Grim-McFarland-Woodbridge family history collection

The Grim-McFarland-Woodbridge family history collection spans from 1844 to 1953. The collection was organized prior to being donated to HSP and required minimal work to re-house into seven boxes. The bulk of the early material focuses on family history and genealogy and is transcribed from origina...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laplante, Virginia G. (Creator), McFarland, Joseph 1868-1945. (Creator), McFarland-Gerken, Katharine Adele 1896-1986. (Creator)
Collection:Grim-McFarland-Woodbridge Family History Collection
Collection Number:3706
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Physical Description: 2.6 Linear feet ; 7 boxes, 2 flat files
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: The Grim-McFarland-Woodbridge family history collection spans from 1844 to 1953. The collection was organized prior to being donated to HSP and required minimal work to re-house into seven boxes. The bulk of the early material focuses on family history and genealogy and is transcribed from original documents not housed with the collection. These typed transcriptions arrived at HSP in three-ring binders and record the genealogical notes of Virginia Elmira Kinsey (1870-1942) and Dr. Joseph McFarland, Jr. (1868-1945); the letters to Susan Elmira Grim (1842-1927) and her diaries; the recollections and experiences of Joseph McFarland, MD, ScD; and the memoirs of Helen McFarland-Woodbridge (1893-1971), the older daughter of Joseph and Virginia McFarland. The later material centers on the school life and post-World War I Red Cross nursing experiences of Katharine Adele McFarland (1896-1986), the younger daughter of Joseph and Virginia McFarland. Much of this part of the collection is original and includes a high school yearbook from the Agnes Irwin School, 1916 (Box 6, Folder 1); diplomas and certificates; travel photographs and memorabilia; letters; and hospital reports. The first and second transcribed binders are housed in Box 1. The first binder, “To the Dear Ghost” (1943), was built from family papers collected by Virginia Elmira Kilsey over a fifty-year period. It is her interest in preserving family history that provides much of the genealogical material found in this collection. The material was edited after her death in 1942 by her husband Joseph McFarland, Jr. into a logical and interesting genealogical report as a tribute to his wife and her lifetime passion. The chapter on the life of Susan Elmira Grim in “To the Dear Ghosts” (Box 1, Folder 3) mentions a family break with the McFarland line; consequently, this family narrative centers mostly on the Grim and Kinsey lineages. The Grim line extends Susan Elmira Grim’s family tree through her great-grandparents and beyond. Susan Grim’s maternal lineage through the Pleis and Klett names is rooted in Germany. The Kinsey line extends Virginia Elmira Kinsey’s lineage to her great-great grandparents and beyond. The second binder “Letters to Susan, 1844-1869” contains some of the oldest and most interesting material. There are photocopies of ancestors' letters rich in details about life in the mid-19th century. Civil War letters from her cousin Nicholas Grim who served as a Union soldier with the 28th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers and the 147th Regiment detail both the daily drudgery and the brutality of war. Nicholas Grim took part in Sherman’s march through Georgia, during which he gave his life in battle on June 20, 1864. The third transcribed binder is housed in Box 2. Its contents include the “Recollections and Experience of Joseph McFarland, MD” and “I, Myself, and Me” a memoir by Helen McFarland-Woodbridge. Dr. McFarland reminisces about a childhood in a very different Philadelphia where the streets smelled of manure and the floors of streetcars were covered “with some four or five inches of straw” that provided warmth at first but by late day had turned “filthy and disorderly.” He divides his memoirs into Childhood, Manhood, Travels, and Fifty Years of Summer Outings and Married Life. The memoirs of Helen Woodbridge, Dr. McFarland’s older daughter, cover a later period. Born in 1893, Helen Woodbridge graduated from Bryn Mawr in 1915 and married Donald Woodbridge in 1917. While serving as a visiting professor at the University of Cairo, Helen Woodbridge worked on these memoirs that begin with her childhood and end “with her trip to the Old World with three friends in 1956.” Also in Box 2 is another summer memoir from 1907 entitled “Windy Brow” (Box 2, Folder 8). The collection’s focus shifts beginning in Box 3. The material housed in Boxes 3-7 is more original, more 20th century focused, and almost entirely centered on the life of Katherine Adele McFarland (1896-1986). A CD of the earlier transcriptions, some genealogical charts, maps, and ship lists (Box 3, Folder 1) done around 1905-1910 by Helen Kinsey, the sister of Virginia Elmira Kinsey, comprise a small part of the collection (Box 3, Folder 2). Katharine Adele McFarland’s “Trip Out” began in 1921 and took her first to Houdoin, Czechoslovakia where she served as a Red Cross nurse from November 1921 to April 1922 (Box 3, Folders 3-6). After a vacation in the spring of 1922 (Box 3, Folder 7), she was transferred to Constantinople where she served from June 1922 until November 1922 (Box 3, Folders 8-9). Her letters from that time, which document travel to Czechoslovakia, Turkey, Austria, and Greece, have been transcribed and typed in a binder entitled “News from Abroad, 1921-1925.” These transcriptions comprise the balance of Box 3. In November 1922, Katharine McFarland’s work took her to Greece where she served until August 1924. Her work in this country took her to Skala Aropos (Box 4, Folders 1-2), Corfu (Box 4, Folder 4), Athens (Box 4, Folder 5) and the Polyclinic Hospital (Box 4, Folders 6-8). A vacation in 1923 took her to Austria, Czechoslovakia and Italy (box 4, Folder 3). Photocopies of an original photo album (Box 7) can be viewed in Box 4 (Folders 9-14) along with an address book kept by her while abroad 1921-1925 (Box 4, Folder 15). More memorabilia connected to Katharine Adela McFarland’s life from 1921-1925 is housed in Box 5. Typical of most travelers, she kept a scrapbook, collected postcards, bought souvenir books and purchased materials of local interest, such as art books displaying the work of Joza Uprka (Box 5, Folders 3-4). She saved newspaper clippings from home, took photographs, saved negatives, and wrote and received letters. As an overseas Red Cross nurse, she was involved with Near East Relief work (Box 5, Folder 12) and filing nursing school reports (Box 5, Folder 13). Box 6 documents Katharine Adele McFarland’s life before and after her Red Cross experiences of 1921-1925. There is her high school yearbook from the Agnes Irwin School in 1916 (Box 6, Folder 1), a sculpture notebook (Box 6, Folder 5), along with photographs and certificates. Later in life, she recorded her trip to South America on the freighter Mormacowl in 1953 (Box 6, Folders 6-11).
This family history collection documents several members of the Grim, McFarland, and Woodbridge families over several generations and can be divided into two parts. Approximately one half of the collection documents family history and genealogy while the remaining material centers on the life and work of Katherine Adele McFarland-Gerken. The Grim and McFarland families came together with the eighteen-month marriage of Joseph McFarland (1833-1867) and Susan Elmira Grim (1842-1927) beginning in August 1866. Katherine Adele McFarland-Gerken, the granddaughter of Joseph and Susan McFarland, served abroad as a Red Cross nurse in the 1920s, and much of the material records her nursing and travel experiences from 1921-1925. The collection includes family correspondence, memoirs, photographs, travel souvenirs, genealogical charts, and other items. There are several Civil War letters addressed to Susan Grim McFarland from her cousin Nicholas Grim, who served with the 28th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers and the 147th Regiment. He died in service on June 20, 1864 and is buried in The National Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia.