Contents


Collection Overview

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

Search Terms

SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE

SERIES III. WRITINGS

Ida Tarbell Papers, 1896-1943

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Kara M. McClurken.

Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

2003

Collection Overview

Creator:Tarbell, Ida M. (Ida Minerva), 1857-1944
Title:Ida Tarbell Papers
Dates: 1896-1943
Abstract: Journalist; Historian; Biographer; and Anti-suffragist. Papers are primarily related to her professional life, focusing on her time as assistant editor at McClure's and on her writings about Abraham Lincoln. There is also a small amount of material regarding her anti-suffrage views. Types of material include correspondence, memorabilia, journal and newspaper articles, published and unpublished writings, and a photograph.
Extent: 2 boxes(1 linear ft.)
Language: English.
Identification: MS 159

Biographical Note

Ida Minerva Tarbell was born in Erie County, Pennsylvania on 5 November 1857, the daughter of Esther Ann McCullough and Franklin Sumner Tarbell. She attended local public schools and graduated from Allegheny College in 1880, the sole woman of her class.

Ida M. Tarbell, undated

She taught for a few years at Poland Union Seminary, in Poland, Ohio, and worked for The Chatauquan, a home-study teaching guide based in Meadville, Pennsylvania from 1883 to 1891. She left her job, traveling to Paris to study the role of women in the French Revolution. While there, she supported herself by writing occasional articles for Scribner's magazine and by 1892, McClure's, including a series of articles on Napoleon Bonaparte that was published in book form in 1895. She also wrote biographies of Madame Roland (1896) and Abraham Lincoln (1900), but remains best known for her scathing expose, The History of Standard Oil (1904). She was an assistant editor of McClure's from 1894 to 1906. She was one of a group of investigative journalists (dubbed "muckrakers" by Theodore Roosevelt) who owned and edited the American Magazine from 1906 to 1915. She then lectured on the Chautauqua circuit until 1932, speaking on a variety of topics and occasionally writing articles for magazines.

Though a supporter of women's rights early in her career, she did not support women's suffrage, a position that caused friction between her and those she worked with on a variety of causes. She suffered from Parkinson's disease in her later years and died in Bridgeport, Connecticut on 6 January 1944

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Ida Tarbell Papers consist of 1 linear foot and are primarily related to her professional life, dating from 1896 to 1943. The bulk of the papers date from 1896 to 1912, and focus on her time as assistant editor at McClure's and on her writings about Abraham Lincoln. There is also a small amount of material regarding her anti-suffrage views. Types of material include correspondence, memorabilia, journal and newspaper articles, published and unpublished writings, and a photograph.

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Search Terms

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Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into three series:

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SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS


Box

Folder

11
Newspaper clippings, 1912-42, n.d.

2
Memorabilia and photograph, 1913-24, 1937, 1942, n.d.

3
All in the Day's Work: An Autobiography, 1939

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE


Box

Folder

14-11
General, A-Z, 1896-1901, n.d.


Individuals

12
Boyden, Albert, 1905-12, n.d.

13
Davis, J. McCan, 1898-1900

14
Phillips, John S., 1910-43

Box

Folder

21-9
Business letters, 1896-97

SERIES III. WRITINGS



Published

Box

Folder

210
"The Irresponsible Woman and the Friendless Child," The American Magazine, May 1912


"Is Women's Suffrage a Failure?" Good Housekeeping, October 1924


"Ten Years of Woman Suffrage," The Literary Digest,[Includes excerpts from an interview with Tarbell; author unknown] 1930


"The American Woman: How She Met the Experience of War," The American Magazine (in two parts), n.d.


Unpublished

Box

Folder

211
"Account of whalers caught in arctic ice and the heroism of their rescuer, Charles D. Brower," [author unknown], n.d.