Ernestine Evans papers, 1890-1968, bulk 1930-1967

Ernestine Evans papers, 1890-1968, bulk 1930-1967

Summary Information

Abstract

Contained in this collection are documents related to the life and career of Ernestine Evans, a journalist, critic and literary agent active in the early-to-mid-twentieth century. Personal and professional correspondence and a wide variety of literary manuscripts, likely accumulated during her long career as a literary agent, constitute the bulk of this collection. In addition, the collection includes photographs, drawings and other visual material. Also represented in this collection are clippings of Evans' and other journalists' work; printed material, both periodicals and books; personal documents (including address books, contact lists and journals), financial documents and medical documents.

At a Glance

Call No.:
MS#0405
Bib ID:
4078744 View CLIO record
Creator(s):
Evans, Ernestine, 1889-1967
Repository:
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Physical Description:
15 linear feet (24 document boxes 2 record storage cartons; 2 oversized boxes 2 index card boxes)
Language(s):
English .
Access:
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Description

Summary

This collection contains material related to the life of Ernestine Evans and others in her broad network of friends and colleagues. Correspondence, both personal and professional, and literary manuscripts, constitute the bulk of the collection. The majority of the letters date from the 1940s onward; Evans' early correspondence is not a part of this collection. The collection contains dozens of literary manuscripts; most of these probably belong to authors for whom Evans served as literary agent. Evans' own written work is also available here in the form of clippings and other printed material. Moreover, the collection contains a considerable number of personal documents that offer insight into the practicalities of Evans' life, including notebooks, contact lists, passports, medical documents and financial records. Copious photographs on a range of subjects, as well as a variety of mostly unattributed life-drawings and paintings, constitute the considerable array of visual material that this collection also contains.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged in four series, and one series of unprocessed materials (2 Record Cartons).

Using the Collection

Restrictions on Access

You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Reproductions may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Ernestine Evans Papers; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Related Material

Joseph Barnes Papers, 1907-1970, 1923-1970 Columbia University, Rare Book & Manuscript Library

Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker Paper, 1914-1950 Columbia University, Rare Book & Manuscript Library

Accruals

Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.

Ownership and Custodial History

Gift of Frances Hubbard Flaherty, 1968.

Gift of Ross G. Harrison, III, 1995.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Source of acquisition--Flaherty, Frances Hubbard. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--1968. Accession number--M-68.

Source of acquisition--Ross G. Harrison, III. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--1995.

About the Finding Aid / Processing Information

Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Processing Information

Cataloged Christina Hilton Fenn 06/--/1989.

Collection Processed Annie Rudd, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism 2013 2009.

Finding aid Written Annie Rudd, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism 2013 05/--/2009.

Revision Description

2011-03-18 xml document instance created by Carrie Hintz

2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.

Biographical Note

Ernestine Evans was a prolific female journalist, author, editor and literary agent active in the early-to-mid twentieth century.

Evans was born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1889. The first of two children born to Arthur and Allie Evans (her brother, Ward, was born in 1893). Looking back on her childhood, she would later write that her family rarely lived in the same dwelling for more than a year at a time. Evans' father, a lawyer, had difficulty finding steady work, and her mother was seriously ill for much of Evans' early life; she died when Evans was 16 years old.

Evans matriculated at the University of Chicago around 1908, where she undertook a Bachelor of Philosophy degree, specializing in English and Economics and taking a journalism course led by the sociologist George Edgar Vincent.

It was also during her college years that Evans's career as a journalist began in earnest. During the latter two years of her degree, Evans served as Assistant to the Editor of the university's Astrophysical Journal, and her boss, also the University of Chicago's Dean of Science, Henry Gordon Gale, gave her an uncommon degree of freedom with this post: in addition to extensive fact-checking and other quotidian duties, Evans was often given the opportunity to write articles for the Journal under Gale's name.

Upon graduating in 1912, Evans found a job at the Chicago Inter Ocean, a daily newspaper aimed at an elite readership. Initially Evans was charged with writing articles for the paper's Sunday features pages, but she was soon promoted and became the assistant to the Inter Ocean's political editor. With this position, she covered the suffrage movement, and traveled to Washington on assignment. Evans' time at the Inter Ocean was cut short, however: the newspaper folded not long after she joined its ranks. With this job lost, Evans found a job as assistant editor at the New York Press, a daily penny paper with a reputation for "yellow" journalism. Evans remained at this job for about a year.

Evans was offered an assignment for The Independent, a weekly journal based in Boston, which would require her to travel to Eastern Europe to cover prohibition in Russia. Evans was not offered any travel money for the assignment, but she had some leftover pay from previous writing jobs, and so she set off for Russia. The article that she wrote was rejected by Russian censors, and it was never published. Still, Evans' travels in Europe in pursuit of "the story" seem to have stuck with her, and she began to travel to Europe quite regularly, working as a freelance foreign correspondent for publications that included the New York Tribune, The Nation and Asia Magazine. She would later write of her experiences reporting from Moscow during the Russian Revolution as gunfire was exchanged outside her hotel window.

Evans also involved herself with women's suffrage. In the years preceding and following the United States' decision to grant women the vote in 1920, Evans wrote for The Suffragist, an organ of the National Woman's Party, which later changed its name to Equal Rights. She also reported on the suffrage movement in Britain for the Philadelphia Public Ledger.

After the end of World War I, Evans returned to the United States, where she found work as features editor of the Christian Science Monitor. Her responsibilities included buying eleven columns per day, as well as many illustrations, for the paper. Through the mid-1920s she continued to work as a freelance journalist, and wrote articles for The Nation, Century Magazine, the Virginia Quarterly, the Manchester Guardian, and others; she also served as Paris correspondent for Reynolds News Agency. Moreover, during these years she produced the children's book review supplement for The New Republic, which contained articles and reviews by Bertrand Russell, Charles A. Beard, Genevieve Taggard, Babette Deutsch, and Lewis Mumford, among others, including Evans.

During these years Evans also worked at the Whitney Studio Club, a meeting place--founded by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney--for artists living in Greenwich Village. There, Evans learned about painting and becoming involved in the neighborhood's growing art scene. Through her connections at the Whitney Studio Club, Evans was hired as an assistant editor at Coward-McCann, a publishing company whose start-up had also been funded by Whitney. The first book she brought to the firm was a children's title, Wanda Gag's Millions of Cats, a spectacular success which, having sold millions of copies since its publication, is still in print today.

In 1929, Evans authored a book of her own: Frescoes of Diego Rivera, a large-format publication that featured the work of the Mexican artist. Evans, who had previously traveled to Mexico as a reporter for the New York Times, and had written of the working-class appeal of Rivera's work, was responsible for every aspect of the book from start to finish; on its publication, it was the first English-language book on Rivera, and has been cited as a key document in Rivera's rise to popularity in the English-speaking world.

Evans left Coward-McCann in 1930, taking a job with Lippincott, another publishing house. Evans' Lippincott career, like her previous position, allowed her to travel extensively to scout new books. She also oversaw Lippincott's children's publications.

With the rise of the Great Depression, Evans moved to Washington, and went to work for Rexford Tugwell, the head of the Resettlement Administration (RA), an initiative established in 1935, as part of the New Deal, to ease the effects of the Depression on Americans by relocating struggling families to planned communities. Evans pushed for Tugwell to hire the little-known photographer Walker Evans (no relation to Ernestine), who she had previously worked with in her publishing career, to document the RA's accomplishments, believing that both the abject poverty many Americans were enduring, and the government's efforts to allay it, would be best illustrated by photographs. Evans also hired several additional photographers, including Ben Shahn, to undertake similar documentary work for the RA; virtually all of them would go on to enjoy great success as photographers for Life magazine and/or Magnum photo agency. Ernestine Evans was, in addition, responsible for proposing the Works Progress Administration Guides, a series of guidebooks to regions of the United States that were part of the Federal Writers' Project. The project employed hundreds of unemployed writers and researchers, and many of the guides are still in print today.

As the Great Depression ended, Evans returned to her previous occupations of freelance journalist, literary agent, and world traveler. She went to London as a book scout, worked as a researcher for Fortune magazine, and reported on Finland for a "March of Time" newsreel about the country. As World War II began, she returned to the United States. She again went to work for the government in 1943, securing a job with the Office of War Information (OWI). With this position, Evans assisted in efforts to engineer America's image for domestic and foreign audiences. With the large, internationally dispersed network of friends and colleagues that Evans had accumulated, she continued to learn about foreign cultures through her correspondence with friends situated in other places.

