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From Nancy C. Russell to James W. Bollinger, late 19th century - early 20th century

 Item — Folder: Unknown
Identifier: TU2009.39.887

Description

Letter by Nancy C. Russell to Judge James W. Bollinger; describes how she succeeded in getting Charles M. Russell's letters from Sid Willis, and also how she got Mr. Conway to cooperate. Typed.

Transcript

Judge James W. Bollinger 513 Putnam Bldg. Davenport, Iowa Dear Judge Bollinger: You would have been proud of your pupil if you could have been with me in Great Falls. I followed your advice to the very best of my ability and it succeeded far beyond my expectations. The property has been transferred and that deal settled, not exactly as I hoped it would be but much better than it could have been. But the most important thing was my visit with Sid Willis and the fact that he has let me have a of his letters to go in Charlie’s book and is going too do his best for me to counteract whatever has been done against me. I do not know what caused the feeling but at this moment I believe it is a thing of the past, no telling how soon a kink will hit them when I am away. I saw Mr. Conway and used the same tactics with him that you advised me to use with the committee of the Memorial and I have all the clippings and also that letter of Mr. Stanford’s that worried me so and he is most free. Poor little man, I agues he couldn’t understand why his book was not published. He things he is going to make it acceptable to an eastern editor and I sure hope he does. Again I want to thank you for the good advice you gave me and made me see the right way to take hold of a bad mixup. I am most grateful to you. One of these days I will be receiving the story of “Waiting for A Chinook” to put in my little article about Charlie. My kindest regards to all friends. Sincerely,

[Transcribed by Melynda Seaton, 2012-06-28]

Transcript (HTML)

Dates

  • late 19th century - early 20th century

Creator

Language of Materials

From the Collection:

Materials in English

Access Restrictions

Available by appointment only at the Helmerich Center for American Research (HCAR) with the exception of materials with donor restrictions. Contact Library staff in advance to inquire if materials exist pertaining to your research interests.

Extent

From the Collection: 1 extent_missing

Credit Line

Gilcrease Museum/The University of Tulsa

Provenance

Britzman Collection

Medium

ink on paper

Dimensions

Overall: 8 1/2 × 11 in. (21.6 × 27.9 cm)

Notes

The Homer and Helen Britzman collection consists of over 10,000 objects belonging to Charles M. Russell including letters, drawings, personal belongings, photos, and other memorabilia. Homer Britzman worked extensively with Charles Russell’s wife, Nancy, to write Russell’s biography. Chain of custody: Nancy Russell, Homer and Helen Britzman, Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Amon Carter (inventoried collection in 1997), Gilcrease Management Trust (will become property of TU Special Collections if management agreement between TU and the City of Tulsa is severed).

Previous Number

C.3.16 (Colorado Springs Number)

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the Gilcrease Museum/Helmerich Center for American Research Repository

Contact:

918-631-6403