Manuscripts
John Muir letter to Katharine Putnam Hooker
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John Muir letter to Katharine Putnam Hooker
Manuscripts
In this letter to his friend Katherine Hooker, John Muir describes a pleasant voyage to "The River." He describes approaching Para (Belém) and the sight of a "glorious view of fifty miles or so of forest on the right bank of the river." He explains that the experience of that alone is "noble compensation" for waiting all these years for the Amazon journey. He expects to start for Manaus in a day or two and spend at least a month on the river engaged in tough, but lovely work. He hopes Katherine is in the mountains with Marian and promises to tell her about the forest when he gets back.
mssHM 31153
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Katharine Putnam Hooker photograph collection
Visual Materials
A collection of photographs relating to the life of Katharine Putnam Hooker (1849-1935) and her husband, John Daggett Hooker (1838-1911), and their daughter Marian Osgood Hooker (1875-1968), an amateur photographer who made many of the photographs in the collection. The majority of the collection shows Hooker family, friends and associates at the large Hooker family residence and garden, 325 West Adams Street, Los Angeles. Some of the friends include George Ellery Hale, Margaret Collier Graham (copy photograph only), John Muir, and Jules Simoneau. There are group portraits of Marian Hooker with other students of the graduating class of 1894 of the Marlborough School, a private Los Angeles girl's school. The girls are identified as: Mary Hardy, Henriette Vischer, Marian Hooker, Alice Paul and Bessie Ellis. Other posed group photographs show young women in costumes of traditional Japanese and Turkish clothing (ca. 1893-1894) or posed and dressed as "Lphigenie" (1906). There are also family groups dining on the porch; a female group outing to Echo Mountain; Katharine Putnam Hooker working on bookbinding; and views of the house and grounds when it became "Miss (Maude) Thomas' School" (St. Catherine's), (ca. 1910). A portion of the collection features scenic views made by Marian on outings around Southern California: Death Valley; Red Rock Canyon; Balboa; Catalina Island; Bear Valley; El Molino Viejo in San Marino and an adobe out building; street views of West Adams Street in central Los Angeles; and residences and streets in Pasadena. There is one folder of miscellaneous card photographs, mostly unidentified. One view shows a group of African American children sitting on a wood fence in front of a shack. There are also two mounted prints of the house occupied by General George Washington in Morristown, New Jersey.
photCL 349
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John Muir letter to [Clara] Barrus
Manuscripts
John Muir wrote this letter to Clara Barrus, a physician with the state psychiatric hospital in Middleton, New York, from Martinez, California on September 23, 1909. In this letter, Muir writes that he is "glad to hear my little books are considered worth reading and have helped to incite others to go forth and see God's handiwork for themselves." He also mentions a letter from John Burroughs, an American naturalist and nature essayist, in which Burroughs has finished at least one article about the Grand Canyon in Arizona. Muir also hopes that Burroughs will next write about Yosemite. He closes the letter about the health of a woman named Helen, who is doing well.
mssHM 80949
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John Muir letters
Manuscripts
The collection consists of letters, including 22 autograph letters, from 1902 to 1913, from Muir to his daughter, Helen Muir Funk. There is also correspondence with Enos Abijah Mills, J. Marshall Watkins, and the John Muir Association, and photocopies of Muir's Thousand mile journey (mssFAC 624).
mssMuir
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John Muir letters
Manuscripts
The collection consists of letters, including 22 autograph letters, from 1902 to 1913, from Muir to his daughter, Helen Muir Funk. There is also correspondence with Enos Abijah Mills, J. Marshall Watkins, and the John Muir Association, and photocopies of Muir's Thousand mile journey (FAC 624).
mssMuir
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Ephemera: Mementos from John Muir
Manuscripts
Correspondence largely deals with family affairs. Family members represented in collection are: Joanna Muir Brown, Anna G. Galloway, Sarah Muir Galloway, Mary Muir Hand, Anna Muir, Anne Gilrye Muir, Daniel Muir, Daniel H. Muir, Jr., David G. Muir, John Muir, Katie Muir, Margaret Muir Reid, and Anna Reid Waterman. The ephemera in the collection consists of cards, envelopes, mementos, other printed materials.
mssHM 57349-57497