Vera Connolly papers, 1907-1960, bulk 1916-1956

Vera Connolly papers, 1907-1960, bulk 1916-1956

Summary Information

Abstract

This collection documents the career of Vera Connolly, journalist, editor, and fiction author, through her drafts, notes, and correspondence. Connolly's articles, published in popular magazines such as Good Housekeeping, Colliers, and Woman's Day, ranged in topic from financial advice for married women to juvenile delinquency, prison reform, sweatshops, and poor living conditions on Indian reservations.

At a Glance

Call No.:
MS#0276
Bib ID:
4078648 View CLIO record
Creator(s):
Connolly, Vera L., 1888-1964; Christian Science monitor; Good housekeeping; Redbook; Saturday evening post; Woman's day; Woman's home companion
Repository:
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Physical Description:
12 linear feet (27 boxes 1 oversize box)
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 has no restrictions.

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.

Description

Summary

The bulk of the collection relates to Connolly's work as a contract and freelance writer and contains correspondence with editors and agents, extensive research notes, and many drafts of her published and unpublished work. It also includes clippings and scrapbooks of published articles, reviews and reactions to her work, and a small amount of biographical information.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged in four series.

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 has no restrictions.

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.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Reproductions may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the Curator of Manuscripts, Rare Book and Manuscript Library (RBML). The RBML approves permission to publish that which it physically owns; the responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Vera L. Connolly papers; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Accruals

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

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Source of acquisition--Estate of Vera Connolly. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--1965. Accession number--M-65.

Gift of the estate of Vera Connolly, 1965.

About the Finding Aid / Processing Information

Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Processing Information

This collection was processed by Carolyn Smith.

Finding aid written by Carolyn Smith in April, 2008.

Collection is processed to folder level.

Revision Description

2008-12-02 File created.

2009/01/15 xml document instange created by Patrick Lawlor

2009/05/27 xml document instange created by Catherine N. Carson

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

Biographical Note

Vera Leona Connolly was a journalist and editor for many of America's popular magazines, particularly woman's journals such as Good Housekeeping, The Woman's Home Companion, and Woman's Day, from the 1920s through the 1950s. Describing herself as a "crusading journalist--a stirrer-upper," Connolly wrote articles that publicized and criticized social problems in the United States, including juvenile delinquency, lax adoption regulations, ineffective narcotics law, sweatshops, and the poor living conditions on Indian reservations. She encouraged her readers get involved by writing to government officials and volunteering time, and some of her articles sparked investigations and court cases that lead to significant changes. Connolly also wrote extensively about marriage and family throughout her career, but supported the rights of unmarried women and unwed mothers as well.

Connolly was born in 1888 at a military post in Benicia, California. Her father, an Army captain, traveled widely throughout Europe and Southeast Asia and often brought his wife and two children, Vera and Donald, with him. For several years he was stationed on the Round Valley Reservation in California, and Connolly later said that the poverty and malnourishment she witnessed there led to her decision to help disadvantaged groups.

The family eventually settled in Angel Island, San Francisco, where Connolly began writing stories and worked on her high school's newspaper. She went on to study English at the University of California for two years, but left after her father died of a bullet wound sustained in battle. Finding herself financially responsible for her handicapped mother, the 18-year-old Connolly moved to New York City to work as a reporter for the New York Sun. By 1913 she was Associate Editor of Delineator Magazine, and from 1917 to 1918 she ran a department at the Christian Herald called "Adventures in Neighboring," which featured upbeat articles about community improvement in rural areas. Connolly became Associate Editor of World Outlook in 1919 and worked for several months at McCalls.

In 1920, with enough editing experience to know what the magazines were looking for, Connolly began writing articles on contract. Over the next two decades she would publish hundreds of pieces in popular magazines, particularly Good Housekeeping. During the 1920's and early 1930s, Connelly focused on family and juvenile courts, youth crime waves, and prison conditions. She visited over 200 jails to see prison life in person. Connolly also visited sweatshops and wrote "Paid in Sweat" to expose the working conditions in the clothing industry.

