n.d. BW dull 8 x 10. Standing, half length, profile, before window.
- O. l959. "Birthday picture". BW glossy, 3-1/2 x 3-1/2. Standing, half length, profile, tending flowers.
- P. n.d. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. Seated in rocking chair, full length, facing.
- Q. n.d. BW glossy, 8-1/8 x 10. Seated, head and shoulders, head turned to face.
- R. c. l959. BW glossy, 9x7-1/8. Standing, half-length, showing pictures of Shaw and Einstein.
- VI. l960-l968
- A. l960. 3 color slides, various poses, outdoors.
- B. l961. Newspaper clipping, 4-1/4 x 6. Wedding picture. (Verso, article concerning same)
- C. l96l. BW glossy, 5 x 7-l/8. Standing, full length, with may S. (2 copies)
- 1. BW glossy, 9-1/8 x 13-l.4.
- D. l96l. BW glossy, 5-1/2 x 7. Standing, profile, half-length, with May and Armour, ® and wife.
- E. l96l. BW glossy, 8-l/8 x 10. Seated, profile, reading (2 copies)
- F. l963. BW glossy, 7 x 9-1/8. Profile, addressing audience at City College, New York.
- G. l962. Sequence of three photos, BW dull finish, 8 x 5. Different takes of interview promoting "Autobiography".
- H. l963. BW glossy, 5-11/16 x 3-1/2. Kneeling, group family snapshot
- I. l964. BW glossy, 3-1/2 x 3-1/2. Bust, ¾ front, dim exposure.
- J. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 4. Sinclair and May, in two slightly differing exposures, head and shoulders, both facing.
- K. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 4. Sinclair and unknown. Half length, ¾ front, shaking hands.
- L. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 4. Sinclair and unknown, shaking hands, half-length, profile.
- M. n.d. BW glossy, 5 x 4. Sinclair and same as in (L); half-length, ¾ front, shaking hands.
- N. n.d. BW glossy, 7-7/8 x 9-3/4. Seated, half length, ¾ front, writing in garden.
- O. n.d. BW glossy, 9-5/8 x 7-5/8. Bust facing
- P. n.d. BW glossy, 7-3/4 x 9-5/8. Seated, ¾ length, ¾ front face; reading in garden.
- Q. n.d. BW glossy, 7-11/16 x 9-11/16. Seated, ¾, front smiling; papers in lap.
- R. n.d. BW glossy, 7-7/8 x 9-5/8. Typing, profile.
- S. n.d. Color transparency, 10 x 8. Seated at desk, head turned to face.
- T. n.d. color transp., 10 x 8. Seated at desk, reading; profile.
- U. n.d. BW glossy, 8 x 10. Bust, laughing.
- V. n.d. BW glossy, 7-1/8 x 8-7/8. Head and shoulders, turned to almost face as converses with woman.
- W. l963. BW glossy, 10 x 8. Sinclair at reception given by NY chapter League for Industrial Democracy; group photo with Sinclair at center
- X. c. l959. BW glossy, 7-1/8 x 9. Seated, half length, facing, holding World's End to camera
- Y. n.d. BW glossy, 10-1/8 x 8-1/8. Sinclair, profile being interviewed by Mittleman, (Earl)
- Z. l965. BW glossy, 4-1/4 x 5-7/8. Bust, facing, smiling; copy of photo dedicated to John Dwyer.
- AA. l965. BW glossy, 2 strips of photos, 6 total, 2-1/4 x 7-l/8. Head and shoulders, various positions.
- BB. n.d. BW glossy, 7-3/4 x 9-5/8. Full length back view; pacing in his Monrovia study.
Additional Negatives of Sinclair Photos
- 1. C. l935? Standing, full length, in wooded area.
- 2. c. l928? Head and shoulders, head turned to face.
- 3. c. l933. Cover "Liberty" magazine, with take of Sinclair.
- 4. c. l933. With campaign bus.
- 5. c. l960. Profile, hands clasped between knees.
- 6. c. l933. "Radio speech" - on outdoor podium before audience.
Materials in Oversize Folder in Sinclair Collection
- 01. 4 sided fireplace at helicon Home Colony, l907. Looking
toward atrium garden. BW matted in white folder, 10 x 12-3/4.
- 02. Sinclair portrait, taken at Helicon, l907. BW dull matted
in white folder, 10 x 12-3/4. Seated, head and shoulders, head
turned to face camera (Oversize)
- 03. Office staff of EPIC campaign, l934. BW dull finish,
19-1/8 x 11-1/8.
- *04. Small tables and porcelain ware, Sinclair heirlooms. BW
glossy, 7-5/8 x 9-5/8. Together with negative.
- 05. Sinclair, Mary (?) and Fred (?). before campaign bus. BW
glossy, 10 x 8-1/8.
- *06. Farmhouse (Princeton, NJ), where The Jungle was written,
l905-06. BW glossy, 7x5. With negative.
- *07. Arrival of "Fliver King" in Detroit, l937. Truck standing
before building, published in "Autobiography". BW glossy, 10 x
8-1/8. With negative (2 copies).
- 010. Monrovia house, front door. BW glossy, 8 x 10. (good
photo)
- 011. Pasadena house, BW dull finish, 5 x 3-1/8.
- 012. Monrovia house. BW glossy, 10 x 8.
- 013. Cabin in Canada where U.S. wrote Springtime and Harvest
BW glossy, 10 x 8.
- 014. Print of cover "Army and Navy Weekly", v. 1, no. 2. BW
glossy, 8 x 10; incl. "Winning a Naval Appointment" and "Mark
Mallory's Heroism".
- 015. Print of cover of "True Blue" v. 1, no. 1. BW glossy, 8 x
10 (includes "Clif Faraday on the New York").