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[Diary and Ephemera Related to Caney Junior College and the Caney Creek Community Center]

[Diary and Ephemera Related to Caney Junior College and the Caney Creek Community Center] by McIlwraith, Isa

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Seller: Langdon Manor Books LLC
Title
[Diary and Ephemera Related to Caney Junior College and the Caney Creek Community Center]
Author
McIlwraith, Isa
Seller
Langdon Manor Books LLC (United States)
Condition
Very good
Description
Pippapass, Kentucky, 1936. Very good. Small journal (6” x 4”) with 60 handwritten pages; 31 loose leaves of manuscript or typescript; four items of ephemera; twelve black and white photographs each measuring 5” x 7”. All items generally very good or better. This is an amazing collection which documents one woman's experience of working with rural Appalachians in the summer of 1934. The compiler was Isa McIlwraith, an organist who was the assistant professor of music at Mount Holyoke College and, at the time she compiled these materials, the director of music for the New York Ethical Society. She was later the choirmaster and organist for the University of Chattanooga. Isa spent the summer of 1934 teaching at Caney Junior College (now known as Alice Lloyd College) which grew out of the Caney Creek Community Center (CCCC) in Pippapass, Kentucky. According to KentuckyLiving.com: “A frail, 40-year-old woman traveling to an isolated part of the country and establishing a community that has lasted for a century seems like a piece of fiction. However, it is not an imaginary tale but an amazing journey that has resulted in life-changing opportunities for thousands of people who call the Appalachian Mountains home. In the early 1900s, Alice Geddes Lloyd was stricken with spinal meningitis and polio, which greatly weakened her body. At the recommendation of her doctor, who had given her six months to live, she and her mother made the long, arduous trek from Boston to the hills of eastern Kentucky in hopes that the fresh mountain air would strengthen her weakened immune system. What she found upon her arrival in Kentucky was something more important than her physical well-being; she found a poor, yet proud, group of people who needed her. She found her purpose in life. At the behest of a local resident, Abisha Johnson, who offered her land to build a structure in exchange for educating his children, Mrs. Lloyd and her mother moved to Caney Creek and established the Caney Creek Community Center Inc. in 1917. Emboldened by the mountaineers’ eagerness to better themselves and connect with the world around them, Mrs. Lloyd immediately reached out to these people that the rest of America had forgotten. She knew that such a project would need significant funding; so, with an Oliver #9 typewriter and great determination, Mrs. Lloyd began writing thoughtful and persuasive letters to the people she knew in New England asking for money, books, supplies, and teachers. The thousands of letters that Mrs. Lloyd wrote allowed the Caney Creek Community Center to grow substantially in the following years.” Of the many community programs offered by CCCC, bringing education to the area was one of the most important. A woman named June Buchanan volunteered her services after receiving one of Lloyd's letters. She helped establish over 100 schools in the area, beginning with an elementary school and high school on Caney Creek that grew into Caney Junior College (CJC) in 1923. The collection consists of our compiler's journal, several loose sheets of manuscripts with more notes of her experiences, ephemera from CCCC and CJC and some photographs. Manuscripts 1. Isa's journal consists of 60 handwritten pages with 11 being transcribed passages from Horace Kephart's Our Southern Highlanders. It holds day to day notes of experiences and what Isa was teaching as well as lists of local vernacular and their meanings. The journal also contains numerous first hand accounts of interactions at the school as well as Isa's less-thanstellar opinion of both the school and Alice Lloyd. Interesting passages: –“'Funerlizin': About 200 men women and children gathered on hillside near Preacher Billy's . . . preacher standing on large square place covered with wooden flooring. Benches, one row, around it on all four sides. Table with bucket of water and dipper on floored space . . . graves covered with oilcloth . . . emotional ranting no rhyme nor reason to it. Talking all on one quite high tone much higher than speaking voice. Every once in a while one word is yelled out at the top of their lungs. Preacher Johnnie part of time, up, down, rhythm to voice. Begin and end in ordinary speaking voice. Preacher J throws arms