Summary
Creator: |
Bright, Robert Southall, 1872-1943
|
Date(s): |
1763-1942 |
Bulk Dates: |
1894-1934 |
Call Number: |
MSS 0128 |
Language: |
English
|
Abstract: |
The Robert Southall Bright Collection concerns the personal and business affairs of theBright family, most notably Philadelphia
lawyer Robert Southall Bright (1872-1943) and his wife Caroline de Beelen Bright (d. 1932). The collection comprises 2.3 linear
feet of material and contains correspondence, financial and legal items, receipts, insurance policies, leases, speeches, political
papers, certificates, invitations and greeting cards, photographs, and ephemera. The collection is divided into five main
series: I. Robert S. Bright correspondence, II. financial and legal documents, III. papers concerning other members of the
Bright family, IV. miscellaneous papers, and V. photographs.
|
Physical Description: |
2.3 linear feet
(1929 items)
|
Immediate Source of Acquisition: |
Gift of Anna D. Moyerman, 1972. |
Processing Information: |
Processed by Arthur Siegel, October 1998. Finding aid encoded by Lauren Connolly, August 2015 and Tiffany Saulter, November
2015. Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard |
Biographical and Historical Notes
Robert Southall Bright was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, on May 24, 1872 to Robert Anderson and Nannie (Munford) Bright.
His father was a planter who had served in the Confederate army, and after the war had continued to support legislation in
opposition to the rights and suffrage of former slaves. Robert S. Bright's great uncle, George Washington Southall, was the
Bright family's connection to the Southalls, who were among the first families to settle on the Virginia peninsula in the
early seventeenth century. Robert Southall Bright graduated with an A.B. from the College of William and Mary in 1891, then
apprenticed under Philadelphia lawyer George H. Earle until he was admitted to the bar in 1894. On October 19 of the following
year, Bright married Caroline De Beelen, daughter of George Sidney Lovett, and together they had a son, Douglas Bright, who
was born on August 17, 1896. From 1894 to 1926, Bright maintained an independent law firm in Philadelphia, and from 1926 to
1934 he was a member of the Philadelphia banking firm Thomas A. Biddle & Co. In 1932, Caroline died, and on December 1, 1934
Bright married again, this time to Mary (McCaw) Haves, who was the daughter of William Reid McCaw. Also in 1934, Bright retired
to his farm in Frederick, Maryland, where he lived until his death on December 18, 1943.
Robert Southall Bright was active in Philadelphia politics, including his service as president of the Woodrow Wilson League,
and was a prominent member of the Progressive Party. He was a member of a number of different associations, as well as a trustee
of the Lovett Memorial Free Library of Philadelphia, and during the First World War he served as a major in the army on the
staff of the judge advocate general in Washington, D.C. Bright also published a number of historical works, many of which
were originally speeches: "Pocahontas and Other Colonial Dames of Virginia" (1906); "The Hamlet of American Politics" (1908);
"Liberty's Greatest paper" (1910); and "Nathaniel Bacon and His Rebellion" (n.d.).
Sources
Dictionary of American Biography, ed. Dumas Malone. vol.9. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1963.
Historical and biographical information derived from the collection.
Scope and Contents
The Robert Southall Bright Collection concerns the personal and business affairs of the Bright family, most notably Philadelphia
lawyer Robert Southall Bright (1872-1943) and his wife Caroline de Beelen Bright (d. 1932). The collection comprises 2.3 linear
feet of material and contains correspondence, financial and legal items, receipts, insurance policies, leases, speeches, political
papers, certificates, invitations and greeting cards, photographs, and ephemera. The collection is divided into five main
series: I. Robert S. Bright correspondence, II. financial and legal documents, III. papers concerning other members of the
Bright family, IV. miscellaneous papers, and V. photographs.
The first series spans the period 1877-1939, and includes correspondence to and from Robert S. Bright, most notably from his
wife Caroline and from his friend John L. Stoddard.
