1941

Primary Sources
Miller, Joaquin. Miller's opinion on Adah Isaacs Menken quoted in Pauline Jacobson's City of the Golden ‘Fifties. 1941. pp. 199-200 [MGK]
-----. For Those Who Fail. In Poems that Touched the Heart. Garden City, New York, Hanover House. [See 1956 for information about New Enlarged Edition.] [MGK]
-----. 49. Words by C. H. Miller, music by Juanita Miller. (In My Father, (3 July 1941): 176) [LOC] [MGK] [See in Secondary]
-----. Tallyho! Words and music by C. H. Miller, arranged by Juanita Miller. (In My Father (3 July 1941): 217) [LOC] [MGK] [See in Secondary]

Secondary Sources
“Ella Higginson...A Tribute.” Edited by Washington State Federation of Women’s Clubs. Bellingham, WA: Press of the Union Printing Co. 1941. 6 ]MGK]
Hazard, Lucy Lockwood. The Frontier in American Literature. New York: Barnes and Noble. 1941. 183-185. [RCL][MGK] [See also 1927.]
Lucas, Harriet Marcelia. Prose and Poetry of Today/Regional America. Syracuse: The L.W. Singer Company. 1941. 354, 355, 356, and 357. [JGK] [MGK]
Meany, Edmond. History of the State of Washington. New York: Macmillan Company, 1941. 412pp. [WC] [MCK] [Also published in 1946 and 1950]
Miller, Juanita. My Father, C.H. Joaquin Miller, Poet. Oakland: Tooley-Towne. 1941. 219 pages. [RCL] [PMC] [HUN] [OAK] [MAR] [WC] [MGK] [MCK] “Includes songs with music.” [HON] [MES] [NVU has inscribed copy.] [USC has a copy inscribed to Ruth LaPrade.] [frontis portrait, illustrated. Faded green suede covers. Inscribed by Juanita Miller with her name and address on fly-leaf.] [Rex Burress has a copy.] [MGK]
Death of Bill Brown, possible inspiration for poem, William Brown of Oregon. In Western Books. Oregon Historical Quarterly Vol. 42.1 (March 1941): 108 [William Brown of Oregon was originally published in the Sacramento Daily Union 6 February 1875.] [MGK]
“Obituary: Bailey Millard, 80, Editor and Author - Brought Fame to Markham by
Publishing ‘Man With the Hoe’ - Dies on Coast - Helped Joaquin Miller - Ex-Editor of Cosmopolitan and Munsey’s - A Columnist in Los Angeles Recently.” New York Times (21 March 1941): “As city editor of The San Francisco Call he also set Joaquin Miller, the ‘poet of the Sierras,’ on the road to fame.” [MCK]
McCann-Erickson, Inc. Sweet Shasta Town. Death Valley Days Radio broadcast transcript of 4 April 1941. [PMC] [The actual transcript from UOL notes that this show was copyrighted and sponsored by the Pacific Coast Borax Company. It was aired on the NBC Blue Network and was broadcast from 8:30-9:00 P.M. The producers (McCann-Erickson, Inc.) were located at 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York.] [MGK]
“Bret Harte and Joaquin Miller.” In “Poetry Corner” of Scholastic Magazine 38(5 May 1941): 22. [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Snell, James Hall. “When Joaquin Miller was a Jail Bird.” Pony Express Courier 8 (September1941): 8 Includes poem by W.F. Skyhawk, Joaquin Miller’s Jail Answer. [OAK] [CAL] [MGK]
Mention of Juanita Miller’s program at Paul Elder’s Book Store. Pony Express Courier (October 1941): 2: 3 [CAL] [MGK]
“Latest Books Received.” New York Times (12 October 1941) [Online: BR27] Juanita Miller’s My Father, C. H. Joaquin Miller, Poet. [MCK]
[100th anniversary of Miller birth noted 1841.] Sacramento Bee (10 November 1941): 17: 4 [CAL] [MGK]
Lockley, Fred. “Impressions and Observations of the Journal Man.” (16 November 1941) [MGK]

Letters and Archival Papers
Richards, John S. Letter from John S. Richards favors September 8, 1837 as Joaquin Miller’s correct birth date. Letter dated 6 October 1941 and on file at [OAK]. [Absolutely impossible as his parents were married in 1836 and he had an older brother John.] [MGK]

 
Bibliography: Printable

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