In 1928, William Bigelow, editor of Good Housekeeping, sent Connolly on a year-long investigation of Indian reservations in the Western states. She returned to write four articles that accused the Indian Bureau of severe neglect, particularly at government boarding schools. The series, which relied heavily on Connolly's observations and the words of the Indians themselves, elicited hundreds of responses from shocked readers, as well as letters of denial and protest from Commissioner of Indian Affairs Charles Burke. The protests led to a Senate investigation and the appointment of a million dollars to feed Indian children, and may also have forced Burke's resignation. Connolly's third article, "The End of the Road," was entered into the Congressional Record. She considered the series one of her greatest accomplishments.

Connolly continued to write articles on social problems throughout the 1930s and 1940s. She attacked narcotics laws in "The Dope Menace" and warned potential adoptive parents in "Bargain Counter Babies." In 1933, her article "the Light in the Mountains" on rural mountain schools resulted in the Perpetual Vera Connolly Scholarship. She was especially interested in juvenile delinquency and discipline, and "Get the Children Out of the Jails," published in Woman's Home Companion in 1945, led to legislation restricting the jailing of children in several states. A later article, "No Straps, No Paddles," was reprinted by the U.S. Department of State, translated into many languages, and distributed in fifty-five countries to provide an example of how troubled and traumatized children could be treated without physical punishment. Connolly was also disturbed by rising divorce rates and wrote extensively about solutions to marital problems.

During the earlier years of her career, Connolly also published short stories and serials in fiction magazines such as Black Cat and The Cavalier. Her work ranged from animal adventure stories to mysteries, but many of her pieces were similar in theme to her articles. Her cautionary tale "The Incident" was based on interviews with two teenage runaways, and stories such as "The Spell on the Rice" focused on women trapped in unhappy marriages. She also experimented with poetry, musicals, and radio scripts, submitted movie concepts to film studios, and published a young adult novel entitled Judy Grant, Editor. Fiction remained a secondary interest, however, and Connolly eventually dropped most other projects to focus on journalism.

In 1937 Connolly became one of the founders and the Associate Editor of Woman's Day, where she was responsible for the column "Just Between Neighbors" and a tear-out section for children called "Children's Day." Two years later, she was asked to found and edit a woman's page for The Christian Science Monitor. She moved to Boston and created "Today's Woman," an eight-column page that covered the achievements of woman around the world and delved into issues especially important to women.

Connolly returned to New York and to contract writing in 1942, and wrote for Collier's and Women's Home Companion. She also published in Nation's Business, This Week, and the Saturday Evening Post, and served again as Associate Editor of The Delineator from 1945 to 1950. Her articles continued to have a powerful impact; "The Man who Refused to Die," published in Redbook in 1952, told the story of veteran Sam Harrison's determination to have a job despite having lost all but two fingers. The article was celebrated by disabled veterans, some of whom formed "Sam Harrison Clubs" to help others in similar situations. CBS made the story into a half-hour radio drama, and the U.S. Committee on Employment of the Physically Handicapped reprinted and distributed the article to hospitals and rehabilitation centers.

By the mid-1950s, woman's magazines had begun to turn away crusading pieces in favor of entertainment articles, and Connolly found it increasingly difficult to publish her work. She stopped publishing in 1955. Connolly died in New York in 1964.

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.

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Genre/Form
Articles
Reprints
Name
Connolly, Vera L., 1888-1964
Place
United States -- Social conditions
Subject
Adoption
Divorce
Indians of North America
Journalism
Juvenile delinquency
Juvenile probation
Marriage
Prisons
Reformatories
Runaway teenagers
Rural schools
Social problems
Women and journalism
Women journalists
Women social reformers

Series I: Correspondence, 1917-1960

Most of the letters that make up this series are between Connolly and the agents and editors of magazines. Connolly presents concepts for unwritten articles, receives feedback and suggestions on drafts, and negotiates the direction of the articles. There are also some responses from readers.


Subseries I.1 Alphabetical, 1928-1955

This subseries is arranged by personal or institution name and includes correspondence with W.F. Bigelow, editor ofGood Housekeeping,and publishers at McGraw Hill and Dodd, Mead, and Co., among others.


