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"Vassar College" Burges Johnson Hand Signed TLS Dated 1920 For Sale



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"Vassar College" Burges Johnson Hand Signed TLS Dated 1920:
$279.99

Up for sale "Vassar College" Burges Johnson Hand Signed TLS Dated 1920.


ES-9301



Born in

Rutland, Vermont, on November 19, 1877, Burges Johnson was the third of four

children of Reverend James Gibson Johnson and his wife Mary, who interested her

son in literature at a young age. In his memoir As Much As I Dare

(1944), he recalled their nighttime reading sessions. “I wonder how many

thousands of pages our mother read aloud to us four youngsters throughout our

childhood. Bible stories, fairy tales, thrillers in St.

Nicholas, and books without number.… The low rocker in which she sat

is today my most treasured bit of furniture; and I can almost regain at times

that all-pervading sense of perfect comfort when a light burns bright after I

am in bed, and the silence means she might at any moment begin a story.” His

early love of literature matured as he attended school in New London and later

Chicago before enrolling at Amherst College to study English. In 1899, he

graduated from Amherst with a B.A. degree. He was awarded an honorary Litt. D.

from the college in 1924. On June 14, 1904, Johnson married Constance Wheeler,

the daughter of the former president of the New York Bar Association, Everett

P. Wheeler. The couple had three children, Mary, James and Miriam, and they

wrote a number of books together including Yearbook of Humor

(1910) and Parodies for Housekeepers (1921). Johnson began his

career in journalism, at The New York Commercial Advertiser and The New York Evening Post.

He then entered the publishing world, working at G.P. Putnam’s Sons and Harper

& Brothers. He also held positions as assistant editor at Everybody’s Magazine, managing editor at Outdoor Magazine, editor-in-chief at Judge Magazine and president at Thompson Brown &

Co. publishers. Although very devoted to his work as a publisher, Johnson

recalled in his memoir his growing interest in academia: “Now and then during

those Harper days, after I had married and when I visited one college campus or

another, I would hear the faint voices of those many Yankee ancestors who had

been teachers and preachers hinting that an academic life had many advantages

for a family man.” In 1914 Johnson mentioned this notion to Henry Noble

MacCracken, a witnesses for an E.P. Dutton & Co. suit involving its book

series Everyman’s Library. An English professor at Smith

College, MacCracken had long used Everyman titles for

his courses. The two discussed a job offer Johnson had received from Columbia

University to work in its new journalism school as a part-time instructor.

MacCracken advised Johnson to turn down the instructor position and wait for an

opportunity that would grant him a more appropriate position. In December 1914

MacCracken was named to succeed James Monroe Taylor as president of Vassar, and

in his first official act after he assumed the office on February 1, 1915, he

offered Johnson a teaching position at the college, writing to him: “If you are

seriously thinking about the possibility of teaching, why not come up here? We

will allow you to go to New York for half of the week, and we will treat you

better at Vassar than Columbia would.” MacCracken was particularly interested

in hiring Johnson because of his experience in journalism and, by extension,

public relations. In a 1914 Vassar Miscellany

article, Elizabeth Hazelton Haight ‘94, the chairman of the newly formed

Publicity Committee of the Alumnae Council, had outlined Vassar’s plans to

develop a publicity department similar to those at Smith, Mount Holyoke and

Wellesley, to include not only the chair of the Publicity Committee but also

members of the student Press Board: “The committee hopes that after a year, it

may be able to report that more students are writing for papers, that many more

newspapers are regularly printing news (and significant news) of Vassar

college, that special articles on the educational policies of the college and

on its inner life are appearing and that the alumnae at large are cooperating

with it in helping to distribute news of the college to the press and in

sending back news of themselves to the college.”






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