From about 1944 until the early 1950s, Evans worked as a book reviewer for the New York Herald Tribune's weekly supplement, but as she grew older fewer writing jobs opened up for her.

Evans died in 1967.

Subject Headings

The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches for other collections at Columbia University, through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, and through ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.

All links open new windows.

Genre/Form
Photographs
Name
Evans, Ernestine, 1889-1967
Flaherty, Frances Hubbard
Flaherty, Robert Joseph, 1884-1951
Forbes-Robertson, Diana
Subject
Journalism -- United States
Journalists -- Correspondence
Women and journalism
Women authors, American
Women journalists

Series I: Correspondence, 1912, 1926-1968, undated

This series contains Evans' personal and professional correspondence, and it includes letters both incoming and outgoing. The majority of these letters dates to the 1940s and 1950s; this archive does not contain Evans' early correspondence. Evans' most voluminous correspondence was with Jessie Heckman Hirschl, a lifelong friend whom she met during her undergraduate studies. Other friends and colleagues that are well represented here include: Evans' close friend Frances H. Flaherty, wife of the documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty. (Evans collaborated with Robert Flaherty on several occasions.); Gertrude Emerson Sen, an expert on Asia, who lived in India and was, like Evans, a member of the Society of Women Geographers; Margaret Barrington ("Topsy"), a writer who lived in Ireland; Helga Greene, a prominent London literary agent; and Karl A. Bickel and Carleton Beals, two writers for whom she served as literary agent. Evans' correspondence also includes letters to and from luminaries that include Walker Evans, Jean Renoir, Cornell Capa and Katherine Anne Porter.


Box 1 Folder 1 to 12

Incoming, 1912, 1930s-1949, (13 Folders)


Box 2 Folder 1 to 11

Incoming, 1950-1959, (11 Folders)


Box 3 Folder 1 to 5

Incoming, 1960s, (5 Folders)


Box 3 Folder 6 to 11

Incoming, Undated, (6 Folders)


Box 4 Folder 1 to 2

Incoming, Undated, (2 Folders)


Box 4 Folder 3 to 8

Outgoing, circa 1930s-1967, (6 Folders)


Box 5 Folder 1 to 5

Outgoing, circa 1930s-1967, (5 Folders)


Box 5 Folder 6

Outgoing, 1941-1945, undated


Box 5 Folder 7

Outgoing, 1957


Box 5 Folder 8 to 13

Outgoing--Flaherty, Robert and Frances, circa 1940-1950, (6 Folders)


Box 5 Folder 14

Outgoing, 1960-1965


Box 5 Folder 15 to 16

Others, 1932-1958, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 6 Folder 1 to 2

Others, 1932-1958, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 6 Folder 3 to 4

Regarding Evans, 1955-1967, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 6 Folder 5

Fragments, 1941-1965, undated


Alphabetical and previously catalogued


Box 6 Folder 6

Allen, Evelyn, 1953, undated


Box 6 Folder 7

Anderson, Eleanor and Sherwood, 1946-1957, undated


Box 6 Folder 8

Barrington, Margaret "Topsy", 1941-1952, undated


Box 6 Folder 9

Bickel, Karl, 1941-1954, undated


Box 6 Folder 10

Bliven-Sheean, 1941-1945


Box 6 Folder 11

Capa, Cornell, (includes reminiscences of Robert Capa), undated


Box 6 Folder 12

Evans, Walker, undated


Box 6 Folder 13

Flaherty, Robert, Frances and family, 1938


Box 7 Folder 1

Flaherty, Robert, Frances and family, 1937-1951, undated


Box 7 Folder 2

Graham, Eleanor, 1940-1958, undated


Box 7 Folder 3

Greene, Helga, 1953-1965, undated


Box 7 Folder 4 to 11

Hirschl, Jessie [Heckman], 1938-1968, undated, (8 Folders)


Box 7 Folder 12

Johnstone, Ken, 1959-1961, undated


Box 8 Folder 1

MacLeish, Archibald, 1940, undated


Box 8 Folder 2

Plomer, William, 1943-1958


Box 8 Folder 3

[Porter,] Katherine Anne, 1944-1951, undated


Box 8 Folder 4

Schaffner, John to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Edes Harrison and Elizaberth Briggs Harrison, 1968


Box 8 Folder 5 to 6

Sen, Gertrude Emerson--(Mrs. Basiswar Sen), 1926-1965, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 8 Folder 7

[Treat Bergeret,] Ida, 1947-1958, undated


Box 8 Folder 8 to 10

General, 1941-1958, undated, (3 Folders)

Series II: Writings, 1922-1962, undated

Included in this series are manuscripts, drafts, published work and notes by Evans and others; many of the writers whose work appears here were probably Evans' clients during her time as a literary agent. Various manuscripts of Evans' written work are available, including several drafts of an article about Nina Khrushcheva that she wrote during Khrushcheva and her husband's visit to America in 1959, drafts of book reviews, articles for the Office of War Information and various other writings.

Manuscripts and drafts by other authors include work by Carlton Beals, Martha Bensley Bruère, Clinch Calkins, Elizabeth Ellis, Thomas Hibben, Anabel Hughes, Paula Holladay, Ellen Nelson, James W. Osgood, Ken Sato, Felizia Seyd, Janet Stevenson, Harriet Teague, Beatrice Washburn, Annabel Williams-Ellis, and Corwin Willson, among others.

Memoranda, transcripts, newspaper and magazine clippings (of Evans' work and others'), and full periodicals and books are also represented.


By Evans


Box 8 Folder 11 to 12

General, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 8 Folder 13

Book Reviews, undated


Box 8 Folder 14

Finland--for Esso Magazine, 1950s


Box 8 Folder 15

Nina Khrushcheva, 1959


Box 8 Folder 16

"Looking East from Moscow"--for Asia magazine, 1922


Box 8 Folder 17

"The Man at the Corner Table," manuscript, undated


Box 8 Folder 18

"A New Name in Lights: Gertrud Scholtz-Klink", circa 1936


Box 9 Folder 1

Office of War Information, 1943


Box 9 Folder 2

"The War of Ideas"--for the Herald Tribune, 1943


Box 9 Folder 3

Writings on World Religion, undated


Box 9 Box 4-5

Untitled manuscript, chapters 1-11, undated, 2 folders


By others


Authorship Unknown


Box 9 Folder 6

Children's Fables, undated


Box 9 Folder 7

Children's Literature, undated


Box 9 Folder 8

"Conversion of Exigency", undated


Box 9 Folder 9

Germany , undated


Box 9 Folder 10

History of Grace Abbott and U.S. Children's Bureau, undated


Box 9 Folder 11

Irish-American History, undated


Box 9 Folder 12

Korea, circa 1950s


Box 10 Folder 1

Poetry, undated


Box 10 Folder 2

The Seventh Continent , undated


Box 10 Folder 3

Tilly , undated


Box 10 Folder 4

Vegetables, undated


Box 10 Folder 5

The Wedding Trip , undated


Box 10 Folder 6 to 7

Who Is Growing Older? Everybody! , undated, (2 Folders)


Box 10 Folder 8 to 9

General--Manuscripts, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 10 Folder 10

General--Fragments, undated, (1 Folders)


Box 11 Folder 1 to 9

General--Fragments, undated, (9 Folders)


Box 12 Folder 1

Augur, Helen--various, undated


Box 12 Folder 2

Beals, Carlton-- Flower of France, undated


Box 12 Folder 3

Beals, Carolyn Kennedy-- The Trial Begins, undated


Box 12 Folder 4

Boehm, Carson-- Oceanography, 1959


Box 12 Folder 5

Boyd, Madeleine-- Claude Monet, undated


Box 12 Folder 6 to 7

Bruère, Martha Bensley and Robert Bruère-- The Triumph of Felicity Brail: An American Parable, (2 Folders)


Box 12 Folder 8

Calkins, Clinch-- State Occasion, undated


Box 12 Folder 9 to 10

Craton, Anne Washington--untitled, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 13 Folder 1

