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Collection Number: 03070

Collection Title: Edwin Bjorkman Papers, 1855-1954 (bulk 1907-1954).

This collection has use restrictions. For details, please see the restrictions.

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the Duplication Policy section for more information.


This collection was rehoused and a summary created with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities; this finding aid was created with support from NC ECHO.

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Size 15.0 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 12,000 items)
Abstract Edwin Bjorkman (1866-1951) was a Swedish-American literary critic, translator, newspaperman, and author, and, from 1925, a resident of North Carolina. The collection includes literary, personal, and business correspondence, chiefly from 1907, writings and collected writings, of Edwin Bjorkman. His correspondence is divided into two series: Professional (literary), and Personal. The Professional series includes letters from many significant twentieth century authors, including Zoe Akins, Van Wyck Brooks, James Branch Cabell, Olive Tilford Dargan, John Galsworthy, Francis Grierson, Archibald Henderson, Henry Goddard Leach, William Lyon Phelps, Upton Sinclair, Freeman Tilden, and Allan Eugene Updegraff. Topics include Bjorkman's work as a translator of Swedish literature and drama, his World War I experiences in Sweden as an employee of the British Department of Information and the American Committee on Public Information, and his work in North Carolina as literary editor of the Asheville Times newspaper and, after 1935, as director of the North Carolina Federal Writers' Project. The Personal series consists of correspondence of and writings of Bjorkman's family, including his four wives. The bulk of the papers consists of Bjorkman's writings and collected manuscripts, clippings, photographs, and miscellaneous items.
Creator Bjorkman, Edwin, 1866-1951.
Curatorial Unit University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.
Language English
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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Information For Users

Restrictions to Access
No restrictions. Open for research.
Restrictions to Use
Letters and other writings of John Galsworthy, John Masefield, and George Bernard Shaw are restricted and may not be copied without permission.
Copyright Notice
Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the Edwin Bjorkman Papers, #3070, Southern Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Acquisitions Information
Received from Lucy M. (Mrs. Edwin A.) Bjorkman of Biltmore, N.C., 1954-1964, and July 1966.
Additional Descriptive Resources
A copy of the original finding aid for this collection is filed in folder 1A.
Sensitive Materials Statement
Manuscript collections and archival records may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations, the North Carolina Public Records Act (N.C.G.S. § 132 1 et seq.), and Article 7 of the North Carolina State Personnel Act (Privacy of State Employee Personnel Records, N.C.G.S. § 126-22 et seq.). Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in this collection without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications (e.g., a cause of action under common law for invasion of privacy may arise if facts concerning an individual's private life are published that would be deemed highly offensive to a reasonable person) for which the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill assumes no responsibility.
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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Processing Information

Processed by: SHC Staff

Encoded by: Noah Huffman, December 2007

Updated by: Kate Stratton and Jodi Berkowitz, March 2010

This collection was rehoused and a summary created with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

This finding aid was created with support from NC ECHO.

Diacritics and other special characters have been omitted from this finding aid to facilitate keyword searching in web browsers.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subject Headings

The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.

Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Biographical Information

Edwin Bjorkman (1866-1951) was a Swedish-American literary critic, translator, newspaperman, and author, and, from 1925, a resident of North Carolina. Bjorkman was born in Stockholm, Sweden, the son of Anders August Bjorkman and Johanna Elizabeth Anderson Bjorkman. He was educated at South-End Higher Latin School, Stockholm, and was a clerk, actor, and journalist in Sweden before coming to the United States. He was founder of the Swedish Wholesale Clerks' Association.

