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Delia Salter Bacon papers

 Collection
Identifier: B33345

Scope and Contents

This collection contains the call numbers Y.c.2599 (1-323).

Includes 312 autograph letters signed and initialed and one typed letter signed to and from Delia Bacon and others; 10 miscellaneous items including prospectuses of Delia Bacon, her The author's apology and claim, [1857?], an engraving of Leonard Bacon, a memorandum of an agreement between Delia Bacon and Samuel Coleman, an inventory of school items to be sold at a private sale in 1831 and payments to various people for sums due, and 3 newspaper clippings.

Delia Salter Bacon is the originator of the Baconian theory, which she first proposed in "William Shakespeare and His Plays: An Inquiry Concerning Them," Putnam's Monthly Magazine VII (January 1856): 1-19, and shortly thereafter in The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakspere Unfolded, By Delia Bacon, With a Preface by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Author of "The Scarlet Letter," etc. (London and Boston, 1857). The letters to and from Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne, in particular, dating from 1853-1856, discuss her research in England on the authorship of Shakespeare's works. In Folger MS Y.c.2599 (48), March 7, [1837], Delia Bacon writes of revising her play, later published as The Bride of Fort Edward (New York: Samuel Colman, 1839), for the British actress Ellen Tree. The letters from John Lord, Folger MS Y.c.2599 (265-268), 1844-1846, describe his first impressions of England, Ireland and the Continent, politics, religion, and Anglo-American relations. There are also a few miscellaneous papers, Folger MS Y.c.2599 (311-323), including Delia Bacon's "Author's Apology and Claim" [1857?]; prospectus' for two of her Historical Lessons, November [1852] (her lecture series in New York) and February 1853 (her lecture series in Brooklyn); three newspaper cuttings; an engraving of Leonard Bacon, a memorandum concerning the publication of The Bride of Fort Edward, and an inventory of items from the school run by Delia, Julia, and Alice Bacon in Jamaica, Long Island, sold in 1830 for $130.59 in order to repay their creditors.

List of correspondents: Mrs. Alice Bacon; Benjamin W. Bacon; David Bacon; George Blagden Bacon; Leonard Bacon; Leonard W. Bacon; Lucy J. Bacon; Theodore Bacon; George Bancroft; Sarah C. Becker; Catherine E. Beecher; Francis Bennoch; James Buchanan; Charles Butler; Jane and Thomas Carlyle; Messrs. Chapman and Hall; Rufus Choate; Samuel Colman; J.P. Collier; Messrs. Dix and Edwards; Sir Henry Ellis; R.W. Emerson; Edward Everett; Eliza R. Farrar; George Fayrer; C.C. Felton; Celina Flower; G.J. Granville; Mrs. W. Grote; Francis L. Hawks; Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne; Arthur Helps; Herriman and Brink; George S. Hillard; Marcus Hodges; R.M. Milnes (later Lord Houghton); J.B. Hume; M. Jones; Rose H. Lathrop; J? T? Lipscomb; George Littlewood; Sampson Low, Son, & Co.; John Lord; E.B. Lytton (later Baron Lytton); James Martineau; Maria Mitchell; John Murray; Anthony Panizzi; J.W. Parker; Elizabeth Peabody; George Peabody; Alice Bacon Peck; Phillips, Sampson & Co.; George Palmer Putnam; Bernard and David Rice; Mr. and Mrs. George Ripley; Sarah S. Robbins; Benjamin Silliman; Augustus R. Sleet; Harriet B. Stowe; Thomas H. Taylor, the editor of the Tribune; Jonathan M. Wainwright; Thomas S. Williams; and Julia Bacon Woodruff.

Dates

  • Majority of material found within 1827-1859,
  • 1820-1952

Creator

Availability

Collection is open for research.

Extent

323.0 items (2 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Includes 312 autograph letters signed and initialed and one typed letter signed to and from Delia Bacon and others; 10 miscellaneous items including prospectuses of Delia Bacon, her The author's apology and claim, [1857?], an engraving of Leonard Bacon, a memorandum of an agreement between Delia Bacon and Samuel Coleman, an inventory of school items to be sold at a private sale in 1831 and payments to various people for sums due, and 3 newspaper clippings.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged into two series: 1. Correspondence; 2. Miscellaneous papers.

The Correspondence series is arranged alphabetically by sender, and chronologically under each sender's name.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of David Bacon, Leonard Lee Bacon, and Alice Bacon Hallett in 1969, originally housed in 2 black cardboard boxes (items 1-317). Item 318 donated by Leonard Lee Bacon in 1971, and items 319-23 donated by Leonard Lee Bacon in 1994.

Existence and Location of Copies

Also available on microfilm, Film Fo. 127.13a (reduction ratio 13:1, 81 feet, lacking item 82).

The collection is quoted extensively by V.C. Hopkins in Prodigal Puritan: a life of Delia Bacon (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1959).

Related Materials

Autograph letters signed from Delia Salter Bacon to various recipients, 1855 (Folger MS Y.c.64 (1-3)). Recipients include: Editor of Putnam's magazine, May 1, [1856]; Phillips and Sampson Publishing Firm, July 5, 1855; and George Palmer Putnam, September 24, 1855. (MS Y.c.2599 (111) notes that Y.c.64 (1) was forwarded to the publishers, Messrs. Dix and Edwards).

Autograph letters signed from Ralph Waldo Emerson to Delia Bacon, January 15, 1855, and to Thomas Carlyle, May 12, 1853 (Folger MS Y.c.856 (1-2)). A letter of introduction for Delia Bacon.

Processing Information

Processed by Folger Shakespeare Library staff.

Title
Delia Salter Bacon papers
Status
Unverified Full Draft
Author
Finding aid prepared by Folger Shakespeare Library staff, ca. 1969; revised in 2010
Date
ca. 1969 (original typescript on file)
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Sponsor
Project partially funded by the Gladys Kreble Delmas Foundation, in collaboration with the Research Libraries Group.
Edition statement
Apex Data Services, with revisions by Folger staff.

Revision Statements

  • 2020-05-01: Finding aid imported into ArchivesSpace; minor edits were done to conform to the model of ArchivesSpace.

Repository Details

Part of the Folger Shakespeare Library Repository

Contact:
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Washington DC 20003 USA