The second series spans the period 1879-1942, and includes stock and bond certificates, insurance policies, estate accounts,
leases, bills and receipts, bank statements, canceled checks, account and memorandum books, and other legal items.
The third series spans the period 1763-1918, and includes correspondence, legal, and financial items concerning Robert Anderson
Bright, Samuel Bright, George Washington Southall, and Douglas Bright.
The fourth series spans the period 1821-1934, and includes school certificates, speeches and political papers, invitations
and RSVPs, calling cards, greeting cards, legal items pertaining to the case of Armistead et al. vs. Dandridge et al. (1821-1843),
and ephemera.
The fifth series spans the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and includes photographs of the Bright family, many
of which were taken at Monhegan Island, Maine.
The collection focuses primarily on Robert S. and Caroline Bright, documenting their personal and financial affairs particularly
in the 1920s and early 1930s. The names of several prominent Virginia and Pennsylvania families are included in the collection
(the Bassetts, Lovetts, Southalls, and Dandridges), but their relationships to the Bright family are not always made clear.
The items concerning these individuals can be found primarily in the correspondence, or under the heading of "Miscellaneous
Papers" in series four.
The collection contains a large number of photographs, but unfortunately all but a very few are unidentified. It is assumed
that portraits are of members of the Bright family or their relatives. Most of the photographs are of people and locations
on Monhegan Island, which served as a summer vacation spot for Robert Southall Bright and his family. Though these are undated,
Monhegan correspondence elsewhere in the collection dates from 1932 and 1933, and thus provides a rough estimate for when
the photographs were taken. The island was also frequented by a number of prominent American artists, including Rockwell Kent,
Robert Henri, Edward Hopper, and N.C. Wyeth. Since early in the twentieth century, the Wyeths have owned a home on the island,
and one of the more intriguing items in the collection is a letter written to Robert S. Bright by his friend Henriette Wyeth
(b. 1907), who was the daughter of N.C. Wyeth.
The correspondence, particularly that with his fiancee Caroline de Beelen, provides a great deal of information about Robert
S. Bright's personal life, as well as his demeanor -- which at times could be rather piercing. The letters also reveal the
wide range of personal and business contacts which Bright maintained. He corresponded frequently with friends and relatives
in Virginia and the Philadelphia area, a law firm in Buffalo, New York, the president of the College of William and Mary,
and acquaintances in Europe and China. The intensity of Bright's activity is further revealed in the number and variety of
invitations to social functions, as well as his membership in numerous political societies and associations. Also of interest
is the correspondence that Robert S. Bright maintained with his friend John Lawson Stoddard (1850-1931), whose ruminations
on the political and social conditions of pre-war Europe and America provide a fascinating, if brief, glimpse into the important
issues of the day.
There is no indication of when Bright actually met Stoddard, though it is clear that he and his family stayed at Stoddard's
Italian villa on Lake Como sometime before 1909. Stoddard was a prominent writer and lecturer, teaching the classics for a
year at the Boston Latin School, and using the experiences and photographs he acquired through a lifetime of extensive world
travel as the basis of a public lecturing career. He spent the last three decades of his life in retirement abroad, the years
1906-1914 being spent at Lake Como. The horrors of the First World War, witnessed first-hand, drove Stoddard towards Catholicism,
but up to that point he had been a free-thinker. He also had a great love for northern Italy and its people, and these two
facets of his personality are very much in evidence in his letters to Bright.
Though the collection comprises a wealth of financial material from the period 1929-1930 (most notably accounts of Bright's
stock portfolio and the receipts of stock sales and purchases), it is uncertain what sort of effect the market crash of 1929
had on Bright's overall finances. A few letters sent by companies and brokerage firms do suggest a fiscal slump, but Bright's
activity within the market seemed unabated. Overall, Bright was primarily concerned with the purchase of stocks from oil and
utility companies.
Using these materials
General
Boxes 1-7: Shelved in SPEC MSS Manuscript boxes
Access Information
The collection is open for research
Preferred Citation
MSS 0128, Bright family papers, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware.