Upon arriving in New York City in 1891, Bjorkman traveled to Chicago where he worked briefly for a Swedish language newspaper before joining the Scandinavian colony in Minnesota. He edited the Swedish Minnesota Posten, 1892-1894. When the recession of 1893 doomed that paper financially, Bjorkman was persuaded by a friend to try writing in English. An article he submitted was accepted by the Minneapolis Times, and he went on to become a reporter and music critic for the paper, 1894-1897. In 1897, he went east to work as a reporter on the New York Sun and Times. He served in the 23rd Regiment, New York Militia, during the Spanish-American War, 1898. In 1906, he joined the editorial staff of the New York Evening Post, and was department editor for the World's Work in 1909. in September 1910, he was in West Becket, Mass., looking for a position with a university. As editor of the Modern Drama Series, 1912-1925, Bjorkman introduced August Strindberg, Bjornstjerne Bjornson, and Arthur Schnitzler to an American audience. In 1914-1915, he studied abroad as a scholar under the auspices of the American-Scandinavian Foundation.

During World War I, Bjorkman served as representative of the British Department of Information in Sweden, 1915-1917, and was decorated for his service by the Danish government. In 1918-1919, he was director of the Scandinavian bureau of the American Committee on Public Information. From 1920 to 1922, Bjorkman was associate director of the League of Nations News Bureau. In 1925, he was in Waynesville, N.C., apparently recovering from an illness and the loss of his eyesight. From 1926 to 1929, he was literary editor of the Asheville (N.C.) Times. In 1935, he became the state director of the North Carolina Federal Writers' Project.

Among Bjorkman's works are: Is There Anything New Under the Sun? (1911); Gleams: A Fragmentary Interpretation of Man and His World (1912); Voices of Tomorrow (1913); Scandinavia and the War (1914); The Cry of Ukraine (1915); The Soul of a Child (1922); Gates of Life (1923); The Search for Atlantis (1927); and The Wings of Azrael (1934). Bjorkman's two novels are largely autobiographical. About Scandinavia he wrote: "Sweden's Position in the War"; "What it means to be a Small Neutral"; and What is the Matter with Sweden? He also translated works by Gustaf af Geijerstam, Frank Heller, Harry Soiberg, Olav Dunn, Georg Brandes, August Strindberg, Bjornstjerne Bjornson, Hjalmar Bergstrom, and Arthur Schnitzler.

In 1892, Bjorkman married Rosa Odquist, a 21-year-old immigrant from Goteborg, Sweden. Bjorkman's only know child, Frances Elizabeth, was born to the couple a year later. His wife and daughter did not accompany him to New York City in 1897, and in 1899, Rosa was granted a divorce and given custody of Frances. Bjorkman's daughter died of pneumonia at the age of 37.

In 1906, Bjorkman married Frances Maule of Denver, Colo., a well-known newspaperwoman who became a prominent spokesperson for the women's suffragist movement. In 1907, the Bjorkmans joined the Helicon Home Colony, a utopian community in New Jersey founded by author Upton Sinclair. They lost all of their belongings when the colony was destroyed by fire after only four months' existence.

As of June 1920, Edwin and Frances were still living together on Fifth Avenue in New York, N.Y., but they apparently divorced soon thereafter. In 1923, his wife was Virginia MacFadyen. In 1930, he married Ellie Mae Pratt, who was 33 years his junior. Ellie Mae committed suicide in her hotel room in Nice, France, in 1932, while traveling in the employ of Harper's Bazaar. In 1934, he married his long-time assistant, Lucy Millender of Asheville, N.C.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Scope and Content

The collection includes literary, personal, and business correspondence, chiefly from 1907, writings and collected writings, of Edwin A. Bjorkman. His correspondence is divided into two subseries: Professional (literary), and Personal. The Professional subseries includes letters from many significant twentieth century authors, including Zoe Akins, Van Wyck Brooks, James Branch Cabell, Olive Tilford Dargan, John Galsworthy, Francis Grierson, Archibald Henderson, Henry Goddard Leach, William Lyon Phelps, Upton Sinclair, Freeman Tilden, and Allan Eugene Updegraff. Topics include Bjorkman's work as a translator of Swedish literature and drama, his World War I experiences in Sweden as an employee of the British Department of Information and the American Committee on Public Information, and his work in North Carolina as literary editor of the Asheville Times newspaper and, after 1935, as director of the North Carolina Federal Writers' Project. The Personal subseries consists of correspondence of and writings of Bjorkman's family, including his four wives. The bulk of the papers consists of Bjorkman's writings and collected manuscripts, clippings, photographs, and miscellaneous items.

