Ellen Gates Starr papers | Series Descriptions | 1659-1975 | 2 linear feet |
| Although there is some material dating from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the bulk of this series dates from the mid 1800s to mid 1900s. It consists of three subseries: the Starr family, Jane Addams, and Lillie family. The Starr family subseries contains general family records and material related to Ellen Gates Starr and other individual family members (Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell, Caleb Allen Starr, Comfort Starr, Eliza Allen Starr, Jeanne Stutz Starr, Josephine Susanna Starr, Oliver Starr, Susan Gates Childs Starr, Wesley Starr, William Starr, Elizabeth Angela Starr Van Patten and Eunice Allen Starr Wellington). The general family material includes genealogical records (1781-1949) which contain biographical notes and articles giving the family background in Deerfield, Massachusetts before the family moved to Illinois in 1855. The biographical material on Ellen Gates Starr consists of biographical notes by Josephine Starr (1960), three address books, one small diary (1938), her breviary and miscellaneous memorabilia. There is also financial material including bills and receipts (1938), correspondence (1937-39), and items related to her Hull House pension (1935-36). In addition there are clippings, speeches, writings and testimonials related to Starr's activity with the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (1915-16); obituaries and memorials (1940); and her wills (1925-40). In addition to general biographical material (wills, obituaries, clippings and memorabilia) related to other members of the Starr family, of particular interest are Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell's diaries (1891-1933), sea journals of Caleb Allen Starr (circa 1840-60) and William Starr (1762), Jeanne Stutz Starr's childhood memories of Switzerland (1920), early deeds and guardianship papers of Oliver Starr (1806-88), and a copy of Life and Letters of Eliza Allen Starr. The Jane Addams subseries contains obituaries, articles and tributes (1935-39), Hull House clippings and brochures (1935, 1967-69) and an annual financial report (1932), and material related to a tribute to Addams by the WILPF (1935). The final subseries consists of memoirs and reminiscences of Starr's friend, Frances Crane Lillie (1913, 1967), and her daughter Mary Prentice Lillie Barrow (1970). |
| 1791-1975 | 4.25 linear feet |
| Correspondence comprises the largest series in the Starr papers. It is arranged in two subseries, Family and Third Party. The first subseries begins with the primary correspondent, Ellen Gates Starr, followed by family members alphabetically. Where it applies, each person's correspondence is divided into two sections: family and friends and associates. Ellen's correspondence contains both incoming and outgoing letters filed together chronologically. Other family correspondence contains letters authored (i.e. outgoing) by that person. The friends and associates section contains both outgoing and incoming letters. Although Ellen's letters comprise the largest volume, there are substantial blocks of correspondence of Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell, Albert Childs Starr, Eliza Allen Starr, Josephine Starr, Susan Gates Childs Starr, and Elizabeth Starr Van Patten. Ellen Gates Starr's correspondence covers more than fifty years of her life and subjects such as the founding of Hull House, her work there, and her various trips to Europe. In addition it deals with her interest in literature, art and fine binding, and her religious life and final reception into the Roman Catholic Church in 1920. Of particular interest is Ellen's correspondence with Deerfield photographers and cousins Mary and Frances Allen (1884-89). It includes two Allen photographs of Deerfield and Ellen's letter of September 15, 1889, in which she tells of Jane Addams and the opening of Hull House. Also of interest are three folders of correspondence with her aunt, Mary Starr Blaisdell, as well as letters to other family members that relate Hull House experiences. The correspondence with Friends and associates is notable for the circa eighty letters between Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. These include a record book of copies of letters between Starr and Addams (1896), which also contains clippings about early Hull House. There are also letters from Addams to Starr from Rockford and Cedarville (1877-83) and Europe (1883-85). The correspondence continues to 1931, four years before Addams' death. There is also a letter from Starr to Jane's stepmother, Anna Addams (1888). These letters reveal their close friendship and wide interests and include letters in which the idea of Hull House is first mentioned, its purchase, final realization in 1889, and growth into a world renowned social settlement. Starr's correspondents also include a number of Catholic priests (mostly of the Benedictine Order with which she was closely associated), nuns of the Order, other close personal friends, and early residents of Hull House, many of whom were influential men and women in Chicago, Boston, New York, Washington. Other notable correspondents are Frank and Frances Lillie and Mary Hawes Wilmarth, T.J. Cobden-Sanderson (founder and owner of the Dove Press in London, under whom she learned the art of fine binding), Frederic Delano, Harold Ickes, and Vida Scudder. Friends who sent greetings on her eightieth birthday (1938) include Emily Greene Balch, Alice Hamilton, Harold Ickes, Jacob Potofsky, Ruth Sessions, Sidney Hillman, Vida Scudder, Thornton Wilder, and Emily Greene Balch. There are also letters about bookbinding from T.J. Cobden-Sanderson (1895-1916); condolence letters on Jane Addams' death (1935); letters from John Handly, a spiritual advisor and friend (1922-35); Alice Hamilton (1936); Sidney Hillman about the Amalgamated Clothing Workers strike (1915); Jane Addams' nephew James Webber Linn about a biography of Addams (1935); Vida Scudder (1915-29); her