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List of sketches of notable people by Marguerite Martyn







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  • This is a list of sketches of notable people, or of their close relatives, drawn byMarguerite Martyn (American journalist, 1878–1948) and published in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

    Jessie Ann Robbins Belmont, 1912
    Susan E. Blow, 1909
    Inez Milholland Boissevain, 1914
    Catherine Breshkovsky, 1919
    Helene Hathaway Robison Britton, 1911
    Cécile Chaminade, 1908
    Naomi Childers, 1916
    Mrs. Cornelius Cole, 1916
    Wallace Crossley, 1919
    Thamara de Swirsky, 1911
    Effie Ellsler, 1919
    Florence Harding, 1920
    Millicent Hearst, 1908
    Fannie Hurst, 1909
    Thomas E. Mulvihill Sr., 1908
    Anna Pennybacker, 1913
    Ben Reitman, 1910
    Finley Johnson Shepard, 1912
    Louise Vermilya, 1911

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    References[edit]

    Citations are to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch microfilm records.

  • ^ "Belleville Business Woman In Hard Fight for State Office," October 26, 1912, image 3
  • ^ a b c d e f g "Women Leaders Among Republicans," June 17, 1924, images 38-39
  • ^ "Why People Are Captivated by Lady Astor," May 6, 1922, image 14
  • ^ a b c "Sketches of Notable Women Who Are Attending Jubilee Convention of Women Suffragists," March 27, 1919, image 3
  • ^ a b "City Club Needed Advice; That Is Why It Gave a Luncheon to Women," July 21, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Congressman Baltz's Daughters to Drop the Hoe to Take Their Places in Society at Washington," December 15, 1912, image 45
  • ^ a b c "Women Veterans and Newcomers at Convention," June 9, 1936, images 37 and 38
  • ^ "'Suffrage? I'm Too Busy With My Babies,'" September 19, 1912, image 13
  • ^ a b c d e "Harmony? They're All Out of It in Chicago," June 7, 1916, image 3
  • ^ a b c d "Marguerite Martyn Finds the Speaker's Daughter a Regular Political Manager," June 38, 1912, image 6
  • ^ "Sarah Bernhardt Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 12, 1911, image 1
  • ^ a b c d e f g "Notable Women at Convention," July 6, 1924, image 5
  • ^ "Amelia Bingham Would Not Relieve Men of Duties by Accepting Ballot," June 16, 1909, image 9
  • ^ "Fighting for Equal Suffrage 50 Years Ago Vastly Different," March 30, 1919, image 1
  • ^ "Bedraggled Suffragists March in Sloshy Shoes and With Bedraggled Banners to Impress Delegates," June 8, 1916, image5
  • ^ a b c d "Mere Men Beware! The Suffragists Are Plotting 'Inside Politics,'" April 6, 1913, image 1
  • ^ "Mother of Kindergarten System Who Began Here Talks of the Ideal Method to Marguerite Martyn," December 5, 1909, image 32
  • ^ "Nelly Bly Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 14, 1911, image 37
  • ^ a b c "When the Movie Stars Came to St. Louis," August 25, 1924, image 26
  • ^ "'Most Beautiful Suffragette' Still the Eternal Feminine," March 22, 1914, image 1
  • ^ "Language of Soul Same in Aristocrat and Plebeian, Says 'La Marechale,'" May 11, 1916, image 3
  • ^ a b c "Marguerite Martyn Is in Desperate Chase After Suffragettes Who Are in Lively Pursuit of Reporters," July 6, 1908, image 3
  • ^ "Intimate Study of 'Grandmother of the Russian Revolution,'" May 25, 1919, image 15
  • ^ "Mrs. Schuyler Britton New Owner of the Cardinals Tells Marguerite Martyn," April 9, 1911, Page 1, Editorial Section
  • ^ "'Baseball Better Mental Exercise for Women Than Bridge,'" April 14, 1912, image 15
  • ^ a b "St. Louis Princess Threatens International Complications," April 22, 1906, image 60
  • ^ "A Real Champion: Mary K. Browne," October 18, image 126
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Bryan, Possible Mistress of the White House, Just the Balancing Weight Needed to Neutralize Husband's Lack of Reserve," July 12, 1908, image 1