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Contents list

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series Quick Links

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 1. Correspondence

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 1.1. Professional Correspondence

Professional correspondence chiefly relates to literary matters. Included is correspondence with authors, publishers, and book sellers. Notable correspondents include William James, August Strindberg, John Galsworthy, Upton Sinclair, Arnold Bennett, Joseph Conrad, Freeman Tilden, and James Branch Cabell. There are also letters, 1917-1923, from people prominent in the suffrage movement in England and Sweden, and letters directly related to Bjorkman's work in the British Information Service during World War I and with the Committee on Public Information, and the League of Nations News Bureau. There are also letters from Scandanavian acquaintances and from club women who wanted him to speak.

Folder 1a

Original finding aid

Includes index to corrrespondence.

Folder 1

1907-1910

Folder 2

1911

Folder 3-5

Folder 3

Folder 4

Folder 5

1912

Folder 6-8

Folder 6

Folder 7

Folder 8

1913

Folder 9-12

Folder 9

Folder 10

Folder 11

Folder 12

1914

Folder 13-14

Folder 13

Folder 14

1915

Folder 15-16

Folder 15

Folder 16

1916

Folder 17

1917

Folder 18-19

Folder 18

Folder 19

1918

Folder 20-21

Folder 20

Folder 21

1919

Folder 22-23

Folder 22

Folder 23

1920

Folder 24-25

Folder 24

Folder 25

1921

Folder 26-28

Folder 26

Folder 27

Folder 28

1922

Folder 29-30

Folder 29

Folder 30

1923

Folder 31-32

Folder 31

Folder 32

1924

Folder 33-34

Folder 33

Folder 34

1925

Folder 35-37

Folder 35

Folder 36

Folder 37

1926

Folder 38-39

Folder 38

Folder 39

1927

Folder 40

1928

Folder 41

1929

Folder 42

1930

Folder 43

1931

Folder 44

1932-1933

Folder 45-46

Folder 45

Folder 46

1934-1935

Folder 47

1936-1938

Folder 48

1939

Folder 49

Undated 1930s

Folder 50

1940

Folder 51-52

Folder 51

Folder 52

1941

Folder 53

1942

Folder 54

1943

Folder 55

1944-1949 and undated 1940s

Folder 56

1950-1954

Folder 57a

Miscellaneous financial papers and printed items

Folder 57b

Miscellaneous financial papers and slips, tax receipts, deposit slips; membership cards

Folder 58

Undated letters and miscellaneous items

Folder 59

Undated authors' correspondence: James Branch Cabell and Francis Grierson

Folder 60

Undated authors' correspondence: Freeman "T" Tilden

Folder 61

Undated authors' correspondence: Gordon "Y" Young

Folder 62-63

Folder 62

Folder 63

Undated typescripts of letters sold to Philip S. Henry

Folder 64

List of items sold to Philip S. Henry

Folder 65-75

Folder 65

Folder 66

Folder 67

Folder 68

Folder 69

Folder 70

Folder 71

Folder 72

Folder 73

Folder 74

Folder 75

Untranslated correspondence: 1908-1935 and undated

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 1.2. Personal Correspondence

Personal correspondence is chiefly between Edwin Bjorkman and his wives. There are also some letters received by Bjorkman's mother, Johanna Bjorkman (died 1917) and some papers from her home after her death.

