1942

Primary Sources
Miller, Joaquin. Dolores of Mexico. Cincinnatus Heine Miller. 4 acts. Juanita Joaquina Miller (23 March 1942. [LOC] [MGK]
-----. Columbus and The Greatest Battle that Ever was Fought. A Treasury of the Familiar. Edited by Ralph L. Woods. New York: Grolier. 1942. 409, 551-552. [JGK] [MGK]
-----. Sketch of life in Shasta County in '50s. Sacramento Bee. Magazine section (3 January 1942): 3 [CAL] [MGK]

Secondary Sources
Blanck, Jacob. ed. Merle Johnson’s American First Editions. Revised and enlarged by Jacob Blanck. New York: R.R. Bowker and Co. 1942. 365-368. [RCL] [Also published in 1929, 1932, 1936, 1965.] [MCK]
Boggs, Mae Hélène Bacon. My Playhouse Was A Concord Coach: An Anthology of Newspaper Clippings and Documents Relating to Those Who made California History During the Years 1822-1888. San Francisco. 1942. 113, 342, 564, 577, 655, 656, 721 and 722. [MGK]
Gregory, Horace and Marya Zaturenska. “Joaquin Miller.” In their History of American
Poetry, 1900-1940. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1942. 524pp [WC] [MAR] [RCL] [Also published in 1946, 1947 and 1969] [MCK]
Hinkel, Edgar J. and William E. McCann. Biographies of California Authors and
Indexes of California Literature. 2 Volumes. Oakland: The Alameda County
Library (Report of Official Project No. 65-1-08-2536, Works Projects Administration, 1942. Vol. 1: 149-151. [OAK] [WC] [MULT] [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Powers, Alfred. “Chronicle of Western Books Published in 1941.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 43.1 [SPL] [Re: Miller, p. 65, “During that long period, making significant gains for Pacific Northwest letters, Joaquin Miller wrote some verses at Canyon City and brought them down to Portland to be printed, and from that event, while Oregon people were saying what a terrible person he was, he went on to national and international fame.”] [MGK]
Southern, May Hazel. Our Storied Landmarks. Redding, CA: Privately printed. 1942. [MGK]
Washington, DC. American Guide Series. New York, 1942 [MAR] [MCK]
Bagley, Harry P. Sketch of life in Shasta County in ‘50s. Sacramento Bee. Magazine section. (3 January 1942): 3 [CAL] [MGK]
Woodminister Committee. Sequoia trees dedicated at the “Hights,” May 24, 1942, by the Woodminister Committee, one tree to be named for Father Palou and the second tree to be dedicated to Robert Louis Stevenson. California Writer’s Club 13.5 (May 1942): 5 [CAL says author is Cumins.] [MGK]
Powers, Alfred and Mary-Jane Finke. Miller’s 1907 stay at Canyon City’s Elkhorn Hotel [p. 245n]. Miller’s March 18, 1870 stay at Portland’s Cosmopolitan Hotel [p. 268n]. “Survey of First Half-Century of Oregon Hotels.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 43.3 (September 1942): 243-285
Rice, Diana. “Travel Notes: Nation is Rich in Number and Kinds of Parks.” New York
Times (20 September 1942) [Online: D10]
Rice writes: “South of the canyon is the Joaquin Miller Highway, along
which the poet of the Sierras built his cottage and planted a flag (with thirty-eight stars) in the wild Sixties, historic relics still pondered over by tourists in the Sierras.”
Equestrian statue by Kisa Beck dedicated in Joaquin Miller Park, Oakland. San Francisco Chronicle (1 November 1942): 7: 5
McArthur, Lewis A. “More Oregon Geographic Names.” Oregon Historical Quarterly
43 (December 1942): 311 [RCL] [MGK] [MCK]
Refers to a letter of Archie McGowan to the Canyon City Eagle on April
10, 1942 suggesting that Myrtle Park southwest of Canyon City was
named after Minnie.

Letters and Archival Papers
“Some Letters of Joaquin Miller to Lord Houghton.” Edited by Clarence Gohdes.
Modern Language Quarterly 3 (June 1942): 297-306. [RCL] [FST] [MAR] [MGK] [MCK]

 
Bibliography: Printable

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