  • ^ "A Fashion Show for the Democratic women," July 9, 1924, image 30
  • ^ "What-to-Wear Problem Not Solved at Horse Show," October 28, 1914, image 15
  • ^ a b c d e f "Ladies of G.O.P. Have Their Day," June 16, 1932, image 29
  • ^ "Answers Thousands of Questions a Week," November 13, 1931, image 46
  • ^ "Andrew Carnegie Proud of the West," May 1, 1913, image 1
  • ^ "How the Military Genius of a Woman Came to the Aid of Lincoln," February 14, 1918, image 13
  • ^ "Styles Seen at the Derby," May 22, 1928, image 33
  • ^ "The Castles," May 8, 1914, image 15
  • ^ "Actress Who Is 28 Inches Tall Tells Miss Martyn She Would Keep House," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 5, 1910, image 9
  • ^ "American Women Are Chic Parisians in Paris, Says Mme. Chaminade," November 29, 1908, image 26
  • ^ "'When Your Child Fibs, Tell Him a Whopper!' Is One of the Precepts Prof. Chubb Gives Marguerite Martyn," March 31, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Turn Back the Clock and Hide the Calendar!" image 17
  • ^ a b c d e f "With the Lively Ladies of Democracy," June 28, 1932
  • ^ "Phoebe Couzins Tells Why She Has Changed All Her Former Beliefs," May 12, 1909, image 9
  • ^ a b "Overheard at a Municipal Opera Rehearsal," July 11, 1920, image 71
  • ^ "Inside Story of How Women Won," April 13, 1919, image 33
  • ^ a b "Margaret Martyn Finds 'Convention Widows' a Factor in Chicago's Political Show," June 16, 1908, image 11
  • ^ "Woman's Plan Is to Save Missouri by Talking for It, Miss Martyn Is Told," January 6, 1910
  • ^ "Sketches at the Coliseum Made for the Post-Dispatch by Marguerite Martyn," June 16, 1916, image 5
  • ^ a b "Ladies of the Rodeo," September 19, 1933, image 29
  • ^ "Countess de Swirsky Tells Marguerite Martyn," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 23, 1911, image 1
  • ^ "Women Superior to Men, Marie Doro Is Most Sure of That," January 13, 1909, image 4
  • ^ "Sketch of Doxey, His Wife, Witness Who Identified Her and Erder Home," December 5, 1909, image 25
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Does Not Believe Mrs. Doxey Is Aroused to Her Plight," May 24, 1910, image 2
  • ^ "Demeanor of Women in Doxey Trial Is Contrasted by Marguerite Martyn," May 29, 1910, image 18
  • ^ "A Proper Flying Costume," June 4, 1928, image 41
  • ^ "Catherine Elkins Worthy of Pity, Rather Than Envy, Thinks Marguerite Martyn," October 18, 1908, image 9
  • ^ "If Your Name Is Hazel You Can Prove That You Are Under 30 Years of Age," April 4, 1919, image 2
  • ^ "Lillian Russell Is the Model Julian Eltinge Tries to Copy When He Becomes a Dazzling Beauty," November 11, 1908, image 9
  • ^ a b "Home Is Woman's Sphere; Divorce Too Common in This Country," October 22, 1908, image 13
  • ^ "On the Firing Line With Our St. Louis Suffragettes," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 9, 1913, image 1
  • ^ February 26, 1911『'The More I See of Civilization, the More I Like — Indians,'』February 26, 1911, image 1
  • ^ Marguerite Martyn, "A Defender of the Modern Woman," May 30, 1933, image 15
  • ^ "Ballot Is Aristocracy of Sex, Miss Martyn Is Told by Federal Agent," image 11
  • ^ a b c d "On the Firing Line With Our St. Louis Suffragettes," February 9, 1913, image 1
  • ^ a b "Marguerite Martyn Enjoys Thrills While Watching the Gans-Nelson Fight," October 12, 1908, image 9
  • ^ "Mary Garden Tells Marguerite Martyn," January 8, 1911, image 1
  • ^ a b c d e "Little Surprises at the Governor's Inaugural Ball," January 19, 1913, image 11
  • ^ "Marvelous Genee Lives For and Thinks Only of Her Fairylike Dancing," March 10, 1909, image 9
  • ^ "Cardinal Gibbons Interviewed by Marguerite Martyn," September 22, 1912, image1
  • ^ "Charles Dana Gibson Gives Marguerite Martyn a Kind Word for Little Girls; the "Cotton-Made Gibson Man? He Is Discovered!" November 15, 1908, image 9