up into air, then bends over hands on knees tuns around to face different parts of audience all time. Calls on 'Brother Will' often, who agrees with whatever he says. Singing—only a few took part in it—preacher read one line then they sang (roared) it.” –“Mrs. Lloyd preparing to get rid of 2 tables of girls in fall to make room for two tables of boys . . . Mrs. Lloyd thinks that the mountain girls revert to type much more readily than the boys. They often marry ignorant men and go back to living in one or 2 room shacks . . . frankly not interested in the girls. Has them just because some people wouldn't donate to school otherwise.” “So much of what is attempted on campus is just half done or not even that—grass cutting, fixing fences, etc. Could have attractive campus. They also fight bed bugs systematically. Mrs. Lloyd seems to cultivate their habit of lack of perseverance; e.g. glee club boys express individually to me that they would like a regular glee club.” –“Mrs. Lloyd is deceitful. Gets teachers in on false pretense of paying them. Good talker, seems to present very logical reasons for all of actions. She has a mistrust of everyone it seems.” –an informative chat with a student named Elbert: “Miss Long suggests that the students at Caney look on the teachers from outside as curious. Elbert says that he for one doesn't. Not after he gets used to their manners after first day or so. At first notices their difference of speech but soon forgets it. Chief difference the quick ways of saying things. He says they all are so slow at the school. Miss Long says what gets her is that students don't mind flunking. Elbert says he wants to get good grades, he would mind. 2. One great item is a draft of a letter that Isa wrote to her parents, using the vernacular she learned in Kentucky: “Howdy folks, Hit's a right smart leetle spell Ah reckon sicn Ah tuk ta back ye a letter. Thar ain't nary bitty sense in sich a long delay. Ah've been turrible busy. The director person here axed me to take two courses 'stead o'one. So here Ah am a-teachin' a music 'preciation course and a methods of teachin' music course. Preparin them lectures takes the most surprisinist amount o'time a body heered teel on. In six week Ah'm a-giviin one hudert an' two hours o' classes, each one requirin' new material. In the 'preciation class Ah have twenty students and in t'other sixteen. They're the lieablist young folks Ah've see'd rangin' from 18 year old to several that's well nigh thirty, Ah calc'late. One weekend Ah went a-visitin at the home o' one of my students. She lives 15 miles away. We traveled both ways on horseback an' got caugh in pourin' down rain. Ah liked hit best when we-all got our horses loppin' along, 'stead o' jus' walkin'. You never heerd the likes o'such roads. They're a series o'creeks, mud holes, boulders, bumps, jolts, jolts and jolts.” 3. There are also several loose leaves of handwritten notes further fleshing out her experiences: –“Life down here is so different from that up north. Many of the people in the country around here live in such poverty and want, with little to make their lives bearable. It seems that they expect yet so little from existence their lives are so shut-in, their wants and desires so few and simple. Some of their ways of doing things are just so bad. Example—way children are treated—get their own way from the cradle—won't 'cramp it's feelin's'. Case near here—child dying of acute appendicitis because after they got it to hospital it didn't want to be operated on and parents wouldn't go against its wishes.” –“Delightful assortment of gnats, fleas and flies. My room is my sanctuary since cleaned up. I do want to go around and see how the mountain folks live but dang it all if I don't get chewed up every time! Today I visited a mountain home for real and got 32 or more flea bites on my left forearm. We have quite a variety of noises around here—birds, chickens, roosters, mules (they're the worst-they sound like a combination of factory whistles with asthma and hyenas with indigestion) dogs, frogs, cats bats (bumping against the screens at night), cows and katydids (or something that 'favors' them as they say down here.)” –“My ride into the school on the j-j-j-jolt wagon was an experience which doesn't bear repeating. It took five hours to go 19 miles. The 'vehicle' was a veritable 'kivered wagon' drawn by 2 stoical mules.” –“Highlanders are sly, suspicious, secretive, high-strung and sensitive to criticism. Of late years growing conscious of their belatedness and that touches a tender spot. Don't see how anyone can find beauty or historic interest in ways of life cast off by rest of world so resent exposure of their peculiarities. Hence, hard to write about them without offending