Conditions Governing Use
Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the
U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please
contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/
Container List
Series I. Correspondence, 1877-1939
Included is business and personal correspondence of Robert S. Bright. Many of these are from relatives (mostly his wife and
father), while others are from friends and business associates. The scope of the letters is wide-ranging, having been sent
from individuals as far afield as Michigan, New York, Italy, and even China. The letters are arranged chronologically, with
the exceptions of letters to and from his wife Caroline, and those from his friend J.L. Stoddard. Most of the personal correspondence
is hand written.
1886-1894 |
10 items |
Box 1, F1 |
Includes several letters from New York City, Buffalo, and Michigan. Those from Michigan were sent by George W. Earle, Robert's
former legal mentor.
|
|
1895, January-April |
22 items |
Box 1, F2 |
Includes letters from Robert A. Bright, Laura D. Lovett, and a letter informing Bright of his election as an honorary member
of the Phoenix Literary Society.
|
|
1895, May-September |
26 items |
Box 1, F3 |
Includes letters from Robert A. Bright, James Roper, Joseph P. McCullen, and Henrietta B. Wyeth. Also included is an 1895
pocket calendar sent by S. Lippincott from Haden Hall in Atlantic City, N.J.
|
|
1895, October-December |
18 items |
Box 1, F4 |
Includes letters from Robert A. Bright, a ten-page letter from William Taliaferro, and a list of the publications of the Virginia
Historical Society.
|
|
1896 |
19 items |
Box 1, F5 |
Personal and business correspondence
|
|
1897 |
18 items |
Box 1, F6 |
Includes letters from R.A. Bright, a letter from R.P. Lore that contains a transcription of a letter by J.P. Morgan, and other
letters from Lore regarding business dealings with Morgan & Co.
|
|
1898 |
13 items |
Box 1, F7 |
Includes a letter by William Roper, one from A. de Beelen Lovett (Geneva, N.Y.), and a letter and poem about the Battle of
Santiago de Cuba sent by Professor J. Leslie Hall of the College of William and Mary (7 pp.). Also included is a five-page
letter of response from Bright to Hall, regarding the poem.
|
|
1899 |
21 items |
Box 2, F8 |
Includes letters from R.A. Bright, William Roper, and Lyon G. Tyler, president of the College of William and Mary. Also included
are receipts, a check, and correspondence concerning Bright's payments of his father's debts to the estate of J.D. Moncure.
|
|
1900-1909 |
37 items |
Box 2, F9 |
Includes letters from Robert A. Bright, several letters from an individual in the Netherlands, minutes from a special meeting
of the Vestry of Grace Church in Mt. Airy (1900), and a letter from A.J. de Souza in Shanghai, China (1900). This last letter
also includes a photograph.
|
|
1910-1919 |
11 items |
Box 2, F10 |
Includes a copy of a book review of Beverly B. Munford's Virginia's Attitude Towards Slavery and Secession (1910); two copies of the publisher's advertisement for this book; a letter from the State Central Committee of the Democratic
Party in Pennsylvania; and other correspondence.
|
|
1920-1929 |
12 items |
Box 2, F11 |
Includes various personal and business correspondence.
|
|
1930-1939 |
23 items |
Box 2, F12 |
Includes a letter from the National Bureau of Analysis in Chicago, regarding medical tests performed on Robert Bright (1930);
a report of the tests' findings; correspondence regarding the death and estate of Caroline Bright; and financial correspondence.
|
|
Undated |
12 items |
Box 2, F13 |
Includes several letters from Robert A. Bright and [J]. D. Lovett.
|
|
Caroline Bright to Robert S. Bright, 1894-1899 |
23 items |
Box 2, F14 |
Most of these letters were written in the summer and autumn of 1895, only months before the two were married, and are essentially
of a personal nature.
|
|
To Caroline Bright, 1877-1930 |
9 items |
Box 3, F15 |
Much of this is business and financial correspondence, but also included is a letter in French from "Beelen," sent from Pittsburgh,
and dated to 1877.
