John Jay Chapman Letters to His Family


Book Description

Seventy-four letters by John Jay Chapman to his family, including one [item (72)] which tells of a visit with Alfred Lord Tennyson.







John Jay Chapman Additional Letters to Conrad Chapman


Book Description

Letters from John Jay Chapman to his son Conrad Chapman, who was studying at Harvard, discussing family matters and Harvard Business School, and including one poem by John Jay Chapman; with other correspondence.




Unbought Spirit


Book Description

In this collection of his essays and a sampling of his letters, John Jay Chapman (1862-1933) embraces the world at large. Predicting the depersonalization of twentieth-century society, Chapman argues that a civilization based upon a commerce which is in all its parts corruptly managed will present a social life which is unintelligent and mediocre, made up of people afraid of each other, whose ideas are shopworn, whose manners are self-conscious. Chapman should be studied more carefully and at full length, Edmund Wilson wrote in 1929, but in the meantime, what is most important is to have his essays made accessible.... If his books were reprinted and read, we should recognize that we possess in John Jay Chapman -- by reason of the intensity of the spirit, the brilliance of the literary gift and the continuity of the thought which they embody -- an American classic. Jacques Barzun has observed, We have produced very few great critics, but John Jay Chapman equals any of his foreign contemporaries. An American original, Chapman is a tonic to cynicism and an antidote to a society gone flaccid and complacent.




Materials Not Published in John Jay Chapman and His Letters


Book Description

Transcripts of letters from John Jay Chapman to various correspondents and compositions by Howe concerning the letters and Chapman, which did not appear in Howe's (ed.) John Jay Chapman and his letters (Boston, 1937).




John Jay Chapman Correspondence


Book Description

The fonds consists of five items of correspondence from John Jay Chapman to others. Includes four letters to Edwin F. Edgett of "The Lookout" and one to the Boston Evening Transcript.




John Jay Chaptman Letters to Conrad Chapman


Book Description

Primarly letters from John Jay Chapman to his son, Conrad Chapman, concerning friends and relatives, Chapman's world travels, his Harvard reunions, both father and son's writings and readings, and Chapman's criticism of others' writings. Many letters focus on John Jay Chapman's writings against New York Governor Al Smith's nomination as the first Roman Catholic candidate for United States President, along with a small amount of other correspondence.