Guide to the Wallace Stegner Angle of Repose collection M0254

Griselda Mercado
Department of Special Collections and University Archives
2012-2-27
Green Library
557 Escondido Mall
Stanford 94305-6064
specialcollections@stanford.edu


Language of Material: English
Contributing Institution: Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Title: Wallace Stegner Angle of Repose collection
Creator: Stegner, Wallace, 1909-1993
source: Stegner, Wallace, 1909-1993
Identifier/Call Number: M0254
Identifier/Call Number: 2021
Physical Description: 1.5 Linear Feet (3 boxes)
Date (inclusive): 1875-1934
Abstract: Notes and research materials for Wallace Stegner's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, Angle of Repose, which was based on the life of American author and illustrator Mary Hallock Foote.

Conditions Governing Access

Open for research. Note that material must be requested at least 36 hours in advance of intended use.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Wallace Stegner, 1975.

Mary Hallock Foote biography

Born in Milton-on-Hudson into loose-knit, Free-Soil Republican, Quaker family, which was keenly interested in literacy, temperance, women's rights and anti-slavery issues of the day. Family friends: Horace Greely, Henry Ward Beecher, Susan B. Anthony.
Educated (1860-64) at Poughkeepsie Female Collegiate Institute (later Vassar) and School of Design for Women, Cooper Institute, N.Y. Began 50-year friendship with Helena deKay and Richard Watson Gilder, young poet and editor, who were married in 1869.
N.Y. Illustrator (1864-75) Book engraving with W.J. Linton; "gift book" (Long-follow, Hawthorne, etc.) illustration for A.V.S. Anthony of Fields, Osgood & Co. (Houghton Mifflin Co.) and also for Harper's Weekly.
Marriage (1875) to Arthur D. Foote, engineer and cousin of Beecher, whom she met in 1870, on his return from Sutro Tunnel and S.P. Tehachapi projects in California.
Moved West (1876) to New Almaden Quicksilver Mines, where Foote became resident engineer through his brother-in-law, James D. Hague. Lived among miners on The Hill, deplored their condition under "company town" tyranny while moving in important mining and financial society of S.F. (the Hagues, Ashburners, etc.)
To Santa Cruz cement project (1877). Wrote first Scribner illustrated articles;" A California Mining Town," "The Cascarone Ball," "A seaport on the Pacific."
Returned East (1879-81) while Foote engineered in Deadwood; on Hearst's Homestake Mine; in Denver, Co. and at St. Leadville, Co. Wrote Quaker short story, "Friend Barton's Concern."
In Leadville (1879-81) Friendships with Clarence King, Emmons & Wiley of U.S. Geological Survey. Wrote "The Story of the Dry Season", "In Exile," (latter for Atlantic) Helen Hunt Jackson visited her here and a correspondence followed.
Mexican Horseback Trip (1881) Wrote illustrated Century articles: "A Diligence Journey in Mexico" (1881). "A provincial Capital of Mexico" and "From Morelia to Mexico City on Horseback" (1882)
Back East (1882-6) Sees much of Gilders in N.Y.; friendships with the Godkins of the Nation. Henry James and Mark Twain. Wrote Led-Horse Claim (1883). "A Cloud on the Mountain," etc.
Boise, Idaho (1886-1895) Rejoins husband, pioneering Boise, Snake River and Twin Falls irrigation projects (later developed by U.S. Bureau of Reclamation). Wrote: John Bodewin's Testimony (1886). St. Nicholas children's stories, The Last Assembly Ball (1889). "The Rapture of Hetty," "The Fate of a voice" corresponded with Rudyard and Lockwood Kipling; The Chosen Valley (1882), "The Watchman", Coeur D'Alene (1894), "Maverick", "The Trumpoter," "The Story of Aloazar" (1899). Served as art awards judge at Chicago Exposition, 1893.
Grass Valley Calif. (1895-) Declines Principal ship of N.Y. School of Design; joins husband as Resident Manager of the North Star Mines, where she resided until returning east to her daughter, shortly before her death. Wrote: "On A Side Track", "The Cap of Trembling" (1895); "The Harshaw Bride." "Pilgrim's Station" (1896) "Pilgrims to Mecca," "The Borrowed Shift", "How the Pump Stooped," The Little Fig Tree Stories (1889); "A touch of the Sun", The Prodigal, "Eleventh Hour", The Desert and The Sown (1902), A Touch of the Sun and other Stories (1903), The Royal Americans (1910) A Picked Company (1912), The Valley Road (1915), Edith Bonham (1917), The Grand Swell (1919).
Some Principle Themes- Harsh Stratifications of Western deep-mining camp societies (Last Assembly Ball). Exploitation of Western resources & human values by impersonal Eastern corporate capital and remote legal redress (Led-Horse Claim, Chosen Valley, J. Bodewin's Testimony). Exploitation of mine laborer's by outside agitators (Coeur d'Alene). Nostalgi sacrifice of Eastern careers, culture, etc. ("The Fate of a Voice", etc.) Dreams of Water coming to make desert blossoms ("The Watchman," Desert and Sown.)

Preferred Citation

[identification of item], Wallace Stegner Angle of Repose collection (M0254). Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford Libraries, Stanford, Calif.

Related Materials

For further Mary Hallock Foote material see:
M0115: original Mary Hallock Foote correspondence and Reminiscences manuscript.
M0305: McMurray/Foote papers, containing the best transcripts of the MHF correspondence as well as family photos and many original illustrations.
Rodman W. Paul, ed.: A Victorian Woman in the Far West: The Reminiscences of Mary Hallock Foote, San Marino, California, Huntington Library, 1972.

Conditions Governing Use

While Special Collections is the owner of the physical and digital items, permission to examine collection materials is not an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Any transmission or reproduction beyond that allowed by fair use requires permission from the owners of rights, heir(s) or assigns.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

Stegner, Wallace, 1909-1993
Foote, Mary Hallock

Box 1, folder 1-3

"Reminiscences" of Mary Hallock Foote typescript- carbon copy ; typing error uncorrected. Very slightly annotated. 341 pp. (1847-1938) 1895799

Box 1, folder 4

Biographical and critical material 1895811

Box 1, folder 5

Bibliography 1895823

Box 1, folder 6

Children's Stories 1875-1897 1895825

Box 1, folder 7-10

Illustrations:Copies of MHF illustrations (1883-1905) 1895827

Box 1, folder 11-12

Short Stories and Articles by MHF appearing in magazines (1881-1906) 1895837

Box 2, folder 1-2

Short Stories and Articles by MHF appearing in magazines (1881-1906) 1895857

Box 2, folder 3

Mary Hallock Foote: short stories, articles, and novellas appearing in magazines 1895859

Box 2, folder 4

Correspondence: Almaden 1895861

Box 2, folder 5

Correspondence: Santa Cruz 1895863

Box 2, folder 6

Correspondence: Boise, 1883-1889 1895865

Box 2, folder 7

Correspondence: Boise, 1890-95 1895867

Box 3, folder 1

Correspondence: Boise, 1890-95 1895883

Box 3, folder 2

Correspondence: Grass Valley, 1895-1899 1895885

Box 3, folder 3

Correspondence: Boise, undated 1895887

Box 3, folder 4

Correspondence: Grass Valley, 1900 1895889

Box 3, folder 5

Correspondence: Leadville 1895891

Box 3, folder 6

Correspondence: Milton, 1868-85 1895893