Folder 80a

Documentation

Folder 80b

Letters from Frances M. Bjorkman: 1914 and undated

Folder 81-82

Folder 81

Folder 82

Letters from Frances M. Bjorkman: 1914-1926 and undated

Folder 83-90

Folder 83

Folder 84

Folder 85

Folder 86

Folder 87

Folder 88

Folder 89

Folder 90

Letters to Frances M. Bjorkman: 1914-1917

Folder 91-95

Folder 91

Folder 92

Folder 93

Folder 94

Folder 95

Letters from Virginia McFadyen: 1922-1926

Folder 96

Virginia McFadyen manuscript

Folder 97

Madame de Boloni: 1929-1934 correspondence: 1927-1934

Folder 98

Ethel Bigelow correspondence

Folder 99-100

Folder 99

Folder 100

Ellie Mae correspondence and clippings

Folder 101-103

Folder 101

Folder 102

Folder 103

Bjorkman family correspondece (mostly untranslated): 1851-1917

Folder 104-107

Folder 104

Folder 105

Folder 106

Folder 107

Lucy Millender Bjorkman correspondence

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 2. Writings

Materials are largely carbon copies of final typescripts but they also include some ribbon copies, some typed drafts with the author's amendments, some handwritten manuscripts, and some printed copies extracted from magazines and newspapers. Many of the titles exist here in more than one of these forms, and in some cases, related notes and material have been filed with the writings.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.1 Essays

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.2. Articles

The articles are on political, philosophical, sociological, biographical, Scandinavian, and general subjects. Literary subjects are excluded for the most part.

Folder 133

"A Plan for Immediate American Action on Behalf of Universal Peace"

Folder 134

"The New York Police Court"

"Solving the Rural Problem with Song"

"Predecessors of Helicon Hall"

"The Constitution of a City-State"

Folder 135

"America through Swedish Glasses"

Folder 136

"Branting of Sweden"

"Enter Mr. Branting of Sweden"

"The Late King of Denmark"

"Oscar II: Sweden's Democratic Monarch"

"Charlotte Perkins Gilman"

Folder 137

"The Linneaus Bicentenary"

Folder 138

"The Fame of a Dead Man's Deeds"

Folder 139

"Things between Heaven and Earth"

Folder 140

"Hugh MacRae: Builder of Human Happiness"

Folder 141

"Will Your Home Be as Happy as Theirs?," Ida Tarbell

Hugh MacRae

"The MacRae Colonies at Wilmington, N.C.," E. Bjorkman

Folder 142

"Tacking through Spotless Sweden"

Folder 143

"Sweden's Solution for Divorce"

Folder 144

"Plants and Personality"

Folder 145

"Scandinavian Politics"

"The New Swedish Cabinet"

"Sweden Under Socialist Government"

Folder 146

"The New City Hall at Stockholm"

Folder 147

"The Cry of Ukraine"

Folder 148

"What Industrial Civilization May Do to Men"

"The Danger of Typhoid"

"Our Debt to Dr. Wiley"

"The Unnecessary Curse of Sickness"

Folder 149

"What Is the Matter with Sweden?"

"Sweden's Position in the War"

"Sweden's Currency: Rival to the Dollar"

"Scandinavia and the War"

"When the Dollar Barely Holds Its Own"

"The Position of Sweden"

"What It Means to Be a Small Neutral"

Folder 150

"When Maturity Weds Precocity"

Folder 151

Clippings: essays and articles

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.3. Publishers' Reports

Folder 152

Publishers' reports

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.4. Literary Studies

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.5. Book Reviews and Literary Articles

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.6. Translations

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.7. Novels

Folder 204-205

Folder 204

Folder 205

Closed Chapters

Folder 206-209

Folder 206

Folder 207

Folder 208

Folder 209

The Soul of a Child

Folder 210-217

Folder 210

Folder 211

Folder 212

Folder 213

Folder 214

Folder 215

Folder 216

Folder 217

Gates of Life

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.8. Plays

Folder 218-222

Folder 218

Folder 219

Folder 220

Folder 221

Folder 222

Margot's Marriage: A Play in Three Acts

Folder 223

Seeing It Face to Face

Folder 224

The Gift of the Magi

Folder 225

Mary and Martha and the Magistrate

Folder 226

Failures

Folder 227-229

Folder 227

Folder 228

Folder 229

God's Harlot

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.9. Poems

Folder 230

Poems in print

Folder 231

Swedish poems

Folder 232

Poems: collected manuscripts

Folder 233

Some shorter poems and poems for marketing

Folder 234-235

Folder 234

Folder 235

Poem manuscripts

Folder 236-241

Folder 236

Folder 237

Folder 238

Folder 239

Folder 240

Folder 241

"Old Barham" poems

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.10. Fiction I

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.11. Fiction II (Short Pieces)

