1937

Primary Sources
Miller, Joaquin. “The Music Loving Bears.” Through Fairy Halls of My Book House. Ed. by Olive Beaupre Miller: Chicago: The Book House for Children. 1937. [MGK]
-----. California's Cup of Gold. In C.L.C. Stokes’ One Hundred and One California and Western Poems. 1936 [MGK]

Secondary Sources
Goodspeed, Charles E. Yankee Bookseller. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1937.
325pp. 166. [WC] [RCL] [MGK] [MCK] [Also published in 1974]
Miller, Juanita. About “The Hights”: Joaquin Miller Park, Then and Now. 17th Edition. Oakland: Tooley-Towne, 1937. [36]pp. [WC] [MCK]
Miller, Olive Beaupre, ed., “Childhood Biographies of Authors: The Poet of the Sierras Joaquin Miller.” Halls of Fame of My Book House. Chicago: The Book House for Children 1937, 280p [MGK]
Parrish, Philip H. Historic Oregon. New York: Macmillan Company, 1937. 254pp.
[WC], [MULT] [RCL] Revised Edition. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1949. 228 [MCK]
Peterson, Martin Severin. Joaquin Miller, Literary Frontiersman. Stanford, California
and London: Stanford University Press and Oxford University Press, 1937. 198 pp. [Referenced as [PET] in this bibliography] [FST: “Only book-length criticism of Miller’s work of any real worth; generally too high an estimate of the intrinsic value of his work.”] [RCL] [PMC] [WCL] [HON] [OHS] [USC] [MAR] [MULT] [CCL:177-178] [Corning, 1946:166: “Chronology and 10.”] [Robert E. Spiller, ed., Literary History of the United States, Macmillan Company, 1974 [First printed in 1949]: 660: “The fullest bibliographical listing [of Miller’s work]...pp. 179-191.”] [MGK] [MCK]
California State Historical Society Quarterly 16.4 (1937): 378. [CSC] [MGK]
Stewart, George R., Jr. [Review of Joaquin Miller: Literary Frontiersman by Martin
Severin Peterson, 1937] 1938 [RCL] [MCK]
Warfel, Harry R. and others, ed. The American Mind/Selections from the Literature of the United States. Vol. Two. New York: American Book Company. 1937. pp. 892-898. [JGK] [MGK]
Duffus, R. L. “Uncle Sam Plays a Baedeker Role; in the First of a Series of Guidebooks
Federal Writers Tell the Bad Points as well as the Good About the Nation’s
Capital.” New York Times (10 January 1937): 124-127. Noted that Joaquin Miller and others knew Washington well but were not inspired by it. [MCK]
McArthur, Lewis A. see Oregonian (22 April 1937) [MGK]
Clark, R. C. “Oregonians in the Dictionary of American Biography.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 38.2 (June 1937): 229 [MGK]
“Obituary: Gertrude B. Kanno, Noted Sculptress; Wife of Japanese Poet Dies in
California - Made Busts of Many Leaders.” New York Times (17 August 1937):
19. Note that Gertrude Boyle and Kanno met at the Hights. [MCK]
“Bearded Bard From Oregon: Joaquin Miller, Pioneer Poet in Literature of Our State.”
Review of Joaquin Miller, Literary Frontiersman by Martin Severin Peterson. Oregonian (22 August 1937) Section 6: 3 [MCK]
Woodminister Project, a memorial to California writers at Joaquin Miller’s home, “The Hights,” Oakland, to be discussed. Sacramento Bee. (24 August 1937) [CAL] [MGK]
Leibbrand, Rose. “Game Preserve for Archers; Variety of Game in Area.” New York
Times (26 September 1937): 195. Leibbrand describes the Canyon Creek Game Refuge and notes that the Joaquin Miller Resort is located two miles north of the refuge and eight miles from Canyon City. [MCK]
Holden. E.D. “California Landmarks: Joaquin Miller Home, Oakland.” Pony Express Courier 4 (October 1937): 7 [OAK][MGK]
Painting of Joaquin Miller by James E. Stuart presented to State Library by Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt. Pacific Bindery Talk 10.3 (October 1937): 35 [CAL] [MGK]
Juanita Miller’s playlet “In the Land of Simply Seeming” mentioned. San Francisco Chronicle (3 October 1937): 12: 1 [MGK]
Coblentz, Stanton A. “Joaquin Miller, Poet and Wanderer.” Review of Joaquin Miller,
Literary Frontiersman by Martin Severin Peterson. New York Times (17 October 1937): 108 [MCK]
Lockley, Fred. “Impressions and Observations of the Journal Man” in the Oregon Journal passim.[MGK]

 
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