Collection of printed material on Josephine Preston Peabody, 1903-1994 (inclusive), 1903-1931 (bulk)
Overview
Printed material regarding poet and playwright Josephine Preston Peabody.
Dates
- 1903-1994
- Majority of material found within 1903-1931
Language of Materials
Materials in English.
Access Restrictions:
Access. Collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright in the papers in the collection may be held by their authors, or the authors' heirs or assigns.
Copying. Papers may be copied in accordance with the library's usual procedures.
Extent
1 folderThe collection consists of printed material related to Josephine Preston Peabody. It includes publicity for her prize-winning play The Piper: A Play in Four Acts, including the announcement that production of the play was postponed due to the death of King Edward VII; poems by Peabody published in the Radcliffe Quarterly and elsewhere; a publication list including excerpts from reviews of Peabody's writings; and a memorial poem, "To a Poet's Passing," by Isabel Fiske Conant. Additional material includes an article on Peabody and Abbie Farwell Brown, including excerpts from letters Peabody wrote to Brown; an article on Peabody by Brown; and an article titled "Josephine Preston Peabody: Poetic Drama and the Feminist Movement."
BIOGRAPHY
Poet and playwright Josephine Preston Peabody was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1874, the daughter of Charles Kilham Peabody and Susan Josephine Morell Peabody. She had two sisters, Marion and Florence. (Her parents had another daughter, Maud, who died before Peabody was born.) After the death of her father in 1882, the family moved to Dorchester, Massachusetts. She attended Girls' Latin School in Boston, Massachusetts, and was a special student at Radcliffe College from 1894 to 1896. From 1901 to 1903 she was an instructor in English at Wellesley College. In 1906, she married Lionel Simeon Marks, a British engineer and professor at Harvard University; they had two children, Alison and Lionel. In 1909 she won the Stratford Prize Competition for her verse play The Piper: A Play in Four Acts, based on the pied piper legend. The play was performed at Stratford-upon-Avon's Memorial Theatre in 1910 as part of its Shakespeare Summer Season and was also produced in London in 1910 and at the New Theatre in New York City, in 1911. Her other works include The Wayfarers: A Book of Verse (1898); Fortune and Men's Eyes: New Poems, with a Play (1900); In the Silence (1900); Marlowe: A Drama in Five Acts (1901); The Singing Leaves; a Book of Songs and Spells (1903); The Wings (1905); The Book of the Little Past (1908); The Singing Man (1911); The Wolf of Gubbio (1913); New Poems (1915); and Portrait of Mrs. W.: A Play in Three Acts (1922), a play about Mary Wollstonecraft. Peabody was a pacifist and feminist and much of her work addressed issues affecting women, children, and working people. Peabody joined the British socialist organization the Fabian Society in 1909. She died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1922.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
The collection of printed material on Josephine Preston Peabody was transferred to the Schlesinger Library from the Radcliffe Alumnae Pamphlet collection (2010-M90).
Separated Materials
SEPARATION RECORD
Processed by: Susan Earle
The following item have been removed from the collection and transferred to the Collection of Josephine Preston Peabody Posters (A/P352d):
- Theatrical poster.
The following item has been removed from the collection and transferred to the Papers of Josephine Preston Peabody (A/P352e):
- Calendar.
Processing Information
Processed:
By: Schlesinger Library staff
Updated and additional description added: March 2022
By: Susan Earle with the assistance of Paula Aloisio
The Schlesinger Library attempts to provide a basic level of preservation and access for all collections, and does more extensive processing of higher priority collections as time and resources permit. Finding aids may be updated periodically to account for new acquisitions to the collection and/or revisions in arrangement and description.
- Author
- Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
- Language of description
- eng
- Sponsor
- Processing of this collection was made possible by Carl & Lily Pforzheimer Fund, Pforzheimer Fund for the Schlesinger Library, Sybil Shainwald Fund at the Schlesinger Library, and Class of 1955 Manuscript Processing Fund.
- EAD ID
- sch02040
Repository Details
Part of the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute Repository
The preeminent research library on the history of women in the United States, the Schlesinger Library documents women's lives from the past and present for the future. In addition to its traditional strengths in the history of feminisms, women’s health, and women’s activism, the Schlesinger collections document the intersectional workings of race and ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class in American history.