Folder 270-272

Folder 270

Folder 271

Folder 272

Fiction II: 1-3

Folder 273-279

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

Fiction II: 4 (clippings only)

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

"A Glimpse of Fate"

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

"Leisure Class"

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

"Solidarity"

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

"A Shadow on the Path"

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

"The Will to Live"

Folder 273

Folder 274

Folder 275

Folder 276

Folder 277

Folder 278

Folder 279

Humor:"A Postponed Reformation," "A Court Room Scene,"

Folder 280

Fiction II: 4, Swedish fiction

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.12. Other Writings

Folder 281

War Memoranda: 1917-1918

Folder 282

Planned Books: "Gleams"

Folder 283-284

Folder 283

Folder 284

Book of essays, plans for "The Meaning of Life," etc.

Folder 285-288

Folder 285

Folder 286

Folder 287

Folder 288

Papers associated with "Atlantis"

Folder 289-292

Folder 289

Folder 290

Folder 291

Folder 292

Papers related to "Forest Station History"

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.13. Sundries

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.14. Notes

Folder 299

Grierson, Francis (1848-1927)

Folder 300-301

Folder 300

Folder 301

Notes for articles

Folder 302-303

Folder 302

Folder 303

Notes for lectures and speeches: 1917-1923

Folder 304

Miscellaneous

Folder 305

Social: original notes

Folder 306

Religion, criticism, literature: original notes

Folder 307

Notes: original

Folder 308

World War I

Folder 309-310

Folder 309

Folder 310

Original notes

Folder 311-313

Folder 311

Folder 312

Folder 313

Pocket memoranda: books 1-3

Folder 314

"Scandinavian Dramatics of Today" and other notes

Folder 315

Notes

Folder 316

Unfinished stories

Folder 317

List of some articles for a book

Refusal of shorts

Folder 318

Unfinished stories, etc.

List of some articles for a book

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 3. Clippings

Folder 319

Travel credentials: 1914-1919

London programs and invitations: 1915, 1916

Folder 320

Miscellaneous from travel momentos

Folder 321-325

Folder 321

Folder 322

Folder 323

Folder 324

Folder 325

Concerning Bjorkman: 1910-1915 and undated

Folder 326-328

Folder 326

Folder 327

Folder 328

Concerning Bjorkman: 1916-1919

Folder 329-332

Folder 329

Folder 330

Folder 331

Folder 332

Concerning Bjorkman: 1920-1924

Folder 333-334

Folder 333

Folder 334

Concerning Bjorkman: 1932-1937

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 4. Photographs and Other Pictures

Chiefly pictures and photographic portraits of Edwin Bjorkman, his family and friends, and prominent artists and literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s including Conrad Aiken, Claude Anet, Gertrude Bell, Silas Bent, Willa Cather, Agatha Christie, Miguel Covarrubias, Clemence Dane, Warwick Deeping, Miguel De Unamuno, John Erskine, Ford Madox Ford, John Galsworthy, Andre Gide, Paul Green, Francis Greirson, Thomas Hardy, Ernest Hemingway, Fannie Hurst, Aldous Huxley, Henrik Ibsen, Wolfgang Kohler, Selma Lagerlof, D. H. Lawrence, Sinclair Lewis, Joan Lowell, Thomas Mann, Edgar Lee Masters, Alfred Neumann, Eugene O'Neill, Marcel Proust, Carl Sandburg, George Bernard Shaw, Upton Sinclair, August Strindberg, Booth Tarkington, Louis Untermeyer, Sigrid Undset, S. S. Van Dine, Maurine Watkins, Edith Wharton, Stewart Edward White, Thornton Wilder, Horace Williams, Woodrow Wilson, Kathleen Woodward, and Elinor Wylie.