Ellis, Elizabeth-- The Fatal Diet, undated


Box 13 Folder 2

Grierson, John-- Propaganda and Education, 1943


Box 13 Folder 3

Hibben, Thomas-- Rammed Earth Construction, 1940, undated


Box 13 Folder 4

Holladay, Paula-- Call Me Hagar, (incomplete), undated


Box 13 Folder 5

Holladay, Paula--"Prolegomena" to "The Journey Homeward", undated


Box 13 Folder 6 to 7

Holladay, Paula--various, undated, 2 folders


Box 13 Folder 8

Holmes, Winifred--poetry--"The Red Sea Dolphins", 1945


Box 14 Folder 1

Hughes, Anabel--Poetry--Drafts and Notes, undated


Box 14 Folder 2

Jarecka, Louise--Journal, circa 1931


Box 14 Folder 3

Leland, Marine-- French Canada, 1944-1945


Box 14 Folder 4

Lovett, Robert Morss--"The Outside Children – The Virgins", 1942


Box 14 Folder 5

Momoko, Ishii--"Merry Dolls, Quiet Dolls", undated


Box 14 Folder 6

Morrison, Stanley-- The Bibliography of Newspapers and the Writing of History, 1954


Box 14 Folder 7

Nelson, Ellen-- Dodo the Duck, undated


Box 14 Folder 8

Osgood, James W.-- A Constructive Program for Conservatives, undated


Box 14 Folder 9

Sato, Ken-- The Yellow Jap Dogs, undated


Box 15 Folder 1

Sen, Gertrude-- Testing Ground in NEFA, undated


Box 15 Folder 2 to 3

Seyd, Felizia-- Alexander I of Russia, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 15 Folder 4

Shapley, Olive--untitled manuscript, 1949-1950


Box 15 Folder 5

Stevenson, Jane-- Kate: A Play, 1951


Box 15 Folder 6

Teague, Harriet-- Richard Mill: In Memoriam, undated


Box 15 Folder 7

Thompson, Dorothy--"Editorial for Ladies' Home Journal", undated


Box 15 Folder 8

Tikhonov, Nikolai-- Tales of Leningrad, undated


Box 15 Folder 9

Treat, Ida--Manuscripts, undated


Box 15 Folder 10

Turner, Roger-- If I must go down to the sea again, undated


Box 15 Folder 11

Uht, John-- Four Tigers, Four Trees and Mabu, undated


Box 15 Folder 12

Washburn, Beatrice--Short Pieces, 1939


Box 15 Folder 13

Washburn, Beatrice-- Sketches of Mexico-- Manchester Guardian, 1940


Box 16 Folder 1

Williams-Ellis, Annabel-- Human Nature Study for Schools, undated


Box 16 Folder 2 to 4

Willson, Corwin-- Merrily We Roll, 1962, (3 Folders)


Box 16 Folder 5

Woodward, Anne-- Paddy Corrigan Stories, 1954


Box 16 Folder 6

Wuolijoki, Hella-- Women of Property, 1937


Children's Book Manuscripts


Box 16 Folder 7

Barrington, Margaret, 1946, undated


Box 16 Folder 8

Jarecka, Louise, undated


Box 16 Folder 9

General, undated


Box 17 Folder 1 to 6

Various Authors, A-Y, undated, 6 folders


Box 17 Folder 7

Project files--Greeting Cards, undated


Box 17 Folder 8

Project files--General, undated


Memos and Press Releases


Box 17 Folder 9

BBC Fortnightly Newsletter , 1942


Box 17 Folder 10

British Information Services, 1959


Box 17 Folder 11

George Eastman House, 1949, undated


Box 17 Folder 12

Journal of the American Medical Association , 1943-1944


Box 17 Folder 13

Lend Lease: Miss Rankin's Amendment , 1941


Box 18 Folder 1

Magnum Photo, 1955-1959


Box 18 Folder 2

Palmer, Frederick, 1945


Box 18 Folder 3

Penguin Books, undated


Box 18 Folder 4

Post Office Department, 1946-1958


Box 18 Folder 5

UNESCO World Review , 1949


Box 18 Folder 6

General, 1944-1957, undated


Notes


Box 18 Folder 7

Biographical, undated


Box 18 Folder 8

Women Journalists, 1945


Box 18 Folder 9 to 10

General, undated, (2 Folders)