Box 1 Folder 1

Author's League, 1949


Box 1 Folder 2

Bigelow, W. F.--editor Good Housekeeping, , 1929-1931


Box 1 Folder 3

Brandt & Brandt--Agents, 1949


Box 1 Folder 4

Bye, George, 1936-1942


Box 1 Folder 5

CBS, 1951


Box 1 Folder 6

Collier's , 1943-1949


Box 1 Folder 7

Congressional Christian News Bureau, 1952


Box 1 Folder 8

Cotton, Thomas L.--Correspondence, 1950


Box 1 Folder 9

Delineator , 1928-1932


Box 1 Folder 10

Dodd, Mead, and Company, 1937-1950


Box 1 Folder 11

Good Housekeeping , 1928-1933


Box 1 Folder 12

Harrison, Sam, 1951-1952


Box 1 Folder 13

Hoover, J. Edgar, 1936, 1945, 1936, 1945


Box 1 Folder 14

McCall's Magazine , 1951-1952


Box 1 Folder 15

McGraw-Hill, 1950-1955


Box 1 Folder 16

Montgomery, George, 1948


Box 1 Folder 17

Ober, Harold, 1951


Box 2 Folder 1

Reader's Digest , 1954-1955


Box 2 Folder 2

Redbook Magazine , 1947-1951


Box 2 Folder 3

Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1948


Box 2 Folder 4

Saturday Evening Post , 1951-1952


Box 2 Folder 5

State of California Youth Authority, 1949


Box 2 Folder 6

Tallulah Falls School, 1934


Box 2 Folder 7

This Week , 1953


Box 2 Folder 8

Today's Woman , undated


Box 2 Folder 9

William Morris Agency, 1950-1951


Subseries I.2: Chronological, 1917-1960

This small subseries contains a file of correspondence related to fiction submissions and several separate runs of general correspondence with editors, agents, and occasionally readers and friends.


Box 2 Folder 10

Fiction Submissions, 1921-1924


Box 2 Folder 11-12

Editors and Agents, 1930-1960, (2 Folders)


Box 2 Folder 13

General Correspondence, 1917-1955


Box 3 Folder 1-7

General Correspondence, 1919-1947, (7 Folders)


Box 4 Folder 1-3

General Correspondence, 1948-1958, (3 Folders)


Box 4 Folder 4

General Correspondence, Undated

Series II: Nonfiction, 1916-1956

Most of Connolly's nonfiction files contain a combination of research notes and drafts of magazine articles. Lists of article concepts and notes from interviews are also present, and some files, such as those relating to the American Indian series, contain extensive correspondence. Clippings of the finished article are sometimes available, but most drafts are undated and few include information on where the article was eventually published. A partial list of articles is included in her resume (see Series IV), but Connolly's published articles can be most easily found by searching magazine indexes, particularly those for Good Housekeeping, The Christian Science Monitor, Colliers, Redbook, Reader's Digest, The Delineator, The Saturday Evening Post, and Woman's Day.


Subseries II.1: Titled Drafts and Research Notes, 1929-1956

Titled drafts of published and unpublished works have been arranged alphabetically. Many files also contain associated research notes.


American Indian Series, 1929


Box 4 Folder 5

"The Cry of a Broken People,", 1929


Box 4 Folder 6

"Can a Crushed Race be Saved?", undated


Box 4 Folder 7

"The End of a Long, Long Trail,", 1929


Box 4 Folder 8

"Is it the End of the Road?", 1929


Box 4 Folder 9-10

Reactions--Clippings and Correspondence, 1929, (2 Folders)


Box 5 Folder 1-6

Reactions--Clippings and Correspondence, 1929, (2 Folders)


Box 6 Folder 1-2

Reactions--Clippings and Correspondence, 1929, (2 Folders)


Box 6 Folder 3

"Charm Helps Win the War"--USO Charm Schools, circa, 1943


Box 6 Folder 4

"Children for Hire--Cheap,", 1943


Box 6 Folder 5

"Clinics that Explain the Marriage Law,", undated


Box 6 Folder 6

"Communities that Saved Themselves"--radio concept, 1951


"County Pork Barrel"--County Jails, 1945-1946


Box 6 Folder 7-10

Drafts, undated


Box 6 Folder 11

Notebooks, undated


Box 7 Folder 1

Correspondence, 1945-1946


Box 7 Folder 2-3

"Delinquent Kids are Rejected Kids"--Youth House, circa, 1946, (2 Folders)


Box 7 Folder 4

"Do Our Kids Matter?"--Concept for Book on Juvenile Delinquency,, undated


Box 7 Folder 5

"Does Your Child Have a Guardian?", undated


Box 7 Folder 6

"Don't Stay Away from the Child Guidance Clinic,", 1953


Box 7 Folder 7-9

"Doped Americans"--Sleeping Pills, 1942-1945, (3 Folders)


