Processing history
Scope and Contents
Biographical Note
Acquisition
Preferred citation
Use
Access
Title: Fred Kimpton Hinchman Papers
Identifier/Call Number: MS.558
Contributing Institution:
Autry National Center, Braun Research Library
Language of Material:
English
Physical Description:
3.0 linear feet
(4 boxes)
Date (inclusive): 1900-1945
Abstract: Fred Kimpton Hinchman (1888-1945) was a teacher and the supervisor of the Extension program at the Southwest Museum from 1929-1945.
This collection dates from 1900-1945 and includes Hinchman's personal and teaching papers as well as biographical information
and obituaries collected by Southwest Museum staff.
creator:
Hinchman, Fred Kimpton, 1888-1945
Processing history
Processed by Glenna Schroeder, circa 1977-1981. Final processing and finding aid completed by Holly Rose Larson, NHPRC Processing
Archivist, 2012 October 5, made possible through grant funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commissions
(NHPRC).
Scope and Contents
This collection includes Fred Hinchman's papers as well as biographical information and obituaries collected by Southwest
Museum staff. Hinchman's papers include class notes and assignments, date books, manuscripts, newspaper clippings, personal
ephemera, and a scrapbook. Hinchman's writings include analysis of dramatic texts and literature as well as poetry, which
was one of his hobbies. Materials date from 1900-1945.
Biographical Note
Fred Kimpton Hinchman (1888-1945) was a teacher and the supervisor of the Extension program at the Southwest Museum from 1929-1945.
The only child of Andrew W. and Cora Ethel (Kimpton) Hinchman, he was born in Dunlap, Morris County, Kansas, 1888 October
20. After spending the first seven years of his life on the family farm, the Hinchman family moved first to Las Vegas, New
Mexico then to Denver, Colorado because Cora Ethel suffered from “ill health.”
In World War I, Fred was attached to Field Hospital M.O.T.C. at Fort Riley, Kansas, and to the Medical Department at Camp
Logan, Texas.
He was introduced to Native American arts and culture while travelling to New Mexico during World War I and the 1915 Panama–California
Exposition, held in San Diego, California. He also made numerous “excursions” with his mother to Isleta, New Mexico.
This is when Hinchman started acquiring a collection of Native American jewelry, textiles, basketry, and objects. Frederick
Webb Hodge would later describe this collection as having “high ethnologic value and one that could never be duplicated.”
Sometime after the War, Hinchman enrolled in the University of Colorado at Boulder and received his A.B. He returned to Kansas
and became an instructor in English and was later appointed principle of the Dunlap High School. He served as principle for
five years. Fred’s father passed away in 1925 and in 1928, Fred and his mother moved to California. In 1929 August, he was
hired as the assistant to Curator of the Southwest Museum, and in December of the same year, he was promoted to Supervisor
of Extension.
He passed way in 1945 January 27. Hinchman bequeathed his collection of objects, photographic negatives, books, and paintings
by and of Indians to the Southwest Museum. Hinchman also made the Southwest Museum his residuary legatee and beneficiary of
the "Cora E. Hinchman Fund," an endowment "to be used for the upkeep and repair of the building, and for the purchases and
repair of exhibit cases and cupboards."
Reference: Fred Kimpton Hinchman obituary published in
The Masterkey, volume 19, number 3, pages 76-79, 1945 and written by Fredrick Webb Hodge.
Acquisition
Bequest by Fred Kimpton Hinchman, 1945.
Preferred citation
Fred Kimpton Hinchman Papers, 1900-1945, Braun Research Library Collection, Autry National Center, Los Angeles; MS.558; [folder number] [folder title][date].
Use
Copyright has not been assigned to the Autry National Center. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts
must be submitted in writing to the Autry Archivist. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Autry National Center
as the custodian of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must
also be obtained by the reader.
Access
Collection is open for research. Appointments to view materials are required. To make an appointment please visit http://theautry.org/research/research-rules-and-application
or contact library staff at rroom@theautry.org. An item-level list is available from the library staff.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Hodge, Frederick Webb, 1864-1956
Lummis, Charles Fletcher, 1859-1928.
Southwest Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Clippings
Indians of North America
Isleta Pueblo (N.M.)
Literature -- History and criticism
Manuscripts
Obituaries
Panama-California Exposition (1915 : San Diego, Calif.)
Poetry
Scrapbooks
Taos Pueblo (N.M.)