Main content
George Palmer Putnam Collection
Notifications
Held at: Princeton University Library: Manuscripts Division [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: Manuscripts Division. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
Publisher George Palmer Putnam (1814-1872), a self-taught genius from Maine, began his independent publishing enterprise in 1848 in New York City, after working for a bookseller and other publishers there, starting in 1829 (at the age of fifteen). Among his chief concerns as a publisher were the promotion of American literature the establishment of international copyright regulations.
During the years he worked in England, 1841-1847, while still John Wiley's partner (1841-1847) Putnam realized that the book market on both sides of the Atlantic was for English authors. Putnam and Wiley tried to promote interest in American literature by publishing such works as Caroline Kirkland's books about the West, e.g. Western Clearings (1845) and Herman Melville's first novel Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846). When Putnam broke up with Wiley in 1848 he kept the literary part of their trade list. The two had developed different priorities. Putnam's interest in publishing American literature no longer suited Wiley, who had developed a preference for technological and scientific works.
Already as Wiley's partner, Putnam had concerned himself with the need for copyright legislation. He and Wiley were the first American publishing firm to offer royalties to the author, in direct opposition to the more common practice among American publishers of selling piracies. Putnam fought for copyright legislation throughout his career. His son George Haven Putnam at the end of his biography of his father says that the copyright struggle exhausted him and may have caused his early death in 1872.
Two of the first authors to be published by Putnam, as an independent publisher, were Washington Irving and Edgar Allan Poe. In fact, Putnam cultivated ties with all the American authors now considered part of the canon of 19th century literature, such as James Fenimore Cooper, Richard Henry Dana, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, as well as with many still awaiting evaluation.
Putnam began publication of Putnam's Monthly Magazine in 1853. He drafted a survey letter to be sent to potential contributors, a copy of which is preserved in the scrapbook. It reads like a manifesto on behalf of American literary and intellectual history.
The financial crisis that struck the nation in 1857 together with the revelation of dishonest financial dealings within his staff forced Putnam to suspend publication of his magazine and assign his business to another company. Fortunately his good friend Washington Irving bought up and then sold back to him at cost the stereotypes of his books, so that Putnam could resume his business. Other authors were inspired by this to retain their contracts with Putnam, and within the year his publishing enterprise was flourishing again.
However, business slowed down with the outbreak of the Civil War. Putnam was forced to turn his trade list over to the firm of Hurd & Houghton which sold his books on commission from 1862 until 1966. During that period Putnam supported himself and his family by working as a civil servant, overseeing the eighth district of New York City for the Internal Revenue Service. He was fired by President Andrew Johnson in 1866 after refusing to pay an assessment in return for his job. In the wake of that disruption Putnam reestablished his publishing enterprise as G. P. Putnam & Son, or, as it was called after 1871, G.P. Putnam & Sons, and finally G.P. Putnam's Sons.
The magazine resumed publication in 1868, only to be merged finally with Scribner's Monthly in 1870. The publishing house as a family business endured into the 1930s, then became a division of a larger house.
The George Palmer Putnam Collection contains correspondence, a scrapbook, manuscripts, and artwork pertaining to George Palmer Putnam's publishing enterprise from before the Civil War. There are approximately 1650 letters, 17 manuscripts, and more than 50 artworks in the collection. The correspondence originally fell into five distinct sections, four of which were organized alphabetically, and one randomly, in scrapbooks. The first part was marked "Private," although there is a mixture of private and professional letters in it. The artwork depicts the writers of particular letters and sometimes their homes as well. Fifteen of the manuscripts are drafts of descriptive and anecdotal articles by various authors (still in part unidentified) for Putnam's 1853 publication entitled Homes of American Authors. There are letters by the authors represented in this publication in the correspondence series.
In addition to more letters, this scrapbook contains miscellaneous material. Each of the original subseries of correspondence which was dismounted remains intact, arranged alphabetically.
Volume 14 of the Northwestern-Newberry edition of The Writings of Herman Melville includes the Melville correspondence from Princeton's George Palmer Putnam Collection. This volume has been edited and annotated, with an historical note, by Lynn Horth, revised and augmented from The Letters of Herman Melville (1960), edited by Merrell R. Davis and William H. Gilman.