Box 8 Folder 1-3

"Doped Americans"--Sleeping Pills, 1942-1945, (3 Folders)


Box 8 Folder 4

"Down into Ol' Virginny for an Afternoon with Lord and Lady Astor,", undated


Box 8 Folder 5

"Eat to Grow Famous"--Celebrity Diets, undated


Box 8 Folder 6-9

"Finding a Pot of Gold--In a Cotton Dress"--Florida Fashions, Inc., undated (contains photographs), undated


Box 9 Folder 1-2

"Firehouse 13 Leads the Way"--Social Halls, undated, (2 foldres)


Box 9 Folder 3

"Five Million Young Detectives,"--Know Your Money Campaign, 1945


Box 9 Folder 4-6

"George Mason: The Man Who Wouldn't Sign,", undated, (3 Folders)


Box 9 Folder 7-9

"Get the Children Out of the Jails,", 1944-1946, (3 Folders)


Box 10 Folder 1-5

"Get the Children Out of the Jails,", 1944-1946, (5 Folders)


Box 10 Folder 6

"Going to School with Mom and Dad"--City College Courses, 1949


Box 10 Folder 7

"The Happiest Husband and Wife Team in Showbusiness"--Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy,, 1952


Box 10 Folder 8

"Has Your Husband Made a Will?", undated


Box 10 Folder 9

"How to Borrow Money," circa, 1949


Box 10 Folder 10-11

"How Not to Buy a House,", 1948, (2 Folders)


Box 11 Folder 1

"I was an Adopted Child," by Josephine Antoine as told to Connolly,, 1946-1947


Box 11 Folder 2-4

"A Job for a Lady"--Policewomen, 1943-1944, (3 Folders)


Box 11 Folder 5-6

"Kangaroo Courts,", 1945, (2 Folders)


Box 11 Folder 7

"The Long, Long Arm of ISS,", 1952


Box 11 Folder 8

"Little Children on the Crime Road"--Juvenile Delinquency, 1936


Box 11 Folder 9

"Man all Boats"--Fire Hazards on Ships, undated


Box 12

"The Man Who Refused to Die"--Sam Harrison


Box 12 Folder 1-7

Notes and Drafts, 1950-1951


Box 12 Folder 8

Interview, undated


Box 12 Folder 9

Radio Script, 1951


Box 13 Folder 1

"No Place Like Home,"-Boarding Homes for Children, 1945


Box 13 Folder 2

"Old Maids and Glad of It!"--Single Women, undated


Box 13 Folder 3

"Paid in Sweat"--Sweatshops, 1933


Box 13 Folder 4

"A Park Vacation for a Song"--artwork, undated


Box 13 Folder 5

"Robbing the Veteran,", 1956


Box 13 Folder 6

"Speak up for Courtesy,", 1950


Box 13 Folder 7

"Starting on a Shoestring"--Small Businesses, 1948


Box 13 Folder 8

"Taping Your Bumper May Save Your Life"--Auto Accidents, 1954


Box 13 Folder 9

"They Cleaned Up a Blackboard Jungle"--Patrick Henry Junior High School, NYC,, undated


Box 13 Folder 10

"The Tiffany of Doll Makers"--Madame Alexander, undated


Box 13 Folder 11

"Vera Connolly Drops in for a Chat"--radio news program, 1940


Box 13 Folder 12-14

"When Parents Disagree,"--Progressive Education, 1944-1945, (3 Folders)


Box 13 Folder 15-16

"Where Harbor Whistles Blow,", undated, (2 Folders)


Box 14 Folder 1

"Will You be a Foster Mother?", 1944


Box 14 Folder 2-3

"You-And Your District Judges," circa, 1949, (2 Folders)


Box 14 Folder 4

"You Can't Get Away From it All"--Western Influence, circa, 1938


Box 14 Folder 5

"You Don't Have to Punish Kids"--Youth House, undated


Subseries II.2: Untitled Drafts and Research Notes, 1916-1954

Files containing untitled drafts or research notes only have been arranged by subject, though these may relate to one or more of the titled drafts.


