Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) records

The records of the Contemporary Club of Philadelphia are housed in eight boxes and span from the club's formation in 1886 to 1952, around the time of its demise. The records are almost purely administrative. Outside of some clippings pertaining to the club's executives and its members, the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) (Creator)
Contributors: Oakley, Thorton 1881-1953. (Collector (col))
Collection:Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) Records
Collection Number:1981
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
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Online Access:Link to finding aid
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LEADER 09272ntc a2200337 u 4500
001 ead-1981
008 150520i xx eng d
040 |e dacs 
041 0 |a eng 
099 |a 1981 
100 1 |a Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.)  |e creator 
245 1 |a Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) records  |f 1886-1952, undated (Bulk 1886-1932) 
300 |a 3.0 Linear feet  |f ; 8 boxes 
500 |a 1886-1888 - Dr. Daniel G. Brinton 1889 - Dr. James MacAlister 1890 - Dr. Daniel G. Brinton 1891 - Mr. C. Stuart Patterson 1892 - Rev. H. L. Wayland, D.D. 1893 - Dr. Harrison Allen 1894 - Rev. S. D. McConnell, D.D. 1895 - Prof. Edmund J. James 1896 - Hon. Robert N. Willson 1897-1998 - Hon. W. W. Wiltbank 1899 - Prof. John Bach McMaster 1900 - Dr. William H. Klapp 1901 - Mr. Richard L. Ashhurst 1902 - Hon. John B. McPherson 1903 - Mr. Joseph S. Harris 1904 - Miss Agnes Repplier 1905 - Mr. Charles E. Dana 1906 - Miss Agnes Repplier 1907 - Dr. George McClellan 1908 - Mr. Francis A. Lewis 1909 - Dr. W. W. Keen 1910 - Dr. S. Burns Weston 1911 - Mr. H. LaBarre Jayne 1912 - Hon. Roland S. Morris 1913 - Dr. Morris Jastrow, Jr. 1914 - Mrs. Cornelius Stevenson 1915 - Mr. Harrison S. Morris 1916 - Dr. Felix E. Schelling 1917 - Mr. Francis A. Lewis 1918 - Mrs. Edward Coates 1919 - Mr. Russell Duane 1920 - Prof. Edward P. Cheney 1921 - Hon. Roland S. Morris 1922 - Dr. R. Tait McKenzie 1923 - Mr. Henry G. Bryant 1924 - Mr. Ellis Ames Ballard 1925 - Ms. Violet Oakley 1926 - Hon. William B. Linn 1927-1928 - Dr. Frank Aydelotte 1929-1930 - Rev. Frederick R. Griffin, D.D. 1931 - Dr. Richard M. Gummere 1932 - Dean Herbert F. Goodrich 1933-1934 - J. A. MacCallum 1935 - Lucy L. W. Wilson 1936 - L. P. Lichtenberger 1937-1940 - Thornton Oakley 1941-1942 - Thomas Raeburn White 1943-1944 - William E. Lingelbach 1945-1946 - George Emerson Barnes 1947-1948 - Francis S. Philbrick 1949 - Katherine McBride 1950 - Dr. Edward M. Twitmyer 1951 - Dr. Percy R. Stockman  
506 |a The collection is open for research. 
520 |a The records of the Contemporary Club of Philadelphia are housed in eight boxes and span from the club's formation in 1886 to 1952, around the time of its demise. The records are almost purely administrative. Outside of some clippings pertaining to the club's executives and its members, there are no personal materials in the collection. Comprising the first two boxes (Boxes 1-2) are outgoing letters from the club's presidents. They are arranged in folders chronologically, starting with the club's first president, Daniel G. Brinton (1886-1888, 1890), and ending with its last president, Dr. Percy R. Stockman (1951). There are no materials in this section from two of the club's presidents: Joseph S. Harris (1903) and Edward M. Twitmyer (1950). Some of the folders also contain photographs of the individual presidents. The amount of correspondence per author varies widely -- some only have a few letters, while others have several dozen. The contents of the letters generally pertain to club matters, such as finances, membership, and speakers. Researchers may also find the occasional outgoing letter from a president in his or her folder. Following the president's correspondence are two boxes of correspondence from people who were invited to speak before the Contemporary Club (Boxes 3-4). These letters have been grouped into folders alphabetically by speaker's last names. (Individual correspondents have been listed in the inventory of this guide and written on the folders.) This group of letters dates from 1887 to 1948 and consists mostly of replies to invitations, though some do inquire about club membership generally. There are also some letters from speakers concerning local accommodations. Also in Box 4 as well as the first few folders of Box 5 are papers of club secretaries Sophia Wells Royce [Mrs. Talcott] Williams and William K. Huff, and club presidents S. Burns Weston and Thorton Oakley. The remainder of papers in Box 5 concern members and consist of applications and nominations, rules and regulations, ballots, remarks, clippings, and other miscellaneous items. This collection contains a number of printed materials, including some of the club's annual reports. The reports date consecutively from 1890 to 1904 (Box 6, Folders 6-13) and from 1909 to 1912 (Box 1, folders 1-2). Other printed matter includes items authored by club members or presented by club members or guests, such as Railroads and the Public by Joseph D. Potts (1892) (Box 7, Folder 3), The Next Step in Christianity by S. D. McConnell (undated) (Box 7, Folder 8), and New Theories of Constitutional Construction by Thomas Raeburn White (undated) (Box 7, Folder 9). The final box of the collection (Box 8) contains three volumes of handwritten meeting minutes from 1899 to 1919.  
