Corneille McCarn Rucker papers,

This collection documents the lively social life and literary aspirations of a well-educated young woman in the early 20th century. Corneille McCarn Rucker memorialized her life in an extremely narrative and vivid fashion through letters, diaries, writings, and scrapbooks. The first series, I. Corr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rucker, Corneille McCarn
Format: Kit
Language:English
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Summary:This collection documents the lively social life and literary aspirations of a well-educated young woman in the early 20th century. Corneille McCarn Rucker memorialized her life in an extremely narrative and vivid fashion through letters, diaries, writings, and scrapbooks. The first series, I. Correspondence, includes letters to and from Corneille, although the vast majority are addressed to Corneille. The bulk of the letters are from her friends and speak to an active social life in Nashville, Tennessee and Honolulu, Hawaii. The letters are personal; full of accounts of school, sports, parties, relationships between friends, gossip, and emotions. Several young men express romantic feelings for Corneille, but it is unclear if the feelings were reciprocated. After about 1920, many of the letters refer to Corneille's efforts to publish her poems and are generally very supportive and congratulatory. In relation to Corneille's writing, a brief letter from John Crowe Ransom (a professor at Vanderbilt and a founding member of the Fugitives) may be of interest. There are a few glancing references to suffrage, race relations, and World War I and a few letters from magazines either rejecting or requesting poems written by Corneille; but the bulk of the letters illuminate the increasingly liberated life of young men and women in the first quarter of the 20th century. II. Diaries includes three diaries; two of which document Corneille's time in Hawaii from 1914 to 1915. The first of these two diaries, which was written in April 1914, is written in the margins of <emph render="italic">Diary of One Month in Honolulu</emph>, by Katherine M. Yates. Corneille writes of life with her family as well as her social interactions, practicing on her ukulele, reading, sewing and making beads, and school. The second volume, dating from 1915 and 1918, is written in eight "chapters," each headed with the date and a title: "In which I have a swim at Waikiki Beach," "In which I got to a card party at Sophie Wacker's -- with Brian," "In which I go to Marion's moonlight swimming party and wear a 'loud' bathing suit," etc. The eight sections describe in great detail Corneille's social life in Hawaii, and the last entry appears to have been written just prior to her return to Tennessee. Following the eighth segment, there is one entry from July 22, 1918 in which Corneille describes and writes a love letter to an imaginary "ideal" soldier in France. Finally, this volume includes two undated drafts for a short story, "A Story of Many Lands." In the third diary, written from June 11 to 17, 1929, Corneille writes about her daily life with her husband Warren, visits with her parents, her still active social life, and the process of writing poetry. The diary includes drafts of poems and newspaper clippings regarding her father and presumably her friends. Only 21 pages of this volume were filled. The third series, Coursework, includes exercises and essays for English III in 1915; essays on literature and current events for English 15 in 1920; a French exercise; reading lists; and lists of misspelled words, most of which are undated. A few of the reading lists are dated 1920 and one is addressed to Mr. Ransom (her professor at Vanderbilt), so it can be assumed that at least some of this work was completed during her college education. Many of the essays from 1920, which were clearly written for English 15, include the term "editorial;" and these relate to current events including war, crops, and women voters. Series IV. Writings includes the bulk of Corneille's writings. Researchers will find fragments, music, poems (alphabetized by title--researchers should be aware that no poems with titles from A to C exist), and short stories. Publications that include Corneille's works are included in this series. If researchers are interested in all of Corneille's works, they should also consult her correspondence, her diaries, her coursework, and her scrapbooks. Corneille's two scrapbooks are included in Series V. The first scrapbook, "My Him Book," includes photographs of young men pasted into a published template-volume designed by Elisa E. Edwards. This volume is filled with photographs and Corneille's captions and comments. Many of the young men pictured in this volume also wrote to Corneille or were described in her diaries or friends' letters. Corneille cut a portion of an unidentified letter that states, "For you, dear, have had more men in your young life than any of my acquaintances" and pasted it into the back cover of the volume. The second scrapbook, entitled "My Memory Book," includes lists of friends, with portions of letters cut and pasted into the volume; newspaper clippings, largely relating to friends' weddings, lists of weddings, and wedding memorabilia; description of and letters relating to "my mysterious romance;" Vanderbilt University newspaper clippings, official letters, and memorabilia; Tri Delta sorority memorabilia; rejection letters for her poetry; memorabilia from servicemen during World War I; and a detailed account of William N. Carruthers (a beau) being accused of passing bad checks for fancy neckwear. The final series consists of material not created or collected by Corneille, but, rather, her family. Most of this material was created by her mother, Mary D. Allison McCarn, who is referred to as "Munner" by Corneille, her family, and her friends. There are several letters written to and from Mary McCarn as well as a scrapbook that she probably compiled containing clippings of poems written by her and her husband Jefferson McCarn (known as "Dow" in the collection). There is also one published volume of poems written by Katharine Rucker
Physical Description:3 boxes (1 linear foot)