them. Hard to convince them that studies of mountain dialect made for any motive except vulgar curiosity.” –“Considering the quantity and quality of what they eat there is no people who beat them in endurance of strain and privation. Showers 2 days out of 3 in spring and summer and women and men go about unshielded from the wet. They have endurance to cold. In spite of toughness, mountaineers not notably healthy with problems of rheumatism and gnawed by dyspepsia. There's a high percentage of defectives. They are kept at home and go around, allowed to reproduce their kind. Evils of inbreeding known, but knowledge is no deterrent, since whole districts are interrelated to start with . . .” –“Ordinarily wounds stanched with dusty cobwebs and bound up in an old rag. 'Tooth-jumping': cut round gum, put nail just below gum against ridge of tooth, slant down on upper and up on lower tooth and hit one lick with hammer. Generally out with 1st lick, if not you might as well stick your head in a swarm of bees and forget who you are. Back teeth extracted that way too . . . –“Those who don't want or can't go to the expense of a frame house build log ones not even well chinked. Whole structure built of green timber, soon shrinks, checks, warps, sags, so that there can't be a square joint, a perpendicular face, or a level place anywhere about it. The roof droops in a season or two, the shingles curl and leaky places open . . . no closets or cupboards, just places for rats and other vermin. Linens and small articles stored in chest or small tin trunk. Most of family wardrobe hangs from nails in wall along with strings of dried apples and beans.” Other items 1. A seven-page typescript of a lecture that Isa gave in 1935 entitled “Who Are Our Appalachian Mountaineers?” Its first paragraph: “When the Southern part of the Atlantic coastal region of the U.S. was settled, wealthy planters owned huge tracts of land and hired poorer white people to do the work on the plantations. When the traffic in negro slaves commenced, these poor white folks were thrown out of employment as the wealthy owned all the rich, fertile land in the plains, there was nothing for this outcast class to do but to push further back from the coat to the hilly regions where it was much harder to wrest a living from the soil.” The lecture goes on to discuss the lineage of Appalachians, and provides detail on the issues of raising crops, the problem of poor roads, the difficulty in raising stock, the history behind the distilling of corn alcohol, local diet and more. After the typescript are several more pages of handwritten notes: “A summer lunch: warm beans, warm beets, warm salmon gravy, warm cornbread. Summer supper: warm beans, warm potatoes, raw onions halved, warm cornbread . . . Meat appeared twice during the 7 weeks, on 2 Sundays. Considering the quantity and quality of what the mountaineers eat there is no people who can beat them in endurance of strain and privation . . . Clothing: very plain. Men usually go round in overalls, the women simple cotton dresses. On Caney Creek the folks often received clothing from the school in exchange for bringing some food supplies. Many of the people including children go without shoes and in so doing cannot help but contract hook-worm, one of the plagues of the South . . . At Caney, sociological lab for the testing of mountaineers for the professions. Caney has all the children fit for school from around its area and has gone into around 8 adjoining counties and also Virginia and West Virginia for students. The school authorities must know all about a child's ancestors before he is accepted. Reason: inbreeding, high percentage of defectives. Also the possibility of the child's mind snapping in early adulthood.” Searching newspapers.com brings up several instances of her giving the talk. 2. Two rare newsletters from Caney Creek Community Center, not in OCLC 3. The 1934/35 Caney Junior College Handbook. A comprehensive 48-page guide to the school with some letterpress and numerous photographic illustrations. Not in OCLC. 4. Several pages of handwritten music, though we are not sure if any of it is original to Isa's experience at CJC. 5. Twelve wonderful photographs. Included are group shots of students, faculty and locals and three birdseye views of the grounds around CJC and CCCC. One shows a small group of men and is captioned on the verso with their names and brief descriptions such as “Dreyfus Brashear—mountain father,” and “Claude Caudill—blind boy.” Two of the three birdseye views have legends identifying the buildings. A wonderful collection, with numerous first-hand accounts of life and education in the Appalachians.
(Jazz) WILLIE "THE LION" SMITH [ca. 1945] Portrait by Bill Gottlieb

(Jazz) WILLIE "THE LION" SMITH [ca. 1945] Portrait by Bill Gottlieb by Bill Gottlieb

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$500.00
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Seller: Walterfilm, Inc.
Title
(Jazz) WILLIE "THE LION" SMITH [ca. 1945] Portrait by Bill Gottlieb
Author
Bill Gottlieb
Seller
Walterfilm, Inc. (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
Bill Gottlieb. No binding. Near Fine. [New York]: Bill Gottlieb, [ca. 1945]. Vintage original 9 1/2 x 7 1/2" (24 x 19 cm) borderless black-and-white photo, mounted on artboard. In extreme right bottom, "Photo" has been written in ink over printed name of photographer Bill Gottlieb. Willie "the Lion" Smith was one of the great Harlem pianists and an acknowledged master of the stride piano, which arose from ragtime and was characterized by a rhythmic sound and fast tempos. The liner notes of the 1958 LP The Legend of Willie "the Lion" Smith (Grand Awards Records, GA 33-368) state: "Duke Ellington has never lost his awe of the Lion's prowess." It quotes Ellington as saying, "Willie the Lion was the greatest influence of all the great jazz piano players who have come along. He has a beat that stays in the mind." This really iconic portrait of Smith, with his characteristically jaunty expression and cigar in mouth, is one of a group of portraits of jazz icons which Gottlieb executed between 1937 and about 1948. This portrait, along with other examples of Gottlieb's work, is now in the Library of Congress. (Wikipedia)
The Claims of Decorative Art

The Claims of Decorative Art by Crane, Walter

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Seller: Crooked House Books & Paper
Title
The Claims of Decorative Art
Author
Crane, Walter
Seller
Crooked House Books & Paper (United States)
Condition
Good
Description
London: Lawrence and Bullen, 1892. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. Full tan cloth with black lettering & decoration, edges untrimmed, title page in red & black, headpieces in red ink throughout, 9-1/8" x 7-3/8". One of 110 copies signed by the printer. Printed on Arnold wove paper. Some discoloration to covers, spine definitely darkened, chipping to head & tail of spine. Good to VG. Walter Crane is best remembered today as a children's book illustrator, but he was also a notable artist in the Arts and Crafts movement, and these essays give a thoughtful insight into his theories & motivations.
I, Willie Sutton: The Personal Story of the Most Daring Bank Robber and Jail Breaker of Our Time

I, Willie Sutton: The Personal Story of the Most Daring Bank Robber and Jail Breaker of Our Time by Reynolds, Quentin

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Seller: Brenner's Collectable Books
Title
I, Willie Sutton: The Personal Story of the Most Daring Bank Robber and Jail Breaker of Our Time
Author
Reynolds, Quentin
Seller
Brenner's Collectable Books (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
New York: Farrar Straus & Young, 1953. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Good. 8vo., 273pp. Sharp presumed and likely First Edition though no statement as such on the copyright page and no FSY logo as typically called for. Square, tight and clean throughout with moderate wear to spine ends and edges. Bright unclipped dust-jacket, ($3.650), has chipping and closed edge-tears. Sub rubbing and creases. Not perfect but complete and presents fairly well. Signed by Reynolds on the front end-paper. A solid collectable copy.
DRAWINGS

DRAWINGS by Steig, William; Ross, Lillian

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Seller: Type Punch Matrix
Title
DRAWINGS
Author
Steig, William; Ross, Lillian
Seller
Type Punch Matrix (United States)
Condition
Very good plus in very good plus dust jacket.
Description
New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1979. Very good plus in very good plus dust jacket.. First printing of this collection of highlights celebrating Steig's 50-year relationship with THE NEW YORKER, featuring some of his best-known comics and illustrations for the periodical. William Steig has the distinction of being nominated twice for the Hans Christian Andersen Award - once as an artist, and once as an author. He has also earned a Caldecott Medal, and the adoration of children and adults for his beloved SHREK! and its associated films. 11'' x 11''. Original red cloth boards. Original price-clipped color pictorial dust jacket. Illustrated in black and white. Unpaginated. Jacket with light wear, a couple small closed tears. Binding with mild edgewear. Textblock edges with faint foxing. Interior clean.
Allan Dwan: The Last Pioneer