friend, Cora Vawter (1912-39) and two letters from Thornton Wilder (1930-35). There are also Wilder letters in the Third party subseries. There are thirteen folders of correspondence with Charles H.A. Wager (1906-35), head of the English Department at Oberlin College about their shared intellectual and spiritual interests. Wager and Starr became friends when they were both teaching at Chautauqua in the early 1890s. He followed Starr's preparation for conversion to Catholicism with interest. Correspondence with Frances Crane Lillie (1906-40), Johanna Doniat (1912-39), Mary Hawes Wilmarth (1905-16), Mrs. Carl Linden (1912-40), Jane Reoch (1907-23), Edward L. Burchard, and Caroline Urie (1936) includes Hull House related discussions and reminiscences. Frances Crane Lillie was a devoted friend, benefactor and early associate at Hull House. These letters reflect Starr and Lillie's parallel interest in the Anglican Church. Lillie was also a convert to Roman Catholicism and the correspondence mostly reflects their mutual religious interests. Other notable Starr family are those of Susan Starr who wrote letters to her husband Caleb during a prolonged visit to Deerfield with her four children in 1863, in which she describes farming and the attitude of rural New Englanders toward the Civil War; Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell who wrote to her family up until 1931 including letters from Europe (1881-82), and Josephine Starr, whose letters reflect her close relationship with her aunt, Ellen Gates Starr. There are also letters from Jane Addams to Blaisdell (1914, 1918). Josephine Starr's correspondence includes nine letters from Jane Addams (1930-31). Subjects related to Ellen including the arts and crafts movement (1972), an exhibit at Hull House (1973-74), T.J. Cobden-Sanderson (1974), and condolence letters on Ellen's death, and the sale of her books (1973-75) are addressed in Josephine's correspondence. Notable correspondents include Florence Converse (1918-20), Jill Ker Conway (1964-75), Constance McLaughlin Green (1970), Lydia Bush -Brown Head (1959-74), Frances Crane Lillie (1938-39), Archibald MacLeish (1965), Laura Lord Scales (1968-73), and Vida Scudder (1918-50). Third Party correspondence includes letters of Catherine Breshkovsky (1910-15), Johanna Doniat (1919-41), Cora Vawter (1918), and four letters from Thornton Wilder to Charles Wager (1917-18). The Breshkovsky correspondence includes published letters from Russia (1917) and typed copies of letters to Alice Stone Blackwell (1911, 1915). Letters of Johanna Doniat and Cora Vawter are about Ellen Gates Starr and Charles H.A. Wager. The letters from Thornton Wilder include comments on his college life, writings, and views on the war, a sonnet written to Charles Wager and a manuscript of a short Christmas playlet entitled "The Last Miracle Of The Graal." |
| 1841-1935 | 2 linear feet |
| This series contains five subseries: Ellen Gates Starr, Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell, Eliza Allen Starr, Jeanne Stutz Starr, and Thomas J. Cobden-Sanderson. The works and writings of Ellen Gates Starr are arranged by subject: bookbinding, drawings, religion, Christian art, and miscellaneous writings and notes. The material on bookbinding includes articles by and about Starr and her craft (1897-1916). (See also Clark, T.J. The Arts and Crafts Movement in America, 1876-1916 located on the shelf). There are also photographs of her bindings and her studio at Hull House in SERIES IV. PHOTOGRAPHS - Miscellaneous. Drawings are primarily flower studies. Additional studies are located in the flat file. Starr's religious writings consist of published material (1909-37) on Catholicism, Protestantism, and spirituality generally: typescripts and notes (1928, n.d.); and notebooks containing meditations and notes (1897-1935, n.d.). In addition there are notes and printed material on Christian art (1906, n.d.). The miscellaneous writings and notes contain Starr's work on socialism and settlements. There is also a folder of undated notes on The Odyssey, John Ruskin, and William Morris. Mary Houghton Starr Blaisdell's drawings and art (1882, n.d.) include diagrams for Ellen's books; and her travel notes and speeches (1899-1903), particularly her trip to Egypt, Palestine, Corfu, Rome and Spain, which were probably used as lectures. There is large body of Eliza Allen Starr's work, consisting of writings on art and religion (1841-1901), lectures and art courses (1883-97), poems and sketches, plus six volumes of poetry and religious writings. She also contributed to Girlhood's Hand-Book Of Woman edited by Eleanor Donnelly which is located in the Sophia Smith Collection's Women: Position and Progress collection. The remaining subseries consist of Jeanne Stutz Starr's lectures on Faust (n.d.); and a folder of material on T.J. Cobden-Sanderson containing brochures and announcements and articles about the Dove Press. There is also a first sheet from Dove Press in the flat file. |
| 1862-1968 | 1.5 linear feet |
| This series contains circa 250 photographs and is arranged in five subseries: Family, Friends and associates of Ellen Gates Starr, Family homes, Miscellaneous and Albums. The first subseries contains photographs of Ellen Gates Starr and Starr family members arranged alphabetically. The Friends and associates of Ellen Gates Starr subseries includes, among others, Jane Addams (1890-1920) and Thomas J. Cobden-Sanderson and his family (1888-99, n.d.). Family homes contains photographs of Eliza Allen Starr's home in Chicago and family homes in Deerfield and Conway, Massachusetts, and Durand, Illinois. The Miscellaneous photographs include Starr's bindings and her bindery at Hull House and crosses in Ireland photographed by her friend Cora Vawter in 1939. The three Albums (1886-1904; 1907-29; and 1904-14) are family photograph albums. The first is primarily of Josephine Starr; the second includes World War I photographs. There are photographs of Ellen Gates Starr throughout. |
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