|
|
John Stoddard, 1904-1912 |
6 items |
Box 3, F16 |
These typed and hand written letters were sent from Stoddard's villa on Lake Como, in Italy, and contain reflections on contemporary
Italian society, socialism, politics, and personal anecdotes. Also included are several printed copies of poems which Stoddard
sent and dedicated to Bright, entitled "Youth and Age," and "The Pagan Past."
|
|
Series II. Documents, 1879-1939
Included are various financial and legal documents, as well as an account book and memorandum book. The stocks are varied
in type, though many come from oil and utility companies.
Stocks and Bonds, 1899-1926 |
34 items |
Box 3, F17 |
Includes stock certificates, correspondence from companies to shareholders, receipts, and accounts of Bright's portfolio.
Also included is a four-page copy of a Deed of Trust from Henry W. Biddle to the Fidelity Trust Company (1920). Most of Bright's
financial business was transacted through A.A. Housman & Co.
|
|
Stocks and Bonds, 1929 |
105 items |
Box 3, F18 |
Includes stock certificates, receipts, correspondence, lists of securities, and accounts of Bright's portfolio. Thomas A.
Biddle & Co. was the brokerage firm handling the bulk of the business in this folder, for both Robert and Caroline Bright.
|
|
Stocks and Bonds, 1930-1933 |
80 items |
Box 3, F19 |
Includes stock certificates, receipts, correspondence, and accounts for Robert and Caroline Bright. Also included are annual
prospectuses for the Electric Auto-Lite Co., the Zonite Products Corp., and Mack Trucks, Inc.; and notices of annual meetings
from various companies in which they owned stock.
|
|
Insurance Policies, 1879-1934 |
20 items |
Box 3, F20 |
Most of these were contracted either by Robert or Caroline Bright. Included are policies for fire insurance from the Hamburg-Bremen
Fire Insurance Company (1897), and the Spring Garden Insurance Company (1896); for theft insurance from the Fidelity and Casualty
Co. (1898); for property insurance from the Commercial Union Assurance Co., limited (1933), the Insurance Company of North
America (1933), the Virginia Home Insurance Company (for W.H.E. Manecock, 1878), and the Insurance and Trust Company of Philadelphia
(for Catherine Shacklett, 1892, and Louisa D. Lovett, 1915); and a life insurance policy issued by the Treasury Department
(1918). Also included are nine copies of liability insurance policies issued to Caroline Bright by the Maryland Casualty
Company (1931-1933), and correspondence from the St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (1931).
|
|
Estate Accounts, 1895-1930 |
15 items |
Box 4, F21 |
Included are accounts for the estates of Mary M. Smylie, Daniel V. Allen, Charlotte Bostwick, and Catherine M. Shacklett.
Robert Bright was either the trustee or administrator for most of these individuals.
|
|
Eleanor A. Hare Will & Papers, 1902-1930 |
11 items |
Box 4, F22 |
Robert Bright was the executor of her estate, and co-executor of her will, along with the Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Company
of Philadelphia. Included are one typed and three hand written copies of her will; correspondence from Tradesmens National
Bank and Trust Company, and the law offices of Roper and Caldwell (1930); general correspondence; and an audit of estate accounts.
|
|
Gentry & Storr Chainless Bicycle & Gear Co, 1898 |
2 items |
Box 4, F23 |
Papers relating to the establishment of this company, of which Robert Bright was elected Secretary. Included is a 23-page
Articles of Agreement with the state of Maine, which lays out the company's by-laws. Also included is a two-page Certificate
of Organization of a Corporation under the General Law, signed by the Attorney General and Secretary of the State of Maine.
|
|
Leases, 1903-1904, 1915 |
3 items |
Box 4, F24 |
Includes two leases from the Brooklyn Home for Aged Men to Robert Bright (1903 & 1904), and a lease for several law offices
from the City of Philadelphia to Robert S. Bright, William W. Roper, and J. Gaven Roper (1915).