Article Ideas


Box 14 Folder 6

Notes, circa, 1949


Box 14 Folder 7-10

Notes and Partial Drafts, undated, (4 Folders)


Box 14 Folder 11

Article Summaries, undated


Box 15 Folder 1-4

Notes and Partial Drafts, undated, (4 Folders)


Box 15 Folder 5

Canada--Articles inspired by Trips, 1916-1918


Box 15 Folder 6-8

Child Detention Center--Buffalo County New York--notebooks, undated, (3 Folders)


Box 16 Folder 1

Child Labor, circa, 1943


Box 16 Folder 2-3

Children in Jail, 1942-1954, (2 Folders)


Box 16 Folder 4

Christian Science, undated


Box 16 Folder 5

Coal Mining, 1923


Box 16 Folder 6

Counterfeiting, 1944


Box 16 Folder 7

County Jails, 1943-1946


Box 16 Folder 8-11

Delinquency, 1943-1952, (4 Folders)


Box 16 Folder 12

Divorce, 1949-1951


Box 16 Folder 13

Dog Shows, undated


Box 17 Folder 1

Erie Canal, 1950


Box 17 Folder 2-3

Erie Canal, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 17 Folder 4

Espionage, 1945


Box 17 Folder 5

Federal Civil Defense Administration Training School, 1952


Box 17 Folder 6

Foster Parents' Plan for War Children (organization), 1948


Box 17 Folder 7-8

Framington Reformatory, 1948, (2 Folders)


Box 17 Folder 9

Health Clinic--Notebook, undated


Box 17 Folder 10

Home Engineering Plan, undated


Box 17 Folder 11

Investment, undated


Box 17 Folder 12

Hoover, J. Edgar, 1942-1944


Jails


Box 18 Folder 1

Research Articles, circa, 1939


Box 18 Folder 2

Regulations, 1944


Box 18 Folder 3

Photographs of Lynchburg City Jail, Virginia, and Anderson County Jail, Tennessee,, 1946-1947


Box 18 Folder 4

Correspondence, 1947


Box 18 Folder 5

Migrant Workers, 1945


Box 18 Folder 6

National Traveler's Aid Association--Runaway Case Studies, 1943-1952


Box 18 Folder 7

Sandy Hook Pilots, 1951


Box 18 Folder 8

Savings, 1949-1950


Box 18 Folder 9

Trefflich, Henry--Animal Dealer--Interview, 1948


Box 18 Folder 10

Trieste Refugee Camps --photographs, undated


Series II.3: Article Clippings, 1917-1954

Scrapbooks and clippings of published articles can be found in this subseries. They are organized alphabetically by publication title.


Box 18 Folder 11-13

Multiple Magazines, 1922-1951, (3 Folders)


Box 18 Folder 14

Christian Science Monitor --To Change the Subject (editorial),, 1941


Good Housekeeping


Box 19 Folder 1-2

Articles, 1926-1929, (3 Folders)


Box 19 Folder 3

Poster Ads, 1927-1928


Box 19 Folder 4

Reader's Digest , 1944-1954


Box 19 Folder 5

General Articles, 1938


Box 19 Folder 6-7

"Children's Day" Section, 1925-1939, (2 Folders)


Box 19 Folder 8

Zest: The National Savings Newspaper , 1924-1925


Box 20

"Just Between Neighbors", 1938-1939, (3 scrapbooks)


Oversize


Box 21 Folder 1

Multiple Magazines, 1926-1944


Box 21 Folder 2-3

Christian Herald --"Adventures in Neighboring,", 1917-1918, (2 Folders)


Box 21 Folder 4

Collier's , 1943-1946


Box 21 Folder 5-6

The Delineator , 1938-1930, (2 Folders)


Box 21

Woman's Day --Scrapbook, 1938-1939

Series III: Fiction, 1907-1952

This series is composed primarily of drafts and occasional printed copies of Connolly's short stories, poems, radio and television concepts, and her novel Judy Grant: Editor. Like her nonfiction articles, few of Connolly's fiction drafts are dated, although most were probably written before 1920. Files occasionally contain research notes, correspondence with publishers and editors, or clippings of published works and their associated illustrations.


Subseries III.1: Titled Drafts, 1912-1952

This subseries contains drafts and notes of titled works, arranged alphabetically.


