1934

Primary Sources
Miller, Joaquin. Adah Isaacs Menken. [Miller wrote an appreciation of Adah Isaacs Menken which duly appeared in The Morning Call of San Francisco (31 July 1892): 15: 1-2] [AAS and HUN have 1934 reprints by Edwin B. Hill, Ysleta, Texas.] Scott McKeown Private Collection. [HUN] [MGK] [MCK]
-----. The Silent Man. An Oregon idyll in 4 acts, arranged for oral delivery by Juanita Miller. (30 July 1934) [LOC] [MGK]

Secondary Sources
Bacigalupi, E. Overland Monthly 92 (January 1934): 14 [PMC] [MGK]
Bates, Ernest Sutherland. Oregon Historical Quarterly 35. 1934. 283. [Mention of Miller from Dictionary of American Biography Vol. 12. Incidents in the boyhood of Joaquin Miller are related by Glen E. Veatch in Indiana Magazine of History, 1934 in an article entitled “Indiana Boyhood of the Poet of the Sierras.” See below] [MGK]
Dobie, Charles Caldwell. “Literature on the Pacific Coast.” In American Writers on
American Literature. Edited by John Macy. New York: Tudor Publishing
Company, 1934. 416. [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Dunlap, George Arthur. The City in the American Novel, 1789-1900; A Study of
American Novels Portraying Contemporary Conditions in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston. Philadelphia, 1934. 187pp. 62-63. New York: Russell & Russell,1934 [WC] [PSU] [Also published in 1965]
Dye, Eva Emery. The Soul of America: An Oregon Iliad. New York: The Press of the Pioneers, Inc. 1934. pp. 223, 353, and on title page. [...Oh, wave on wave of human hope/That climbed the Rockies’ shining slope!/ Oh, wave on wave that sank beyond!] [MGK] [See also Dye, Eva Emery. “The Poet of the Pacific.” The Greater West. 96-98. (OHS Clippings File)] [MCK]
Falk, Bernard. The Naked Lady, or Storm over Adah. London: Hutchinson and
Company, 1934. 306pp. 26, 68, 70, 71, 76. [RCL] [MGK] [MCK] [Revised edition published in 1952. 268pp.] [WC]
Harlow, Alvin F. Old Waybills, The Romance of the Express Companies. New York
and London: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1934. 503pp. [HGT] [PSU]
[WC] [MGK] [MCK] [Also published in 1976, New York: Arno Press] [WC]
Hubbard, Elbert. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Elect. Printed and made into a
Book by Roycrofters, East Aurora, Erie County, New York. New York: W. H. Wise & Co, 1934. 414pp. [PSU] [WC] [MCK]
Quiett, Glenn Chesney. They Built the West. An Epic of Rails and Cities. New York
and London: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1934. 569pp. [MULT], [WC],
[OHS] [Also published in 1965, New York: Cooper Square Publishers, Inc., 1965. 569pp. 499. [PSU] [WC] [MCK] [Noted that during the Idaho strikes “Joaquin Miller ran a stage line from Florence to Walla Walla, presumably with profit, for transportation charges were high”]
Whicher, George F. “Poetry After the Civil War.” In American Writers on American
Literature. Edited by John Macy. New York: Tudor Publishing Company, 1934.
380-381 [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Sloan, Bessie I. “George Wharton James.” Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine
92 (January 1934): 11-12. [RCL] [RCL: “Reminiscences of James with frequent references to his friendship with Miller.”] [MGK] [MCK]
Noguchi, Yone. “Japanese Speaker Pays Tribute.” The Trans Pacific 22 (Tokyo) (15 February 1934): 17 [PMC] [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Veach, Glen E. “The Indiana Boyhood of the Poet of the Sierras.” Indiana Magazine of
History 30 (June 1934): 153-160 [RCL] [MAR] MGK] [MCK] [FST:“Land transactions of Hulings Miller in Grant County, Indiana, are discussed”] [p. 153 Nov.10, 1841 given as Miller’s birthdate by father and 1842 by his mother.] [MGK]
Bennett, Raine E. “Greybeard of California Bards.” Westways 26 (July 1934): 22-23,
34. [RCL] [OAK] [HON] [MGK] [MCK]
Conner, George H. “Early History of the McCloud Country.” In: Mt. Shasta Herald. (25 October 1934): 1 [MS2114: Long article with many interesting accounts. Much history of the earliest McCloud buildings and settlers. Says: “The Big Bend of Pit river Indians came every summer to Squaw valley to gather huckleberries and hunt, and play their native games and pastimes.” Mentions that “the Indian wife of John Hibbs said she knew Joaquin Miller in her girlhood days. While roaming the forest he came on a large sugar pine hollowed out by fire, he carved his name on the bark, thus, ‘Hiner Miller’s house’ The tree was in the forest between Little Soda and [S]quaw Creeks.” 13. History after 1849. MS2114]. [This was Nancy Hibbs who also supposedly rescued Miller after the Battle of Castle Crags. MGK]

 
Bibliography: Printable

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