Folder 335

Art: Christmas cards, Swedish sculpture

Folder 336

Kuhn, Walt Christmas Drawings: 1937-1941

Dr. Learned: other Christmas cards; woodcuts, etc.

Folder 337

Walt Kuhn: art pictures

Folder 338

Swedish art and Swedish humor

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Contact prints of Edwin A. Bjorkman, 1914

Photographer: Genthe Studios, N.Y.

Image P-3070/6

Bjorkman, Johanna Elizabeth, circa 1880

Photographer: L. & T. Lundberg

Image P-3070/7

Bjorkman, Anders August, circa 1860s

Image P-3070/8

Grandmother of Edwin Bjorkman, circa 1860

Image P-3070/9

Unidentified woman, possibly Edwin Bjorkman's grandmother, circa 1880

Image P-3070/10

Paternal grandmother of Edwin Bjorkman, circa 1900

Photographer: Gust. Joop and Comp., Stockholm, Sweden

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Snapshots of Edwin Bjorkman and Frances Maule, circa 1915

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Bjorkman, Edwin and Frances Maule, circa 1915

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Maule, Frances, 1911

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Bjorkman, Frances Maule, circa 1915

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Bjorkman, Frances Maule, circa 1915

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Bjorkman, Frances Maule, circa 1925

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Velin, Bertha, circa 1900

Image P-3070/22

Heckscher, Eli F., circa 1900

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Rydbeck, Oscar, circa 1900

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Lagerlof, Selma, circa 1890

Image P-3070/25

Neale, Victor, circa 1890

Image P-3070/26

Cassel, Gustav, circa 1890

Image P-3070/27

Fibry, Charles, 1914

Image P-3070/28

Bomerie, Kristine, circa 1880

Photographer: Forbech Christiania

Image P-3070/29

Thorsson, Fredrick V., circa 1900

Photographer: Erik Holmen, Stockholm, Sweden

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Wallenberg, Marcus, circa 1900

Photographer: Erik Holmen, Stockholm, Sweden

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Scandinavian journalists, circa 1917

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Serbian Minister B. T. Tcholak-Antilch and American Minister Ira N. Morris, circa 1915

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Publicity photographs, artists and literary figures: A-C

Includes photographs of Conrad Aiken, Claude Anet, Gertrude Bell, Silas Bent, Willa Cather, Agatha Christie, Miguel Covarrubias, and other prominent artists and literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s.

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Publicity photographs, artists and literary figures: D-I

Includes photographs of Clemence Dane, Warwick Deeping, Miguel De Unamuno, John Erskine, Ford Madox Ford, John Galsworthy, Andre Gide, Paul Green, Francis Greirson, Thomas Hardy, Ernest Hemingway, Fannie Hurst, Aldous Huxley, Henrik Ibsen, and other prominent literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s.

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Publicity photographs, artists and literary figures: J-R

Includes photographs of Wolfgang Kohler, Selma Lagerlof, D. H. Lawrence, Sinclair Lewis, Joan Lowell, Thomas Mann, Edgar Lee Masters, Alfred Neumann, Eugene O'Neill, Marcel Proust, and other prominent artists and literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s.

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P-3070/165

P-3070/166

P-3070/167

P-3070/168

P-3070/169

P-3070/170

P-3070/171

P-3070/172

P-3070/173

P-3070/174

P-3070/175

P-3070/176

P-3070/177

P-3070/178

P-3070/179

P-3070/180

P-3070/181

P-3070/182

P-3070/183

P-3070/184

P-3070/185

P-3070/186

P-3070/187

P-3070/188

P-3070/189

P-3070/190

P-3070/191

P-3070/192

P-3070/193

P-3070/194

P-3070/195

P-3070/196

P-3070/197

P-3070/198

P-3070/199

P-3070/200

P-3070/201

P-3070/202

P-3070/203

P-3070/204

P-3070/205

P-3070/206

P-3070/207

P-3070/208

P-3070/209

P-3070/210

P-3070/211

P-3070/212

P-3070/213

P-3070/214

P-3070/215

P-3070/216

Publicity photographs, artists and literary figures: S-W

Includes photographs of Carl Sandburg, George Bernard Shaw, Upton Sinclair, August Strindberg, Booth Tarkington, Louis Untermeyer, Sigrid Undset, S. S. Van Dine, Maurine Watkins, Edith Wharton, Stewart Edward White, Thornton Wilder, Horace Williams, Woodrow Wilson, Kathleen Woodward, Elinor Wylie, and other prominent artists and literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s.