|
|
Bills and Receipts, 1890-1939 & undated |
185 items |
Box 4, F25 |
For goods purchased and services rendered.
|
|
Bank Statements, 1929-1932 |
15 items |
Box 4, F26 |
Includes financial correspondence from Thomas A. Biddle & Co.; and statements from the Tradesmens National Bank and Trust
Co., the Augusta Trust Co., and the Fidelity Philadelphia Trust Company. These statements are for accounts of both Robert
S. and Caroline Bright.
|
|
Account Book, 1896-1926 |
129 pp. |
Box 4, F27 |
Accounts established with R.S. Bright, including accounts for the estate of Catherine M. Shacklett, general accounts, and
fee accounts for his legal work. The fee accounts span the entire period of the ledger, and are listed in chronological order
according to year and date. The book is bound in a hard cover, and was manufactured by William Murphy's Sons, Co. of 509
Chestnut St. in Philadelphia. There is an index on the first page.
|
|
Canceled Checks, 1894-1933 |
421 items |
Box 5, F28 |
Signed by both Robert S. and Caroline Bright, and drawn off of the Equitable Trust Co., the Guarantee Trust and Safe Deposit
Co., the Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Co., the National Bank of Germantown and Trust Co., the Germantown Trust
Co., the Tradesmens National Bank and Trust Co., and the Augusta Trust Co.
|
|
Memorandum Book, 1891-1893 |
3 pp. |
Box 5, F29 |
A record of amounts loaned to Richard Cook, with his signature indicating that the account was paid in full. The book was
issued by the Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Co. of Philadelphia.
|
|
Series III. Bright Family, 1763-1918
Includes papers concerning Robert S. Bright's father, Robert Anderson Bright (b. 1839); his grandfather, Samuel Bright (b.
1803); his great uncle, George Washington Southall (1810-1854); and his son, Douglas Bright (b. 1896).
Douglas Bright, 1896-1918 |
21 items |
Box 5, F30 |
Includes a certificate of birth (August 1896); a letter from the U.S. Marine Corps regarding appointment of Douglas to the
rank of 2nd Lieutenant (1917); nine letters of recommendation on behalf of Douglas; a letter of rejection by the U.S. Marine
Corps (June 1917); a letter of acceptance to take an exam for the Signal Officers' Reserve Corps (1918); a letter from the
Signal Corps, War Department; a letter by Douglas Bright to his father and two sets of photocopies of this letter (n.d.);
various business correspondence; and receipts.
|
|
Robert Anderson Bright, 1868-1902 |
Box 5, F31 |
Related Materials
29 items
Includes correspondence; financial accounts; receipts; a certificate of life membership to the Virginia State Agricultural
Society (1871); a notice of selection by the Conservative State Committee of Virginia to the post of canvasser against the
proposition for black suffrage; a bond to Gilbert Enley (1886); a certificate of life membership to the Virginia Agricultural
and Mechanical Society (1893); and a letter from a War Department commission for the erection of monuments and memorials for
Confederate soldiers on the field of Gettysburg (1899).
|
|
Samuel Bright, 1850 |
2 items |
Box 5, F32 |
|
|
G.W. Southall -- Correspondence, 1832-1863 |
18 items |
Box 5, F33 |
Includes personal and business correspondence. Half of the letters were written by W.W. Vest, with others from G.W. Bassett,
G.W. Ward, Edward Buckley, William Duval, Warren Jones, and Helen M. Anderson to Peyton S. Southall, and James Brickhead to
H.M. Anderson.
|
|
G.W. Southall -- Documents, 1792-1843 |
30 items |
Box 5, F34 |
Most of these items are receipts, but also included is a record of the division of the G.W. Southall estate; a bond between
Henry and Furman Southall and William Barnes (1792); promissory notes; and memos.
|
|
Series IV. Miscellaneous Papers, 1821-1942
Concerns the personal effects of Robert S. Bright, and includes school certificates, speeches, political papers, invitations,
greeting cards, calling cards, and miscellaneous items. Also included are several items pertaining to Caroline Bright, as
well as to the Lovett family, from which Caroline Bright was descended.