  • ^ a b c d e f g h "A Woman for Vice President," June 30, 1932, image 34
  • ^ "Emma Goldman Says Anarchism Will Mean Absolute Equality and Freedom for Women With No Moral Code," November 1, 1908, image 9
  • ^ a b "Emma Goldman's Talk as Heard by Miss Martyn," February 3, 1910, image 4
  • ^ a b "Notables at Denver Snapped and Sketched, Better Known Ones Being Thoroughly Camera-Broke, Newer Ones Still Pencil-Shy," July 8, 1908, image 1
  • ^ "Be Shy, Mrs. Gould's Winning Rule," March 13, 1912, image 8
  • ^ "Hetty Green's Son Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 7, 1911, image 1
  • ^ "Woman Delegate Worries Over Clothes, Just Like Merry Convention Widow," June 19, 1908, image 3
  • ^ a b c d e f g "Mrs. Hadley Keeps to Her Room, Unmindful That Governor Is the Talk of Chicago," June 21, 1912, image 4
  • ^ "'I Have Looked at Your Society Woman's Duties With a Magnifying Glass, and I Cannot Find One Worthy of the Name,'" February 25, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Mrs. Harding Wears Her Old Clothes on Campaign Trip," October 17, 1920, image 66
  • ^ a b c "Sketched at Chicago," June 7, 1920, image 3
  • ^ "Mrs. Hearst Loves Babies, Politics and Journalism," September 19, 1908, image 3
  • ^ a b c "Femininity at the Convention," June 27, 1924, image 3
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Scores the Herrick Writers for Half Truths About Women," August 31, 1908, image 3
  • ^ "Miss Hoffman's Salome Abnormal as Sin — But Art, Says Marguerite Martyn," January 7, 1909, image 13
  • ^ "Mrs. Houston, With Great Executive Ability, Is Natural Aid in Her Husband's Progress," March 13, 1913, image 13
  • ^ "Inside Glimpse Into the Workaday Methods of Fannie Hurst, Famous Short-Story Author," August 22, 1914, image 5
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Ropes a Mighty Lariat Thrower," November 12, 1911, image 13
  • ^ "Mother Jones Not as Belligerent at Near View as Her War-Like Record Might Indicate," June 29, 1915, image 3
  • ^ "'Five Years From Now Will See the End of Strikes,' Declares Mother Jones," May 13, 1918, image 3
  • ^ "'The Most Beautiful Woman' Tells Marguerite Martyn," February 12, 1911
  • ^ "Charity Worker Tells Miss Martyn How 'Philanthropist' Employers Ruin Women's Lives by Underpaying Them," May 29, 1910, image 1
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Fascinating Mrs. Kern a Baseball Fan; Thinks She and Her Jolly Household Would Awaken Washington," July 19, 1908, image 9
  • ^ "Senator Kinney Says Tax on Bachelors Will Make Them Real Useful Citizens," February 25, 1909, image 6
  • ^ "Sketches of Women Prominent in St. Louis Life," November 28, 1908, image8
  • ^ "'Every Woman Should Have a Job,'" April 20, 1919, image 1
  • ^ "Women's Council Both Stirred and Amused by Men's Good-Humored Debate on Film Censorship," January 8, 1916, image3
  • ^ "A Noted Judge Decides for the Movies," February 26, 1936, image 37
  • ^ "Pencil and Pen Pictures Show Bryan's Daughter a Beauty of Artist's Type," July 8, 1908, image 11
  • ^ "Marriage and Diplomatic Service," September 4, 1936, image 41
  • ^ by Frederick H. Brennan, "Fifi Widener Comes Home," November 22, 1925, image 123
  • ^ "Two Sketches and a Photograph of the Russian Singer Who Believes in Suffrage," January 28, 1910, image 11
  • ^ "The Guillotine for Jack London, Say Western Women," February 4, 1906, image 50
  • ^ "Mrs. Longworth, Lobster Salad, Chauncey M. Depew and Gossip Exhilirate Marguerite Martyn," June 18, 1908, image 13
  • ^ a b c "Miss Martyn Finds Grand Opera Brilliance at Roosevelt Meeting," June 18, 1912, image 4
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Tells of Women's Fears and Joys at Convention Session," June 19, 1912, image 4
  • ^ "A Priest's Story of His Mother," January 4, 1935, image 41
  • ^ "Joan Lowell Talks of Future," October 27, 1930, image 33
