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COLLECTION Identifier: MS Am 3422

Carleton Putnam papers on Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886

Overview

Contains materials relating to Putnam's writing of Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886, though there are additional materials related to his advocacy for racial segregation and white supremacy.

Dates

  • Creation: circa 1950-1958

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Most of this collection is open for research.

The dictaphone belts are restricted: fragile; use surrogate. For access to original consult curatorial staff.

Extent

3.25 linear feet (6 boxes)

Contains materials relating to Putnam's writing of Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886, though there are additional materials related to his advocacy for racial segregation and white supremacy. Series I. includes Putnam’s personal correspondence related to his writings, along with correspondence with the publishers Scribner’s and the Theodore Roosevelt Association. Series II. Includes resources for Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886, including materials from Anna Cowles, Hermann Hagedorn, Henry Cabot Lodge, William Sewall, as well as Roosevelt family letters and copies of Theodore Roosevelt’s correspondence, diaries, and will. Series III. Contains two sub-series, one with transcripts and written notes, and another with Dictaphone recordings of interviews and Putnam’s related note. Included in the recordings are also further discussion of Putnam’s ideas supporting racial segregation and white supremacy, though this content can also be found throughout additional recordings, notes, and materials in the collection. These materials may be related to his second book, the racist pro-segregation Race and Reason: A Yankee View. Series IV. Drafts includes handwritten and typed drafts of Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886. These materials all date from the mid-twentieth century as Putnam prepared his book on Roosevelt in 1958 and racial segregation and white supremacy in 1961, though the original contents of letters and diaries may be from Roosevelt's lifetime in the nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Biographical / Historical

Carleton Putnam (December 19, 1901 – March 5, 1998) was an American businessman and writer who was an advocate for racial segregation. He graduated from Princeton University in 1924 and received a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) from Columbia Law School in 1932. Putnam published two books, the first of which is entitled Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886 (1958) and describes Roosevelt’s family and the first decades of his life. Putnam admired Roosevelt due to his belief that specifically the European and English settlers and immigrants are responsible for American greatness. In 1961, Putnam published Race and Reason: A Yankee View, which advocated for racial segregation after the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954, though its range covers far more than school segregation. Putnam was a white supremacist. Putnam died of pneumonia in 1998. He was married twice, first to Lucy Chapman Putnam and then to Esther Mackenzie Willcox Auchincloss Putnam.

Sources: “Carleton Putnam,” Wikipedia entry, accessed December 8, 2022: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carleton_Putnam; Bradley, James (2009). The Imperial Cruise: a secret history of empire and war. Little, Brown and Company. pp. 332–333. ISBN 978-0-316-00895-2.

Arrangement

Arranged in four series: I. Correspondence, II. Resource materials, III. Research notes, and IV. Drafts.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

0-AAA1328. Gift of Esther Willcox Putnam, 1991.

Processing Information

Processed by Betts Coup, 2023.

Processing Information

Formerly classified as R110.P971.

Processing Information

Original belts, shelved offsite, were arranged as "Packets" 1-19, which may correspond with the 19 topics listed in the finding aid.

Processing Information

Box 6 contains hard drives.

Title
Putnam, Carleton, 1901-1998. Carleton Putnam papers on Theodore Roosevelt: The Formative Years, 1858-1886, circa 1950-1958 (MS Am 3422): Guide.
Status
completed
Author
Houghton Library, Harvard University.
Date
2022 December 8
Description rules
dacs
Language of description
eng
EAD ID
hou03515

Repository Details

Part of the Houghton Library Repository

Houghton Library is Harvard College's principal repository for rare books and manuscripts, archives, and more. Houghton Library's collections represent the scope of human experience from ancient Egypt to twenty-first century Cambridge. With strengths primarily in North American and European history, literature, and culture, collections range in media from printed books and handwritten manuscripts to maps, drawings and paintings, prints, posters, photographs, film and audio recordings, and digital media, as well as costumes, theater props, and a wide range of other objects. Houghton Library has historically focused on collecting the written record of European and Eurocentric North American culture, yet it holds a large and diverse number of primary sources valuable for research on the languages, culture and history of indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Houghton Library’s Reading Room is free and open to all who wish to use the library’s collections.

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