The Putnam correspondence purchased by Princeton in 1991 and 1993 had been mounted in folio-size scrapbooks, probably by G. P. Putnam's son, George Haven Putnam, in order to refer to them when writing the biography of his father, entitled George Palmer Putnam: A Memoir, Together with a Record of the Earlier Years of the Publishing House Founded by Him (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1912).
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
This collection was processed by Margaret Sherry in 1994. Finding aid written by Margaret Sherry in 1994.
For conservation purposes all letters have been dismounted and foldered, except for those in the scrapbook that was part of the 1993 purchase.
No appraisal information is available.
Organization
Subject
- Novelists, American. -- 19th century
- Publishers and publishing -- New York (State) -- New York. -- 19th century
Occupation
- Publisher
- Manuscripts Division
- Finding Aid Author
- Margaret Sherry
- Finding Aid Date
- 1994
- Access Restrictions
-
Collection is open for research use.
- Use Restrictions
-
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
Collection Inventory
Consists of the correspondence of George Palmer Putnam. Notable correspondents include Washington Irving, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and George Sumner, as well as numerous authors related to his magazine.
This series is arranged into four subseries: "Private", Putnam's Monthly Magazine, Author's Letters, and Scrapbook.
Physical Description11 boxes
This subseries contains approximately 800 letters, arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. Putnam had ties with some of the greatest literary figures of his day, including Washington Irving and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. However, the following names of correspondents in this subseries are representative of how Putnam's circle extended beyond solely literary people to figures eminent in other walks of life who were also literary: Edward Everett who, in addition to teaching Greek literature at Harvard College, held office as Governor of Massachusetts; Richard Henry Dana, lawyer as well as author, later presiding over Jefferson Davis's trial for treason; physician and editor Oliver Wendell Homes, founder of the Atlantic Monthly and father of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court; Julia Ward Howe, poet and suffragist; militant abolitionist Congressman Charles Sumner: and John Pendelton Kennedy, Secretary of the Navy under Millard Fillmore. Also represented are William Cullen Bryant, who, in addition to being a popular poet, was editor of the New York Evening Post; Evert Augustus Duyckinck, who, starting in 1845, edited "The Library of American Books," for Putnam & Wiley; and scientist Joseph Henry, who taught at Princeton University from 1832 to 1846.
Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.
Physical Description3 boxes
3 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
2 folders
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
Almost as large a subseries as A is comprised of approximately 700 letters of inquiry from potential contributors, many addressed to Frederick Briggs, editor of Putnam's Monthly Magazine. Among the great variety of authors represented there are: educator Elizabeth Palmer Peabody; George Ripley, who was a founding editor of The Dial; editor and lawyer John Osborne Sargent; editor and publisher David Marvin Stone; journalist and teacher Frederick William Thomas; poet Frederick Goddard Tuckerman; clergyman Charles Timothy Brooks; and Southern writer John Esten Cooke. The most notable in the list is Herman Melville. These letters consisted of two groups, when purchased, and so they have been maintained as two separate alphabetical units in this subseries.
Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.
Physical Description6 boxes
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
The correspondence pertaining to Putnam's Monthly Magazine includes two signed autograph letters of Herman Melville, as well as the offset of a third. A letter to Putnam by Melvilee, dated 12 June [1854], was at some point removed from the collection before it came to Princeton. It was offered for sale at Christie's on 8 October 1991, but was not purchased by Princeton. Princeton University Library has a Herman Melville Collection, containing copies of other Melville correspondence together with letters and other materials relating to Willard Thorpe's research on Melville. Original Melville holdings at other repositories include: correspondence in the publishing records, 1817-1929, of Harper & Bros. at Columbia University Library, and the Herman Melville Papers at Houghton Library, Harvard College.
Physical Description1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
Consists of about 150 letters, arranged alphabetically, many of them addressed to Frederick Saunders, co-editor of Homes of American Authors. Many of those named here overlap with names in other subseries.
Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.