  • ^ "Women, Not Men, First, Is the Rule in Baltimore, Marguerite Martyn Finds," June 26, 1912, image 4
  • ^ "'Libraries and Art Museums Are Failures,' Says Percy MacKaye, February 16, 1913, image 1
  • ^ "Mrs. Eliot W. Major Gives a 'Woman to Woman Interview," January 5, 1913, image 1
  • ^ "Mansfield and Some of His Auditors When He Described Actors on Stage and in Real Life," May 3, 1906, image 7
  • ^ a b "Marguerite Martyn at the Inauguration of President Wilson," March 9, 1913, image 1
  • ^ "Great Stage Manager Lost to World," December 3, 1909, image 13
  • ^ "How to Be Symmetrical, Agile and Graceful," September 26, 1927, image 29
  • ^ a b "Miss Martyn Sees Suffrage Meeting Turned Into a Bully Roosevelt Rally," June 17, 1912, image 2
  • ^ "George McManus and Wife Convince Marguerite Martyn They Are Newlyweds in Real Life," January 26, 1910, image 9
  • ^ "Brazil Almost a Paradise for Women, Whose Chief Pleasure Is to Please the Men," October 27, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Meriwether's Latest Book Belies Her 87 Years," August 18, 1910, image 11
  • ^ "Mrs. Elizabeth A. Meriwether, St. Louis Woman Author in the Who's-Who Book," July 18, 1914, image 5
  • ^ "Patsy Ruth Comes Back in Triumph," October 18, 1924, image 14
  • ^ "Japanese Prima Donna Would Wear American Evening Gowns If She Were Not So Little," October 13, 1915, image 3
  • ^ "Miss Anne Morgan and Others Outline Part Women Can Play in the Preparedness Movement in Addresses Before the Town Club," March 5, 1916, image 31
  • ^ "'Czar' Mulvihill Has Wee Lenten 'Lid' of His Own; Dry 'Mid Enticing Bottles," April 17, 1908, image 7
  • ^ "Mme. Nazimova Raps the Butterfly Women Fluttering About Men," November 27, 1908, image 18
  • ^ "Nazimova: An Off-Stage Glimpse of the Famous Actress, February 4, 1936, image 27
  • ^ a b c "Mrs. Gann Rocks G.O.P. Social Boat by Snubbing Hostess," June 15, 1932, image 38
  • ^ "'My Voice Is My Child,' Declares Madame Nordica, January 22, 1912, image 14
  • ^ "What Is Society? Toto Papin Explains," December 18, 1910, image 1
  • ^ "Sylvia Pankhurst Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 19, 1911, image 13
  • ^ "The Wiles of a Successful Suffragette," January 28, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Women Likened to a Blizzard Freeze by Rev. Dr. Pankhurst," March 12, 1909, image 11
  • ^ "Mrs. Pennybacker, Dainty and Vivacious," February 20, 1913, image 13
  • ^ a b "Woman Reporter's Description of the Several Types of Women Whose Speeches Won Convention Crowd," June 13, 1920, image 60
  • ^ "Maker of Billiken Tells Marguerite Martyn How She Created the Little God of Optimism," November 7, 1909, image 14
  • ^ "Billikens Girl With Billikens' Smile, Marries," February 15, 1912, image 11
  • ^ "She Wants to Be So Very Genteel!" April 2, 1911, image 15
  • ^ "Youthful Suffragette, a Debutante, Will Lead St. Louis Women in a Militant Franchise Campaign," March 13, 1910, image 1
  • ^ "Woman Sociologist Tells Miss Martyn Taft is the Louis XVI of America," May 19, 1910, image 13
  • ^ "St. Louis Gave Her a Start on Broadway," September 29, 1931, image 28
  • ^ "A Woman In Command," October 18, 1912, image 15
  • ^ a b c "Women May Elect President," October 20, 1912, image59
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Tells of an Evening at the Open Forum When Miss Rumbold Held Her Own Among the Radicals There," December 8, 1915, image3
  • ^ "Contentment Is Secret of Beauty, Says Lillian Russell, Fair and Fat, But Not Too Fat, at Forty," April 27, 1908, image 9
  • ^ "Lillian Russell Tell Marguerite Martyn How Simple Use of Common Sense Preserves Youth," December 12, 1915, image 44
  • ^ "Archbishop Ryan Believes Women Taxpayers Should Vote, He Tells Miss Martyn," December 19, 1909, image 25
  • ^ "'The Lady Hercules' Tells Marguerite Martyn," June 4, 1911, image 11