Printed Material


Books


Box 22 Folder 3

General, undated


Box 22 Folder 4

Cockade Portfolio, V. I. Lenin, undated


Box 22 Folder 5

Ellen Browning Scripps, 1936


Box 22 Folder 6

Encyclopedia Britannica--Picture Books, undated


Box 22 Folder 7

From Learning to Earning, The Welsh, undated


Box 22 Folder 8

Children and Their Books, edited by Evans, 1926


Box 22 Folder 9

Collection by Evans, circa 1928-1940


Box 22 Folder 10

Lasten Kesä, undated


Clippings


Box 23 Folder 1

Eleanor Anderson, undated


Box 23 Folder 2

Manchester Guardian , 1948


Box 23 Folder 3

Newspaper Articles by Evans, 1945-1953, undated


Box 23 Folder 4

Magazine Articles by Evans, circa 1920s-1949


Box 23 Folder 5

Reviews by Evans, undated


Box 23 Folder 6

General, undated


Pamphlets


Box 23 Folder 7

Alfred University, 1942-1943


Box 23 Folder 8

Children's Literature, 1939-1960


Box 23 Folder 9

Lamont, Corliss--"The Myth of Soviet Aggression," "Challenge to McCarthy", 1953-1954


Box 23 Folder 10

Medical, 1947, undated


Box 23 Folder 11

Scottish independence, 1944-1946


Box 23 Folder 12

United States Children's Bureau, 1937-1962


Periodicals


Box 23 Folder 13

Fair Winds magazine, 1937-1939


Box 23 Folder 14

Trade Magazines: Advertising Typographers Association of America, Schlumberger, Standard Oil, 1952-1957


Box 24 Folder 1

General, 1941-1958


Transcripts


Box 24 Folder 2

"Woman's Hour", 1949


Box 24 Folder 3

Library of Congress Hearings, 1954


Box 24 Folder 4

The Hollywood Story", 1948


Box 24 Folder 5 to 6

Proposals, undated, (2 Folders)


Subject Files


Box 24 Folder 7

Film, 1944-1948, undated


Box 24 Folder 8

Finland, undated


Box 8 Folder 9

Missionaries of Batanga, Phillipines, undated


Box 8 Folder 10

Office of War Information, 1938-1944

Series III: Personal, 1907-1968, undated

Personal documents relating to Evans' life, including mementos and ephemera, address books and journals, medical and financial documents, and government-issued documents, such as passports can be found in this series. Also included in this series are documents relating to Evans' old age care, funeral, and memorial services. There is also a small collection of documents related to three other parties: real estate and financial documents regarding the Hirschl family, as well as personal documents belonging to Louise F. Lee and Colin Landin.


Box 18 Folder 11

Autobiographical Writings and Guggenheim Fellowship Application, undated


Box 18 Folder 12 to 13

Ephemera and Mementos, 1941-1962, undated, 2 folders


Box 19 Folder 1 to 23

Address Books, undated, (23 Folders)


Box 20 Folder 1

Address book, undated


Box 20 Folder 2

Journal, undated


Box 20 Folder 3

Postcards, undated


Box 20 Folder 4 to 8

Postcards to Evans, 1907-1966, undated, (5 Folders)


Box 20 Folder 9

Contacts, 1965-1966, undated


Box 20 Folder 10

Contacts--UN Telephone Directory, 1945


Financial


Box 20 Folder 11

Banking, 1941-1967


Box 20 Folder 12

Leases, 1946-1961


Box 20 Folder 13

General, 1941-1967, undated


Box 20 Folder 14

Flaherty Films, 1946-1965


Box 21 Folder 1

Medical documents, 1953-1965, undated


Box 21 Folder 2

Passports, 1949-1957


Box 21 Folder 3

Funeral and Memorial Service for Evans, 1967-1968


Others


Box 21 Folder 4

Flaherty, Robert--Memorial Documents, 1948-1951


Box 21 Folder 5

Hirschl, Jessie [Heckman]--financial documents, 1892-1965


Box 21 Folder 6 to 9

Landin, Colin--Correspondence, 1950-1954, undated, 4 folders


Box 21 Folder 10

Landin, Colin--General, 1951-1956


Box 22 Folder 1

Lee, Louise, 1945-1956


Box 22 Folder 2

Weil, Elsie--Journal, undated

Series IV: Visual material, 1890s-1963, undated

This series contains a wide array of photographs, prints, drawings and watercolor paintings. Among the large collection of photographs are a small number of images of Evans; images of schoolchildren by the renowned photographer Gordon Parks; images and manuscripts from the Magnum News Service; photographs and picture postcards from many countries around the world, including Russia, Mongolia, India and Mexico; and film stills from documentaries by Evans' friend and colleague, Robert Flaherty.