Physical Description1 box
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
1 folder
The earliest letter preserved here is a facsimile of an 1813 letter from Sir Walter Scott. Original correspondence includes letters from Bayard Taylor, Robert Cooke, Washington Irving, James T. Fields, and Hugh McCulloch, Secretary of the Treasury under President Andrew Johnson. The two letters from Hugh McCulloch, Secretary of the Treasury Department, refer to Putnam's dismissal from his post as collector of internal revenue for the eighth district of New York. Putnam had been removed from office by President Andrew Johnson for refusing to pay a political assessment levied upon office-holders. He was commended by the Secretary of the Treasury for his integrity.
The bulk of the correspondence in the scrapbook is from traveller and translator Bayard Taylor, spanning the years 1859 to 1863. Taylor was during part of this time (1862) in St. Petersburg, Russia, with the U.S. legation.
The majority of the clippings consist of such material as bulletins written by Putnam from England as a foreign correspondent for The New World and The Evening Post, but there are also numbers of Harper's Weekly dating from the 1880s. George William Curtis, Putnam's friend and associate in the 1850s, had become editor of Harper's Weekly in 1863.
The scrapbook consists primarily of clippings and correspondence, but there are also pressed flowers and some printed items related to Putnam's publishing company such as a trade list dating from 1849. Several items relate to the magazine: a notebook containing handwritten copies of letters from contributors, among which are copies of letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson and Edward Everett; an 1852 draft of a survey letter intended to be sent to prospective contributors which outlines the nature and mission of the magazine. The letter indicates that the magazine hopes to find both a popular and a high-brow audience and aims to become "an organ of American thought."
Not arranged according to any arrangement scheme.
Physical Description1 box
1 box
Homes of American Authors, edited by Frederick Saunders and Henry T. Tuckerman, was published in 1853 (ca. 1852) and appeared in several later editions as well, e.g., in 1896 as Little Journeys to the Homes of American Authors. It consists of anecdotal and descriptive essays on the homes of seventeen American authors, including Washington Irving, Richard Henry Dana, James Fenimore Cooper, and Edward Everett. The collection contains two volumes of bound manuscripts, consisting of drafts for all but six of the seventeen authors. Those six are John James Audubon, James K. Paulding, Washington Irving, Daniel Webster, John Pendleton Kennedy and James Russell Lowell. (Some drafts are marked in pencil with the name Sutherland. John Sutherland was a New York City printer.)
Of the fifteen manuscripts for Homes of American Authors which have been preserved in the collection, the four in Volume 1 are in the handwriting of George William Curtis: Bancroft, 23 pp.; Hawthorne, 33 pp.; Emerson, 30 pp.; and Longfellow, 35 pp. With regard to Volume 2: parts of the James Fenimore Cooper article are in the hand of George Washington Greene, and one of the two drafts on Caroline Maria Sedgwick is in the hand of Sedgwick herself.
The third volume of manuscripts in this series includes a manuscript sermon (36 pp.) entitled Isaac by Episcopal clergyman George Bethune (1805-1862) and a draft (35 pp.) entitled "Voyage on the Nile," chapter V, by Dutch Reform clergyman Francis Hawks (1798-1866), intended as part of the sequel to Monuments of the Nile, published by Putnam in 1850.
Not arranged according to any arrangement scheme.
Physical Description1 box
1 box
Withdrawn from the first three boxes of correspondence ("Private") are more than fifty artworks on folio-sized sheets of paper. Included are portrait engravings of nine of the authors included in Homes of American Authors: William Cullen Bryant, James Fennimore Cooper, Edward Everett, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Washington Irving, John Pendleton Kennedy, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, William Hickling Prescott, and Catherine Maria Sedgwick (for whom there is also a pencil sketch). Other artwork separated from that series consists of engravings and/or drawings of the homes of eleven of the seventeen authors: George Bancroft, James Fennimore Cooper, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Edward Everett, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Washington Irving, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, William Hickling Prescott, Catherine Maria Sedgwick, William Gilmore Simms and Daniel Webster. In addition there are several pencil sketches and a few photographs, possibly salt prints.
Not arranged according to any arrangement scheme.
Physical Description1 box
1 box