  • ^ "Mrs. Sanger, Who Defies Federal Law, Outlines Her Work for Birth Control Among the Poor," May 21, 1916, image 37
  • ^ "Husbands to Pay Wives and No More Old Maids, Ideals Prof. Schmidt Outlines to Marguerite Martyn," January 30, 1912, image 11
  • ^ "English Folk Dance Leader Defines Ideal of Dancing and Demonstrates It for St. Louisans," March 30, 1916, image 3
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Interviews Finley J. Shepard," December 18, 1912, image13
  • ^ "A St. Louis Author at Work," October 18, 1934, image 36
  • ^ "Wife of Gipsy Smith Is Not a Gipsy, But She Is a Real Nomad," image 8
  • ^ "Smoot Expects Women to Vote, But Not to Rule," October 26, 1909, image 11
  • ^ "Mrs. Philip Snowden, Noted Suffragist From Over the Seas, Tells Marguerite Martyn," November 6, 1910, image 13
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Aviatrice," October 12, 1912, image 3
  • ^ "War to Bring Greater Socialization of World, Rose Pastor Stokes Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 19, 1916, image 27
  • ^ "Child, Who at 13 Is an Educational Wonder, Has Ambition to Be a Cowboy and an Editor," November 12, 1915, image 13
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn at Palm Beach," March 12, 1925, image 42
  • ^ "Countess de Swirsky Tells Marguerite Martyn," April 23, 1911, image 13
  • ^ a b "Talk About Fuss and Feathers at Chicago Convention," June 14, 1908, image 1
  • ^ "Let Women Vote, But Never, Never Hold Office, Says Mrs. William H. Taft to Marguerite Martyn," June 25, 1908, image 11
  • ^ "The Well-Dressed Actress," April 5, 1932, image 86
  • ^ "St. Louis Poetess, Whose Verses Pulsate, Tells Marguerite Martyn the Secret of Her Many Triumphs," June 1, 1910, image 11
  • ^ "Next in the 'Who's Who' Series is Sara Teasdale, Famous Poetess," July 23, 1914, image 14
  • ^ "A New Ally for Suffragists and Who Do You Think It Is? Shakspeare," November 27, 1910, image 1
  • ^ "Tetrazinni Seems to Be a Bit of a Tyrant, Says Marguerite Martyn," February 1, 1911, image 11
  • ^ "Tetrazzini Cook Spaghetti? No? But Caruso Said So?" February 20. 1911, image 3
  • ^ "Mrs. M. Louise Thomas, Another 'Who's Who' and the 'Why'of It," July 2, 1914, image15
  • ^ "Miss Thornburgh's Fiancé Not Converted YET," November 10, 1912, image 39
  • ^ "'American Women Independent? Bah! They Don't Dare Do Anything Unconventional,' Princess Troubetzkoy Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 17, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "Father Vaughan, Scourger of Social Wickedness, Finds St. Louis Society So Good, He Becomes Its Devotee, Says Marguerite Martyn," May 5, 1912, image 13
  • ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Vermilya, Feminine (More Than) Forty, Fat and Not Her Conception of a Wholesome Poisoner," November 26, 1911, image 45
  • ^ "Baroness Von Suttner Tells How to End War," October 20, 1912, image 1
  • ^ "It's a Shame the Way They Abuse Waddell, Says Marguerite Martyn After Hearing Rube's Sad Story," June 3, 1908, image 9
  • ^ "Marry Anyway, Advice of Summer Garden Actress for Marguerite Martyn," June 17, 1910, image 11
  • ^ "Eugene Walter, Playwright, Gives Marguerite Martyn New Ideas on Suffrage," June 27, 1910, image 7
  • ^ "Fannie Ward, Who Left St. Louis Poor, Returns Rich to Buy Her Girlhood Home in Dayton Street," March 28, 1909, image 22
  • ^ "Fannie Ward Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 21, 1911, image 13
  • ^ "'I Am Not Quitting,' Says Hunnewell's New Mayor," September 3, 1911, image 43
  • ^ "Jane Frances Winn in Who's-Who Book," August 13, 1914, image 15
  • ^ "Wu Ting Fang Tells Marguerite Martyn Why the American Woman Should Vote," October 24, 1909, image 11
  • ^ "Gay Dinner Parties at 60 Below," August 12, 1913, image 6
  • ^ "Living With an Alarm Clock 25 Years 'Made' Mrs. Young," August 22, 1909, image 1

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