Katherine to Francis Biddle., 10/04/1946-10/09/1946
Collection-level Scope and Content Note
The Biddle Family letters comprise the third part of the Biddle Family papers and is organised into three series:
1. Francis Biddle and Katherine Biddle correspondence exchanged between 1912 and 1968. Of particular interest are the very early "courtship" letters from Katherine Biddle before her marriage to Francis Biddle; and the correspondence (primarily from her) sent in late 1945 to 1946 when Francis Biddle served on the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.
2. George Biddle correspondence primarily to his brother Francis Biddle written between 1899 and 1972, with the bulk dating between 1940 and 1970. The letters provide biographical details on his work and rich connections in the art world. (cf. also George Biddle's autobiography, "An American Artist's Story" (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1939).
3. Miscellaneous family correspondence and material relating to other members of the Biddle clan including the families of Coxe, Chapin (note especially the letters of sculptor and artist Cornelia Chapin), McMurtrie, Randolph, and Robinson. Letters by the earlier members of the family provide much historical interest, offering insight into the lives of American nineteenth century men, women and their families.
Husbands and sons often wrote from abroad as necessities of work and education dictated. In particular, letters from William McMurtrie to his wife Elizabeth Coxe McMurtrie offer colorful descriptions of his experiences while serving in the U.S. Navy off the coasts of Italy, Turkey, and in Gibralter. Women's correspondence is typically replete with domestic news of births, deaths, and the general health of various family members. Mothers and aunts advised daughters and nieces on the social graces and especially matters of religion. Well-educated and literate, the women wrote to each other at length, often reporting on books they were reading, as well as the running of their own schools, as did Emily Coxe and her sister Ann Coxe, both married to ministers, the Reverend Charles Pettit McIlvaine and the Reverend Chauncey Colton, respectively. (cf. also the Franklin Sanborne Papers, for nineteenth century American women's correspondence.)
Other substantial correspondence of historical interest includes that of Clement Cornell Biddle (1784-1855), George Biddle (1843-1886), George Washington Biddle (1818-1897), his wife Maria Coxe McMurtrie Biddle, and her sister Elizabeth McMurtrie McColl. The collection is completed by several valuable files of information on the Biddle family genealogy tracing roots back to William Biddle (1630-1712) and wife Sarah Kemp, who arrived in America in 1681, as well as to William Randolph (1650-1711), whose grandson married a granddaughter of Pocahontas.
Dates
- 10/04/1946-10/09/1946
Collection-level Access Restrictions
Permission of the Biddle Family is required before accessing this collection. The Booth Family Center for Special Collections can provide information on the permission process.
Collections stored off site require a minimum of three days for retrieval. For use of all manuscripts collections, researchers are advised to contact the Booth Family Center for Special Collections in advance of any visit.
Extent
From the Collection: 2.25 Linear Feet (3 Hollinger Document Cases, 1 Record Storage.)
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Container Summary
Correspondence from Katherine to Francis Biddle: 4 ALS with an autograph transcription of a letter from Edmund Randolph Biddle (10/9/1946). - ALS 10/4/1946, letter #47. Reference to health; sentencing at the Nuremberg trials and media reaction in the U.S.; a banquet attended with John Biggs and including John Parker, Robert Patterson, Frederick Vinson, Felix Frankfurter, and others. Also Alexis Leger, and Bernice Gilkyson. - ALS 10/4/1946, letter #48. Reference to the Nuremberg trials and reaction in U.S.; Bernice Gilkyson; Marthe Andre de Fels; Marion Merrell; Edmund Randolph Biddle. - ALS 10/6/1946, letter #48. Reference to career prospects for Francis Biddle after the Nuremberg trials, particularly in relation to Julian Huxley, John G. Winant, William Benton and a position in what would eventually be UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation); interest of Pare Lorenz in producing a film on the trials; Marthe Andre de Fels; Alexis Leger; John Biggs; and Edmund Randolph Biddle. - ALS 4/8/1946, letter #49. Reference to Alexis Leger and Marthe Andre de Fels.
Subjects and Associated Physical Materials
BIDDLE, KATHERINE - CORRES. TO BIDDLE, FRANCIS 1946 (OCTOBER): Autographed Letter
BIDDLE, FRANCIS - CORRES. FROM BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946 (OCTOBER): Autographed Letter
NUREMBERG WAR TRIALS - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
BIGGS, JOHN - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
PARKER, JOHN - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
PATTERSON, ROBERT - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
VINSON, FREDERICK - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
FRANKFURTER, FELIX - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
LEGER, ALEXIS - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
GILKYSON, BERNICE - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
DE FELS, MARTHE ANDRE (COMTESSE) - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
MERRELL, MARION - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
BIDDLE, EDMUND RANDOLPH - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
LORENZ, PARE - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
HUXLEY, JULIAN & UNESCO - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
UNESCO - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
WINANT, JOHN G. - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
BENTON, WILLIAM - REFERENCE BY BIDDLE, KATHERINE 1946: Autographed Letter
Repository Details
Part of the Georgetown University Manuscripts Repository
Lauinger Library, 5th Floor
37th and O Streets, N.W.
Washington DC 20057
speccoll@georgetown.edu