Image P-3070/217-225

P-3070/217

P-3070/218

P-3070/219

P-3070/220

P-3070/221

P-3070/222

P-3070/223

P-3070/224

P-3070/225

Photographs of unidentified Swedish people, circa 1890-1910

Image P-3070/226-240

P-3070/226

P-3070/227

P-3070/228

P-3070/229

P-3070/230

P-3070/231

P-3070/232

P-3070/233

P-3070/234

P-3070/235

P-3070/236

P-3070/237

P-3070/238

P-3070/239

P-3070/240

Unidentified Swedish celebrities, circa 1915.

Image P-3070/241

Unidentified baby, circa 1870

Photographer: P. Soderberg

Image P-3070/242

Unidentified young man, circa 1870

Image P-3070/243-258

P-3070/243

P-3070/244

P-3070/245

P-3070/246

P-3070/247

P-3070/248

P-3070/249

P-3070/250

P-3070/251

P-3070/252

P-3070/253

P-3070/254

P-3070/255

P-3070/256

P-3070/257

P-3070/258

Envelope of miscellaneous, unidentified Swedish portraits, circa 1875-1910

Image P-3070/259-269

P-3070/259

P-3070/260

P-3070/261

P-3070/262

P-3070/263

P-3070/264

P-3070/265

P-3070/266

P-3070/267

P-3070/268

P-3070/269

Unidentified people, circa 1900-1925

Image P-3070/270-278

P-3070/270

P-3070/271

P-3070/272

P-3070/273

P-3070/274

P-3070/275

P-3070/276

P-3070/277

P-3070/278

Reproductions and photographs of drawings of people, animals, and landscapes.

Image P-3070/279a

Reproductions and photographs of drawings of people, animals, and landscapes.

Image P-3070/280-287

P-3070/280

P-3070/281

P-3070/282

P-3070/283

P-3070/284

P-3070/285

P-3070/286

P-3070/287

Reproductions and photographs of paintings

Image P-3070/288-296

P-3070/288

P-3070/289

P-3070/290

P-3070/291

P-3070/292

P-3070/293

P-3070/294

P-3070/295

P-3070/296

Photographs of interiors and exteriors of houses, in which paintings and sculpture are featured prominently, circa 1925.

Image P-3070/297-308

P-3070/297

P-3070/298

P-3070/299

P-3070/300

P-3070/301

P-3070/302

P-3070/303

P-3070/304

P-3070/305

P-3070/306

P-3070/307

P-3070/308

Photographs of people which are either illegibly identified or identified in Swedish, circa 1900.

