Jump to Content

Collection Guide
Collection Title:
Collection Number:
Get Items:
Hall (Sharlot Mabridth) Correspondence and Papers
MS.610  
View entire collection guide What's This?
Search this collection
Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Scope and Contents
  • Preferred Citation
  • Processing History
  • Acquisition
  • Conditions Governing Use
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Biographical Note
  • Container list

  • Contributing Institution: Library and Archives at the Autry
    Title: Sharlot Mabridth Hall Correspondence and Papers
    Creator: Lummis, Charles Fletcher
    Creator: Redit, Gertrude
    Creator: Hall, Sharlot Mabridth
    Identifier/Call Number: MS.610
    Physical Description: 0.3 Linear Feet (20 folders)
    Date (inclusive): 1899-1971
    Date (bulk): [bulk 1899-1943]
    Abstract: Sharlot Mabridth Hall (1870-1943) was born in Kansas, was a pioneer, rancher, poet, prose writer, state historian of Arizona, and assistant editor of Out West magazine. This collection includes correspondence to and from Hall and Charles Fletcher Lummis, manuscripts of Hall's published and unpublished poetry and prose, obituaries and tributes, a 1971 reprint of one of Hall's 1907 articles, and a letter from Hall to Lummis's secretary, and later wife, Gertrude Redit. Materials are dated from 1899-1971.
    Language of Material: English .

    Scope and Contents

    This collection includes correspondence to and from Hall and Charles Fletcher Lummis, manuscripts of Hall's published and unpublished poetry and prose, obituaries and tributes, a 1971 reprint of one of Hall's 1907 articles, and a letter from Hall to Lummis's secretary, and later wife, Gertrude Redit. Materials are dated from 1899-1971.
    See also Sharlot Hall letter to J. A. Munk in J. A. (Joseph Amasa) Munk Papers, 1834-1928, Braun Research Library Collection, Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles; MS.209.

    Preferred Citation

    Sharlot Mabridth Hall Correspondence and Papers, 1899-1971, Braun Research Library Collection, Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles; MS.610; [folder number] [folder title][date].

    Processing History

    Processed by Glenna Schroeder, circa 1977-1981. Finding aid completed by Holly Rose Larson, NHPRC Processing Archivist, 2012 October 22, made possible through grant funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commissions (NHPRC).

    Acquisition

    This collection was assembled from various donations, including Charles Fletcher Lummis, circa 1899; Helen Carson Rice, 1939 October; Mrs. M. C. B. Knox, 1943 April; Sharlot Hall Historical Museum of Arizona, 1959 October; Ruth M. Christensen, 1971 December 28; and Library staff.

    Conditions Governing Use

    Copyright has not been assigned to the Autry Museum of the American West. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Research Services and Archives. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Autry Museum of the American West 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.

    Conditions Governing Access

    Appointments to view materials are required. To make an appointment please visit https://theautry.org/research-collections/library-and-archives  and fill out the Researcher Application Form.

    Biographical Note

    Sharlot Mabridth Hall (1870 October 27 - 1943 April 9) was an American journalist, poet and historian. She was the first woman to hold an office in the Arizona Territorial government and her personal collection of photographs and artifacts served as the starting collection for a history museum which bears her name.
    Hall was born to James Polk Knox and Adeline Susannah Boblett Hall in Lincoln County, Kansas on October 27, 1870. In November 1881, her family followed the Santa Fe Trail to Arizona Territory, moving to the Orchard Ranch on the Lynx Creek, 20 miles south of Prescott. At the age of 20, Hall sold her first article to a children's magazine for US $4.00. By age 22 she was working as a journalist, poet, and essayist. Hall became a regular contributor to Charles Lummis' magazine Land of Sunshine and in 1901, when two other poets were unable to complete their deadline, she wrote the poem which announced the magazine's new name of Out West. In 1906, Hall was promoted to associate editor for the magazine.
    Following the death of her father, Hall acquired the cabin which had served as the "Governor's Mansion" for Arizona Territory's first governors. In addition to her living quarters, she used the building to house her collection of artifacts related to Arizona pioneers and pre-historic Yavapai county.This move was followed, in 1928, with her founding of the Prescott Historical Society.The same year she opened what she called the Old Governor's Mansion Museum, now known as the Sharlot Hall Museum. Over the following years, Hall oversaw the expansion of her museum through the acquisition of a variety of additional historical buildings. She was also a popular speaker, giving talks on local history and folklore to schools and clubs throughout the state. Hall died on April 9, 1943 and was buried in a family plot in Prescott's Pioneer Cemetery.

    Container list

    Missing Title

    1. Lummis - Hall correspondence (folder A) Ltr, poor condition, contains biographical data, undated
    2. Lummis - Hall correspondence (folder B) 1900-1901 Seven ltrs, all Hall - Lummis
    3. Lummis – Hall Correspondence (folder C) 1901 or 2 -1906 Thirteen ltrs from both to both
    4. Lummis - Hall correspondence (folder D) 1908-1917Thirteen ltrs, ibid
    5. Lummis - Hall correspondence (folder E) 1922-26Fourteen ltrs, both to both
    6. "The Lancer" column by Harry Carr
    7. "Report of the Arizona Historian"
    8. Sharlot Hall and. her work"Arizona girl writes the song of the west'"A visit to Miss Hall" by Maynard Dixon"Out West" poem"An outdoor poem by Bailey Millard"Work of Sharlot M Hall""Of the desert does she sing"
    9. Misc. Poetry"The Colorado River at high water Jun 1900'"Lost in the desert/Trail of death""Out West""Sheep herding"
    10. Poetry (published) Incomplete fragment "The song of the Colorado"
    11. Prose Published (folder A) "The Burning of a Mojave Chief""The Indians of Arizona""The Legend of O-Am Mar-Sat etc." "The Makers of Arizona"
    12. Prose Published (folder B) "Olive A Oatman, her captivity, etc.""Old range days and new in Arizona""The remaking of an old bonanza""The story of a Pima record rod"
    13. Obituary
    14. Tributes
    15. "A Christmas at the Grand Canyon" by Homer Boelter
    16. Ltr to Gertrude Redit (?)
    17. Lummis - Hall correspondence Photocopies from Colo St U, Ft Collins, Colo Folder F 1904 12 ltrs from both to both
    18. Folder G 1909-10 photocopies as above 8 ltrs from both to both
    19. Folder H 1911 photocopies as above 6 ltrs from both to both
    20. Folder I 1920-21 photocopies as above 6 ltrs from both to both

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Arizona -- History
    Correspondence
    Manuscripts
    Obituaries
    Women poets
    Poetry