Summary Information
Abstract
Barbara Newhall Follett’s papers consist primarily of personal letters,
manuscripts of published and unpublished books, short stories, essays, and poems, book
reviews, newspaper clippings, photographs, and notes written by her mother, Helen
Follett.
At a Glance
| Call No.: | MS#0439 |
| Bib ID: | 4078771 View CLIO record |
| Creator(s): | Follett, Barbara Newhall, 1914-1966 |
| Title: | Barbara
Newhall Follett Papers,
1919-1966
[Bulk Dates: 1919-1939]
|
| Physical description: | 2.73 linear feet (6.5 document boxes)
|
| Language(s): | Material is in English.
|
| Access: |
This collection is located on-site.
This collection has no restrictions.
More information » |
Arrangement
Arrangement
This collection is arranged in five series:
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Description
Scope and Content
Barbara Follett's papers primarily consist of personal letters, manuscripts of published
and unpublished works, photographs, newspaper clippings, and research materials relating
to her autobiography that was published in 1965.
The correspondence was originally processed by year and the current arrangement reflects
this order. Select letters were also catalogued and arranged by special friends of Ms.
Follett.
Series I: Correspondence, 1919-1952
This series consists primarily of personal letters from Barbara Follett to Mr.
Oberg; Alice Dyer Russell, a very close friend; and to her mother, Helen Follett.
Series II: Published Materials, 1927-1933
In this series, the papers are published manuscripts in various versions. The
titles are:
House Without Windows;
I
n Defense of Butterflies;
and
The Voyage of the Norman D.
Series III: Unpublished Materials, 1919-1934
This series contains unpublished manuscripts of books, short stories, essays, and
poems.
Series IV: Childhood Materials, 1922-1925
These files contain materials related to Barbara’s education at home, notes and
history of Farksoo, a make-believe land; butterfly drawings; and numerous notes
about Barbara’s interest in nature from her mother.
Series V: Barbara’s Autobiography, 1919-1966
In this series, there is correspondence between Helen Follett and the writer, Mr.
McCurdy, a professor of psychology; research materials about Barbara’s life;
photographs, and copies of her writings.
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Using the Collection
RBML
Access Restrictions
This collection is located on-site.
This collection has no restrictions.
Restrictions on Use
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish material
from the collection must be requested from the Curator of Manuscripts/University
Archivist, 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); Barbara Newhall Follett papers; Box
and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
Finding aid in repository; folder level control.
Selected Related Material-- at Columbia
Helen
Thomas Follett Papers,
Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
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About the Finding Aid / Processing Information
Columbia University Libraries. Rare Book and
Manuscript Library; machine readable finding aid created by Columbia University
Libraries Digital Library Program Division
Processing Information
Cataloged 06/--/89 Christina Hilton Fenn
Papers processed by Marilyn Chin (Queens College, 2011)
Finding aid written by Marilyn Chin (Queens College, 2011) May 2011
Machine readable finding aid generated from MARC-AMC source via XSLT conversion
June 1, 2011
Finding aid written in English.
2011-06-01
XML document instance created by Catherine C. Ricciardi
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Subject Headings
The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches at Columbia University through the Archival Collections Portal and through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, as well as ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.
All links open new windows.
Subjects
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History / Biographical Note
Biographical Note
Barbara Newhall Follett was born on March 4, 1914. Her parents
were Wilson Follett, an English professor and a writer, and Helen Thomas Follett, also a
writer. Barbara was homeschooled by her mother, who believed that children should learn
at their own pace. At the age of five, Barbara started to use the typewriter and learned
how to make new words and form sentences. She also began to write letters to relatives
and friends.
During her childhood years, she wrote numerous short stories,
essays, and poems about nature. Barbara had a vivid imagination and created a
make-believe world called Farksolia, in which she also developed its language and
vocabulary.
Her first book,
House Without Windows,
was published in 1927,
when she was thirteen years old. It was critically acclaimed and she wrote another book,
The Voyage of the Norman D,
that was published the following year, She was hailed as a
"child genius" and "a child prodigy author" by newspapers around the country. She made
the headlines again when she and her mother went on a long sailing voyage to the
Caribbean and the South Seas Islands during the late 1920s. They co-authored a book
about their trip together and it was published in 1932 as
Magic Portholes.
After her father left the family in 1928, Ms. Follett and her
mother had to find a way of bringing in steady income between their writing assignments.
Starting at sixteen years of age, she worked as a typist in New York City while living
with her mother. From her late teens to her early twenties, she traveled extensively in
the U.S. and Europe with her boyfriend and then husband, Nickerson Rogers.
On December 7, 1939, after an argument with her husband,
Barbara Follett left their apartment with only a few dollars. She was never seen or
heard from again. She was twenty-five years old.
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