520 |a The Contemporary Club was organized in 1886 to hold discussions on outstanding questions of the day and to present scholarly papers by public figures. Membership was open to men and women, most of whom were distinguished in the academic, artistic, and literary worlds of Philadelphia. Correspondence dating from 1886 to 1952 makes up the bulk of the papers. It includes outgoing correspondence of club presidents, incoming correspondence of individuals invited to speak, and miscellaneous correspondence to Thornton Oakley and other club officers. Among the other papers are executive committee minutes (1894-1919), photographs, year books, lists of members and historical sketches, and other miscellaneous items. 
524 8 |a [Indicate cited item or series here], Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) records (Collection 1981), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 
541 1 |a These papers were collected by Thornton Oakley, a Philadelphia artist, muralist, and officer of the club, 1933-1941. Gift of Mrs. Lansdale Oakley Humphreys, 1972. 
545 |a In October 1886, three local men -- George M. Gould, Horace Traubel, and S. Burns Weston -- met to discuss the formation of a social and literary club in Philadelphia. On November 3, 1886, the first meeting of the yet-to-be-named Contemporary Club was held at the Philadelphia Ethical Society. In addition to the three founding members, the meeting was also attended by the reverends J. H. Clifford and N. A. Haskill. At that first meeting, the group came to terms over a few basic rules. The club would be open to both men and women of any profession, and meetings were to be held monthly during the winter "season" of November to April. Word of the new club quickly spread, and at its second meeting in December 1886, attendance quadrupled from five to twenty. This time the group met at the New Century Club, and the members discussed a paper by Reverence Clifford titled "The New Conditions of Intellectual Fellowship." At the group's third meeting in January 1887, club officers were named, with Dr. Daniel G. Brinton being elected president, and a draft constitution was drawn up. The club also formalized itself with a title: the Contemporary Club. Throughout the late ninteenth century, the club grew in popularity and boasted a couple hundred members at the turn of the twentieth century. Each month, the Contemporary Club hosted speakers, some of whom came with or developed notable careers, such as poet Walt Whitman, Arctic explorer Robert E. Peary, and Woodrow Wilson, then a professor at Princeton University. The group also met in several different locations during its formative years. In addition to the New Century Club, the Contemporary Club met at the Union League, the Bellevue Hotel, and enjoyed extended stays at the Haseltine Art Galleries at 1416-18 Chestnut Street, and the Philadelphia Art Club, whose building was once located at 220 South Broad Street. Although the club had allowed women from the start, it wasn't until the twentieth century that the club elected its first female president: Agnes Repplier, a popular Philadelphia essayist, in 1904. Later women presidents included women's rights activist Sarah Yorke Stevenson (1914), artist Violet Oakley (1925), education advocate Lucy Wilson (1935), and Katherine McBride (1950), then president of Bryn Mawr College. The club remained quite active through World War II. But after the war, membership apparently began to dwindle, and the club met with financial hardship. These factors may have contributed to the club ceasing operations sometime in the early 1950s.  
555 |a Finding Aid Available Online:  
600 1 7 |a Huff, William Kistler  |d 1888-  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Weston, S. Burns (Samuel Burns)  |d 1855-1936   |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Williams, Sophia Wells Rayce  |d 1850-1928.  |2 Local Sources 
650 0 |a Clubs--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia. 
650 0 |a Lectures and lecturing--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia.  
651 0 |a Philadelphia (Pa.)--Social life and customs--19th century.  
651 0 |a Philadelphia (Pa.)--Social life and customs--20th century.  
700 1 |a Oakley, Thorton  |d 1881-1953.  |e Collector (col) 
852 |a The Historical Society of Pennsylvania  |b Contemporary Club (Philadelphia, Pa.) Records  |l 1981 
856 4 2 |y Link to finding aid  |u http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/c/ContempoClub1981.html