Image P-3070/309-443

P-3070/309

P-3070/310

P-3070/311

P-3070/312

P-3070/313

P-3070/314

P-3070/315

P-3070/316

P-3070/317

P-3070/318

P-3070/319

P-3070/320

P-3070/321

P-3070/322

P-3070/323

P-3070/324

P-3070/325

P-3070/326

P-3070/327

P-3070/328

P-3070/329

P-3070/330

P-3070/331

P-3070/332

P-3070/333

P-3070/334

P-3070/335

P-3070/336

P-3070/337

P-3070/338

P-3070/339

P-3070/340

P-3070/341

P-3070/342

P-3070/343

P-3070/344

P-3070/345

P-3070/346

P-3070/347

P-3070/348

P-3070/349

P-3070/350

P-3070/351

P-3070/352

P-3070/353

P-3070/354

P-3070/355

P-3070/356

P-3070/357

P-3070/358

P-3070/359

P-3070/360

P-3070/361

P-3070/362

P-3070/363

P-3070/364

P-3070/365

P-3070/366

P-3070/367

P-3070/368

P-3070/369

P-3070/370

P-3070/371

P-3070/372

P-3070/373

P-3070/374

P-3070/375

P-3070/376

P-3070/377

P-3070/378

P-3070/379

P-3070/380

P-3070/381

P-3070/382

P-3070/383

P-3070/384

P-3070/385

P-3070/386

P-3070/387

P-3070/388

P-3070/389

P-3070/390

P-3070/391

P-3070/392

P-3070/393

P-3070/394

P-3070/395

P-3070/396

P-3070/397

P-3070/398

P-3070/399

P-3070/400

P-3070/401

P-3070/402

P-3070/403

P-3070/404

P-3070/405

P-3070/406

P-3070/407

P-3070/408

P-3070/409

P-3070/410

P-3070/411

P-3070/412

P-3070/413

P-3070/414

P-3070/415

P-3070/416

P-3070/417

P-3070/418

P-3070/419

P-3070/420

P-3070/421

P-3070/422

P-3070/423

P-3070/424

P-3070/425

P-3070/426

P-3070/427

P-3070/428

P-3070/429

P-3070/430

P-3070/431

P-3070/432

P-3070/433

P-3070/434

P-3070/435

P-3070/436

P-3070/437

P-3070/438

P-3070/439

P-3070/440

P-3070/441

P-3070/442

P-3070/443

Photographs of Sweden and Swedish landscapes

Chief among subjects are Stockhom, Sweden, and Swedish people, sculpture, and landscapes, circa 1900-1920.

Image P-3070/444-455

P-3070/444

P-3070/445

P-3070/446

P-3070/447

P-3070/448

P-3070/449

P-3070/450

P-3070/451

P-3070/452

P-3070/453

P-3070/454

P-3070/455

Unidentified snapshot postcards

Oversize Image Folder OP-PF-3070/1

Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish journalists, 1918

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 5. Collected Clippings and Ephemera

Folder 339-341

Folder 339

Folder 340

Folder 341

Art exhibit catalogs

Folder 342-350

Folder 342

Folder 343

Folder 344

Folder 345

Folder 346

Folder 347

Folder 348

Folder 349

Folder 350

Playbills

Folder 351-359

Folder 351

Folder 352

Folder 353

Folder 354

Folder 355

Folder 356

Folder 357

Folder 358

Folder 359

Collected monographs

Folder 360

Collected clippings: Art and dance

Folder 361

Collected clippings: Archaeology

Folder 362

Collected clippings: Communism

Folder 363

Collected clippings: Discovery of America, Pre-Columbian

Folder 364

Collected clippings: Education

Folder 365

Collected clippings: Electric power in Sweden

Folder 366

Collected clippings: Labor and industries

Folder 367-368

Folder 367

Folder 368

Collected clippings: Liquor control, Prohibition

Folder 369

Collected clippings: Literary, newspaper pictures of authors, 1937

Folder 370-374

Folder 370

Folder 371

Folder 372

Folder 373

Folder 374

Collected clippings: Literary Criticism

Folder 375

Collected clippings: N.C. items

Folder 376

Collected clippings: Political science

Folder 377

Collected clippings: Religion and churches

Folder 378a-378b

Collected clippings: Science

Folder 379

Collected clippings: Scopes Trial, 1925

Folder 380

Collected clippings: Shakespeare

Folder 381

Collected clippings: Sociology, race, housing, class

Folder 382

Collected clippings: World War II

Folder 383

Collected clippings: Unclassified

Folder 384

Collected clippings: Press notices from Swedish papers, 1913-1919 and undated

Folder 385

Collected clippings: Unclassified, 1929-1934

Folder 386-389

Folder 386

Folder 387

Folder 388

Folder 389

Collected clippings: Unclassified foreign language articles

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Items Separated

Photographs (P-3070/Box 1-2 and OP-PF-3070/1).

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