Allan Dwan: The Last Pioneer by Bogdanovich, Peter

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Seller: ReadInk
Title
Allan Dwan: The Last Pioneer
Author
Bogdanovich, Peter
Seller
ReadInk (United States)
Condition
Very Good+
Description
New York: Praeger Publishers. Very Good+. 1971. 1st U.S. edition (softcover issue). Softcover. [solid clean copy, light external rubbing/scuffing]. (Praeger Film Library) Series Trade PB (B&W photographs) "In half-a-century making films, Allan Dwan worked with D.W. Griffith, directed Douglas Fairbanks, Gloria Swanson and Shirley Temple, discovered Ida Lupino, and made action pictures like SUEZ and SANDS OF IWO JIMA." An extended interview (which originated as an American Film Institute oral history) with the veteran film director takes up most of the book, and provides ample proof that Bogdanovich was just as good an interviewer as he was a critic and essayist. Includes an extensive filmography -- and if anybody ever had an extensive filmography, it was Allan Dwan, who started directing movies in 1911 and barely stopped to take a breath until he retired in the early 1960s. [Bogdanovich's name is misspelled "Bogdanovitch" on the book's spine.] .
Confederate Industry Manufactures and Quartermasters in the Civil War

Confederate Industry Manufactures and Quartermasters in the Civil War by Wilson, Harold S.

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Seller: Americana Books ABAA
Title
Confederate Industry Manufactures and Quartermasters in the Civil War
Author
Wilson, Harold S.
Seller
Americana Books ABAA (United States)
ISBN
9781578064625
Condition
Very good
Description
Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2002. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good/very good. Octavo. Hardcover with illustrated dust jacket. xxii, 412 pages. Illustrated section.
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"The Solid Nucleus and its Gaseous Wrappings." Historical Aspects of Teaching Physiology. . . by Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine.

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Seller: Jeff Weber Rare Books
Title
"The Solid Nucleus and its Gaseous Wrappings." Historical Aspects of Teaching Physiology. . .
Author
Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine.
Seller
Jeff Weber Rare Books (Switzerland)
ISBN
9780854840700
Description
London:: Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1989., 1989. 4to. 56 pp. 12 figs. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. ISBN: 0854840702
Lulu's Mysterious Mission
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Lulu's Mysterious Mission by Viorst, Judith; Kevin Cornell (illustrator)

5 to 14 days for delivery
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Seller: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA
Title
Lulu's Mysterious Mission
Author
Viorst, Judith; Kevin Cornell (illustrator)
Seller
Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA (United States)
ISBN
9781442497467
Condition
New
Description
New York: Atheneum, 2014. First edition. Hardcover. New/New. 182pp. Octavo [23.5cm]. Black boards, with title stamped in gilt on spine.
A Call to Sanctity: The Formation and Life of Mother Katherine Drexel

A Call to Sanctity: The Formation and Life of Mother Katherine Drexel by Baldwin, Lou

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Seller: The Kelmscott Bookshop
Title
A Call to Sanctity: The Formation and Life of Mother Katherine Drexel
Author
Baldwin, Lou
Seller
The Kelmscott Bookshop (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
Philadelphia: Catholic Standard and Times, 1987. Paperback. Fine. Paperback. "Mother Katharine Drexel is America's most famous nun for she seared the country's conscience on the problems of racism before equal rights was a coined expression. A stunning debutante, charismatic, a generous millionaire, she was a woman of towering idealism who worked selflessly for social justice but she was also a woman torn apart by the flaming injustices of the society in which she lived. A comprehensive, informative, compelling look at the struggles of a great woman in a pathetically unyielding milieu" (James McGrath review on rear cover). Illustrated black paper wrappers with white spine panel titled in black. Light rubbing to covers, else clean and bright. Includes laid-in ephemera with prayer for Drexel. 104 pages. REL/061720.