Box 22 Folder 1

"Apartment to Let,", undated


Box 22 Folder 2

"At Go-Down #5,", 1912


Box 22 Folder 3

"Big Ben,", undated


Box 22 Folder 4

"Big Bob's Little Mary,", undated


Box 22 Folder 5-6

"Blitz Receives a Cablegram,", undated


Box 22 Folder 7

"The Book-ends,", undated


Box 22 Folder 8

"The Cotton Charmer"--Musical, undated


Box 22 Folder 9

"The Fighting Spirit"--Radio Concept, 1952


Box 22 Folder 10

"The Girl Next Door,", undated


Box 22 Folder 11

"He Belong Me,", undated


Box 22 Folder 12

"The Hill Girl,", undated


Box 23 Folder 1

"Hissie's Crowd,", undated


Box 23 Folder 2

"In from the Banks,", undated


Box 23 Folder 3

"The Incident,", undated


Box 23 Folder 4

"Juan of the Hills,", undated


Box 23 Folder 5-8

Judy Grant: Editor circa, 1941, (4 Folders)


Box 24 Folder 1-3

Judy Grant: Editor , 1940, (2 Folders)


Box 24 Folder 4

"Last Bus to Paradise,", undated


Box 24 Folder 5

"Lest We Forget,", undated


Box 24 Folder 6

"The Little Cross Woman," undated (Hawke), undated


Box 24 Folder 7

"Low Bridge,", undated


Box 24 Folder 8

"The Lone Trail,", undated


Box 24 Folder 9

"Mahogany Nutmegs,", undated


Box 24 Folder 10

"Moon Girl,", undated


Box 24 Folder 11

"The Mystery of the Chinese Cove,", undated


Box 25 Folder 1-2

"Ole's Senerio,", 1942, (2 Folders)


Box 25 Folder 3

"The Prairie Devil,", 1947


Box 25 Folder 4

"The Quest,", undated


Box 25 Folder 5

"S.S. Ladybird,", undated


Box 25 Folder 6

"Shy Elizabeth,", undated


Box 25 Folder 7

"The Snare,", undated


Box 25 Folder 8-10

"The Spell on the Rice,", undated, (3 Folders)


Box 26 Folder 1

"Squirrel-Oaks,", undated


Box 26 Folder 2

"Tenderfoot Nan,", 1913


Box 26 Folder 3

"Touch-off,", undated


Box 26 Folder 4

"The Turtle,", undated


Box 26 Folder 5

"Under White Men's Blankets," undated (Hawke), undated


Box 26 Folder 6

"Women Are Crazy,", undated


Subseries III.2: Untitled Drafts and Notes, 1907-circa 1952

Story concepts, notes, and untitled drafts can be found in this subseries.


Box 26 Folder 7

Children's Stories, undated


Box 26 Folder 8

Dorthea Dix--TV Concept, 1953


Box 26 Folder 9

Fiction Ideas, undated


Box 26 Folder 10

Fiction Plots--Notebook, undated


Box 27 Folder 1

Musical Comedy, undated


Box 27 Folder 2

Published Short Stories, 1907-1917


Box 27 Folder 3-4

Untitled Drafts, undated, (2 Folders)


Box 27 Folder 5

Verse, undated

Series IV: General, 1910-1952

This small series contains a variety of materials, including articles about Connolly, resumes and biographical articles, contracts, and lecture notes from events held by the Association of Students of Dr. Hendrik J. deLange.


Box 27 Folder 6

"Bright Interlude," by Josephine Betham and Gertrude Keck--Post-WWII Readjustment,, 1944


Box 27 Folder 7

"Family Man," by Ben Barzman, undated


Box 27 Folder 8-9

The Association of Students of Dr. Hendrik J. deLange--Lecture Notes, 1939, 1942, 1939, 1942, (3 Folders)


Biographical Information


Box 28 Folder 1

Articles about Connolly, 1929-1938


Box 28 Folder 2

College and Canada Trip, 1910-1918 (includes photograph), 1910-1918


Box 28 Folder 3

Dossier, circa, 1950


Box 28 Folder 4

Interview, 1947


Box 28 Folder 5

Resume, 1958


Box 28 Folder 6-7

Scrapbook, 1929-1950, (2 Folders)


Box 28 Folder 8

Who's Who in America, 1951-1952


Box 28 Folder 9

Committee on Publication--Report of Investigation, 1924


Box 28 Folder 10

Contract between Connolly and Theodora Brogan, 1932 July 25


Box 28 Folder 11

Motion Picture Rights, 1917-1920


Box 28 Folder 12

Portable File, 1942-1944