Other visual material includes unattributed life-drawings as well as drawings and paintings by children, perhaps dating to Evans' time at the Whitney Studio Club; large-format illustrated maps and posters; illustrations and page proofs, likely from books that Evans commissioned and edited while working as a literary agent; and a smattering of additional material.


Photographs


Box 24 Folder 11

Ernestine Evans, 1890s-1950s


Box 24 Folder 12

Astor Place Riots and Rammed Earth Construction, undated


Box 24 Folder 13

Robert Flaherty documentary film stills, undated


Box 24 Folder 14

India and Africa, various, undated


Box 25 Folder 1

Magnum News Service Photographs: Algeria, Space Exploration, Moscow, Iraq, 1963


Box 25 Folder 2

Parks, Gordon--Students of P.S. 186 in Harlem, 1945


Box 25 Folder 3

India--News Stock Images, undated


Box 25 Folder 4

Individuals, undated


Box 25 Folder 5

Mexico, undated


Box 25 Folder 6

"Moscow Strikes Back", undated


Box 25 Folder 7

Miller, Lee--Unidentified Sitter, undated


Box 25 Folder 8

Southeast Asia, undated


Box 25 Folder 9

U.S.S.R., undated


Box 25 Folder 10 to 14

General, undated, (5 Folders)


Box 26 Folder 1 to 11

India, undated, (11 Folders)


Box 26 Folder 12 to 23

General, undated, (12 Folders)


Visual Material--Oversize


Box 27 Folder 1

Drawings--Hewes, Alanson--Life-Drawings, undated


Box 27 Folder 2

Illustrations and Page Proofs--Jones, Lombard C.--Papermaking Cartoons, undated


Box 27 Folder 3

Illustrations and Page Proofs--Kimball, Marie--The Martha Washington Cookbook, undated


Box 27 Folder 4 to 5

Paintings--Watercolor Landscapes by Children, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 27 Folder 6

Photographs, undated


Box 27 Folder 7

Posters--British Information Services, undated


Box 27 Folder 8

Relief Prints, undated


Box 27 Folder 9

Reproductions, undated


Box 27 Folder 10 to 11

General visual material, unattributed, undated, (2 Folders)


Visual Material--General


Box 28 Folder 1

Book Art, undated


Box 28 Folder 2

Cartoon Cells--"Rumpus", undated


Box 28 Folder 3

Data Visualizations--Scott Air Force Base, circa 1945


Drawings


Box 28 Folder 4

Children's, undated


Box 28 Folder 5

Craig, John, undated


Box 28 Folder 6

Hewes, Alanson, undated


Box 28 Folder 7

Pen, undated


Box 28 Folder 8

Pencil and Charcoal, undated


Box 28 Folder 9

General, undated


Box 28 Folder 10

Illustrations--Japanese, undated


Illustrations and Page Proofs


Box 28 Folder 11

Hewes, Alanson, undated


Box 28 Folder 12

Lee, Charles--An Almanac of Reading, 1940


Box 28 Folder 13

Nautical Motifs-Mexican children, undated


Box 28 Folder 14

Scherf, Margaret--The Case of the Kippered Corpse, undated


Box 28 Folder 15

Various, undated


Box 28 Folder 16

Paintings--Watercolor, undated


Box 28 Folder 17

Paintings--Other, undated


Box 28 Folder 18

Posters--British Empire, Cuba, U.S. Office of Emergency Management, undated


Box 28 Folder 19

Relief Prints, undated


Box 28 Folder 20 to 21

Reproductions, undated, 2 folders


Box 28 Folder 22

General, undated

Unprocessed Material


Box 29

Correspondence, Manuscripts, Address Books, Clippings, etc.


Box 30

Correspondence, Manuscripts, Address Books, Clippings, etc.