TABLE OF CONTENTSDescriptive Summary of the Collection Biography of John Myers O'Hara Scope and Content of the Collection Series 1: Incoming Correspondence, 1910-1942 |
Administrative InformationCite AsJohn Myers O'Hara Papers, The Newberry Library, Chicago. ProvenanceGift of John Hervey, 1955 Processed byAmy Nyholm, 1955; Virginia H. Smith, 2000. AcknowledgementsThis inventory was created with the generous support of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this inventory do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities. AccessThe John Myers O'Hara Papers are open for research in the Special Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III). Ownership and Literary RightsThe John Myers O'Hara Papers are the physical property of the Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections. Return to the Table of Contents Biography of John Myers O'HaraLawyer and stockbroker, but notably a writer of poetry, prose and literary translations. Born into a wealthy family of Chicago in 1870, John O'Hara was educated and then practiced law in that city until he moved permanently to New York in his early thirties. He worked on Wall Street as a broker and although he and his whole family lost their fortunes in the 1929 crash and the subsequent depression, O'Hara continued not only to work in a brokerage house but carried on his life-long activity of writing and publishing poetry. Much of O'Hara's output was entirely his own, including volumes of sonnets and rather creative translations of Greek, Roman and French authors. He also produced poetical works purported to be translations of foreign literature but which actually were completely original works like Poems of Ming Wu (1941) and Xochicuicatl (1940). When O'Hara's interpretation of the Poems of Sappho appeared in 1907 it was a critical success and later his own poetry collections, such as Pagan Sonnets, Manhattan, Threnodies and his last book Embers in 1921, received favorable notice. He was well-known and active in the poetical circles of his day, which is evident in his lengthy correspondence with several women writers, most notably Sara Teasdale. John Myers O'Hara died in 1944. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Content of the CollectionCollection of incoming correspondence, 1910-1942 - the bulk from poet Sara Teasdale -- and duplicate copies of some of the works of John Myers O'Hara, 1935-1943. There are 446 letters and related items in the collection, of which 263 are from Sara Teasdale. The other correspondents were almost all women poets, with 52 letters from Jessie B. Rittenhouse, and 73 letters from Corinne Roosevelt Robinson. The rest of the collection consists of manuscript duplicates of O'Hara's poems and translations; manuscripts of each of these items are cataloged individually and shelved separately. The collection is significant because of the Teasdale letters, which reflect much of Teasdale's life during the period of 1908 to 1914. Narrative descriptions of the subject matter, types of material, and arrangement of each series are available through the Organization section of the finding aid. Return to the Table of Contents OrganizationPapers are organized in the following series:
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Related MaterialSee also: John Myers O’Hara Letters to John Hervey, 1914-1941 (Midwest MS 171). Return to the Table of Contents |
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