School Certificates, 1889-1890 |
9 items |
Box 5, F35 |
Includes certificates of distinction in English, Virginia History, Jr. Class Physics, Sr. Class Physics, Latin, General History,
United States History, and Mathematics, presented to Robert S. Bright by the College of William and Mary. Also included is
a report card from the fall semester of 1890.
|
|
Speeches, 1906-1914, & undated |
4 items |
Box 6, F36 |
Includes a speech entitled "Pocahontas and Other Colonial Dames of Virginia," given in Geneva, New York (22 Feb 1906); a hand
written speech on John Randolph of Roanoke, entitled "Hamlet of American Politics," given before William & Mary alumni (1908);
a speech given on behalf of Democratic congressional candidate Vance McCormick, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (8 Sep 1914); and
a speech on Nathaniel Bacon and his rebellion, given before the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities (n.d.).
|
|
Political Papers, 1923, 1930 |
5 items |
Box 6, F37 |
Includes a program for a Jackson Day Dinner (10 Jan 1923), sponsored by the Democratic City Executive Committee of Philadelphia;
two copies of a memorandum from the Ways and Means Committee of the Liberal Party (7 Oct 1930); a typed transcript of an interview
with Robert Bright by the Chairman of the Bankers and Brokers Committee of the Liberal Party (20 Oct 1930); and a letter from
the Pennsylvania division of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment (6 Jun 1930). Pierre S. DuPont was the Chair
of the National Executive Committee in this association.
|
|
Miscellaneous Papers, c.1898-1930 |
24 items |
Box 6, F38 |
Includes a wide variety of items, such as correspondence and legal notes, as well as :
- a signed statement by Caroline Lane
- transcripts from several law journals
- a report card for H.M. Bright from the College of William & Mary (1894)
- a typed letter from Samuel Maddox, P.A. to Charlotte B. Lovett (1898)
- a deed between Ashton S. and Harriet Tourison and Louisa D. Lovett (1915)
- an 18-page speech to the Board of Directors of the Fidelity Insurance Trust & Safe Deposit Co. (1898/99, author unknown)
- a list of rules for the "Philadelphia Alumni Association of Kappa Sigma"
- blank letterhead of the Pulaski Club of Williamsburg, on which Judge Frank Armistead and Robert S. Bright are listed as
members
- a memorandum of A.M. Bright (brother of Robert S. Bright)
- a blank income tax form for 1929.
|
|
Invitations and RSVPs, 1895-1934 |
27 items |
Box 6, F39 |
Includes invitations from the Lawyer's Club of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Club, and the Philobiblon Club, wedding invitations,
an invitation to a Christmas day dinner, and to other social gatherings. Also included are RSVPs to a party hosted by Robert
Bright and his wife (dated 1934).
|
|
Greeting Cards, 1928-1934 |
10 items |
Box 6, F40 |
Includes Christmas cards, an Easter card, Valentine cards, several get-well cards, and a frame made from cardboard and ringed
with tissue paper, a small portrait of George Washington having been pasted in the center. Also included are envelopes, several
of which are artistically decorated. These were all addressed to Robert S. Bright.
|
|
Calling Cards & Miscellaneous Items, c.1894-1942 |
21 items |
Box 6, F41 |
Includes calling cards and business cards from Robert Bright's friends and business associates. Also included is a 16-page
address book; a church bulletin, "The Parish Intelligence," from Christ Church in Macon, GA; "Common Speech," a newsletter
of the English-Speaking Union of the United States; a postcard; and three Christmas stamps from 1942.
|
|
Armistead et. al. v. Dandridge et. al, c.1821-1843 |
12 items |
Box 6, F42 |
This case concerns a dispute between the two parties over the administration of the estates of William Langborne and William
Dandridge. Included is a copy of the will of William Langborne (1821); a list of the defendants and plaintiffs in the case;
several orders of summons issued to the Sergeant of the City of Williamsburg, Virginia; a notice of deposition; and other
legal documents.
|
|
Copybook, 1906-1911 |
216 pp. |
Box 7, F43 |
This belonged to Caroline Bright, and includes transcriptions in her own hand of
the works of notable poets (such as George Elliot, Shelley, Browning), as well as newspaper clippings of poems that were pasted
onto a few of the pages. In addition, several photographs of an unidentified building were laid into the pages of the book.
|
|
Book of Verse, 1923-1932 |
46 pp. |
Box 7, F44 |
A leather-bound journal. On the first page is inscribed, "Cape May NJ / The Summer of Nineteen Twenty Three / Caroline de
Beelen L. Bright / Some Thoughts in Verse." Many of these are original poems written by Caroline Bright during a holiday
at Cape May, and a few of the later poems were written at Monhegan Island, Maine, in 1932. Several pages have been torn
out from the front of the book.
|
|
Series V. Photographs, late-19th & early-20th centuries
With the exception of the postcards, these photographs are almost completely unidentified, though the portraits and images
of individuals are very likely to be of members of the Bright family, or acquaintances on Monhegan Island, Maine. All of
the photographs are in black and white, though one or two of these have been hand-painted.
Monhegan Island |
36 items |
Box 7, F45 |
This is by far the largest category of photographs, including images of individuals and animals, the interiors and exteriors
of houses, and natural locations on the island. There are a number of duplicates (including 3 copies of a photograph entitled
"Woods in Winter"), and several of the photographs are significantly larger than the rest.
|
|
Portraits & Individual Photos |
16 items |
Box 7, F46 |
Most of these photographs were taken at professional studios (listed where appropriate), and are matted. They likely date
from the late nineteenth century, except for a small cameo photograph, which may date from earlier in the century.
Only a portrait of Caroline Bright, as a child, has been identified for certain.
- Robert Bright? (hand-painted)
- Young man in uniform, poss. Douglas Bright (4 items)
- Caroline de Beelen Lovett as a child (D. Hinkle, 4739 Main St., Germantown)
- Portrait of a woman (D. Hinkle)
- Portrait of a man (C.M. Bell, 463-465 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington DC)
- Portrait of a woman (C.M. Bell)
- Portrait of a young man (Scannell, 814 Arch St., Philadelphia)
- Portrait of a woman (Kehrwieder's Studio, 4905 Main St., Germantown, PA)
- Portrait of a woman (Fred Robinson, photographer, Geneva, NY)
- Portrait of a woman (small cameo photo pasted on square matting)
- Photo of a woman with a dog
- Photo of a man holding a hat
- Photo of a woman arranging flowers
|
|
Picture postcards |
11 items |
Box 7, F47 |
Images from various locations, including Monhegan Island (Lorimer E. Brackett, Photocards); Boothbay Harbor, Maine (The Labbie
Picture Shop); and Mansfield, England (Sherwood Photographic Company).
- "Surf at Gull Rock"
- "Studio -- Monhegan, Maine"
- Cathedral Woods in Winter
- "Cathedral Woods"
- "Winter Home"
- [studio]
- Portrait of a woman
- Town
- "Newstead Abbey"
- "Fog Bound, Monhegan, ME"
- "Ascott House"
|
|
Miscellaneous |
8 items |
Box 7, F48 |
Includes photographs that do not fall in any of the above categories. Only the photos of the couple and the schoolgirls are
matted, and the photo of the child in the tub is badly damaged.
- Photo of a restaurant sent to R.S. Bright by Walker Cox (1929)
- Group photo at the beach
- Small child in tub
- Photo of house (hand-painted)
- Unidentified couple (mounted in a cardboard folder)
- Group photo of schoolgirls
- Photo negatives (2 items)
|
|
Names & Subjects
Names
Formats