{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Suffrage.\u0026view=compact","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Suffrage.\u0026page=1\u0026view=compact"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":null,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":1,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":1,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":true}},"data":[{"id":"vihi_vih00010","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00010#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Include scattered business and personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and 1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's personal and professional networks and their political activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother, Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters offers insights into relationships between mothers and their adult children. The collection also contains information on teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political activities.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00010#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vihi_vih00010","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00010","_root_":"vihi_vih00010","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00010","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00010.xml","title_ssm":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"title_tesim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2"],"text":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2","Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976","Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage.","900 (ca.) items. (2 archival and 1\n         oversize box).","The papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type.","Adele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement.","This collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.","Correspondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement","Adele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.","Adele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.","Accounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.","Materials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.","In 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.","From 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.","In 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.","The rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.","Materials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.","The papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2.","Include scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"collection_title_tesim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"collection_ssim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of Adele Clark in 1979. Accessioned 7 July\n            1986."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["900 (ca.) items. (2 archival and 1\n         oversize box)."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Adele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.","Correspondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement","Adele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.","Adele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.","Accounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.","Materials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.","In 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.","From 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.","In 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.","The rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.","Materials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.","The papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eInclude scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Include scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":45,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vihi_vih00010","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00010","_root_":"vihi_vih00010","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00010","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00010.xml","title_ssm":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"title_tesim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2"],"text":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2","Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976","Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage.","900 (ca.) items. (2 archival and 1\n         oversize box).","The papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type.","Adele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement.","This collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.","Correspondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement","Adele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.","Adele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.","Accounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.","Materials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.","In 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.","From 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.","In 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.","The rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.","Materials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.","The papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2.","Include scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 C5472 a FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"collection_title_tesim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"collection_ssim":["Adele Clark Papers \n          \n         1855-1976"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of Adele Clark in 1979. Accessioned 7 July\n            1986."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Art and state -- Virginia.","Art -- Study and teaching.","Clark,Adele, 1882-1983.","Clark, Estelle Goodman, 1847-1937.","Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.","Federal art Project (Va.)","Houston, Nora, 1883-1942.","Ions, Willoughby, 1881-1977.","League of Women Voters of Virginia.","Mothers and daughters.","Richmond(Va.) -- Intellectual life -- 20th\n         century.","Suffrage.","Women artists -- Virginia.","Women -- Family relationships.","Women in politics -- Virginia.","Women -- Suffrage."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["900 (ca.) items. (2 archival and 1\n         oversize box)."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The papers of Adele Clark are arranged into seven series by\n         individual and further subdivided by subject or material\n         type."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Adele Clark was a major figure in Richmond's art scene and\n         political life for nearly three-quarters of a century. Born in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent her childhood in New Orleans, La.,\n         before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years later she\n         graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellen School (now\n         St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer for the\n         chamber of commerce, Miss Clark studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Miss Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York, where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection begins with the papers of Robert Clark\n         (1832?-1906) and his wife, Estelle (Goodman) Clark\n         (1847-1937). His papers consist of three letters written by a\n         brother Tom Clark and miscellany; hers include correspondence,\n         accounts, and miscellany. A folder of her general\n         correspondence precedes individual folders of letters with her\n         three daughters, Adele Clark, Edith (Clark) Cowles, and\n         Gertrude (Clark) Dew, as well as one containing two letters\n         from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Accounts and letters\n         concerning the deaths of two family members follow.","Correspondence of Edith (Clark) Cowles includes letters\n         with her sister, Adele Clark, and illustrator Dugald Stewart\n         Walker. Adele Clark (1882-1983) was a major figure in\n         Richmond's art society and political life for nearly\n         three-quarters of a century. Born Adele Goodman Clark in\n         Montgomery, Ala., she spent most of her childhood in New\n         Orleans, La., before moving to Richmond in 1894. Seven years\n         later Clark graduated from the Miss Virginia Randolph Ellett\n         School (now St. Catherine's). While working as a stenographer\n         for the chamber of commerce she studied art with Lily Logan at\n         the Art Club of Richmond. In 1906, Adele Clark received a\n         scholarship to the Chase School of Art in New York where she\n         studied under Robert Henri and Kenneth Hays Miller. Shortly\n         after her return to Richmond to teach at the Art Club, she\n         became involved in the women's suffrage movement","Adele Clark's papers reflect her varied careers and\n         avocations, yet mostly pertain to her personal life and art\n         activities. Major collections of her papers documenting her\n         work with the Equal Suffrage League, the Virginia League of\n         Women Voters, and the U.S. Work Projects Administration have\n         been given to the Virginia State Library, the University of\n         Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, and other\n         institutions.","Adele Clark's papers begin with a section of general\n         correspondence, which consists of letters with family members,\n         artists, politicians, and suffragists. Among the more\n         prominent are: Ella Graham Agnew, Edmund Minor Archer, Harry\n         Flood Byrd (1887-1966), Colgate Whitehead Darden, Marion\n         Montague Junkin, Elizabeth Dabney (Langhorne) Lewis, Theresa\n         Pollak, and Roberta Wellford. Separate folders contain\n         correspondence with Richmond artist Nora Houston and artist\n         and designer Willoughby Ions, Adele Clark's first cousin.","Accounts precede financial records, which include materials\n         concerning \"Swannanoa,\" the summer home of James Henry Dooley,\n         uncle of Nora Houston. Adele Clark was helping the Dooley\n         family dispose of this property after the death of Sallie\n         (May) Dooley in 1925. A few items documenting Adele Clark's\n         brief tenure as acting dean of women at the College of William\n         and Mary precede materials concerning her uncle, Edward Samuel\n         Goodman, who died in 1931. These include inquiries concerning\n         his health, sympathy letters and trust information. Sympathy\n         letters concerning the death of Nora Houston, recipes,\n         miscellaneous newspaper clippings and personal miscellany\n         conclude this section.","Materials pertaining to Adele Clark's art career and\n         political activities are located in box 2. These begin with a\n         folder of general art correspondence, arranged alphabetically,\n         which mostly consists of portrait requests, commissions,\n         inquiries, and letters with miscellaneous art institutions.\n         Clark was treasurer and member of the board of directors of\n         the Richmond Art Club as well as a student and instructor\n         there. A minute book, loose minutes, correspondence, loose\n         clippings and a scrapbook of clippings, located with oversized\n         materials in box 3, document her affiliation with the club. An\n         unsigned appeal from James H. Dooley, the club's president, is\n         found among the loose minutes.","In 1919, Adele Clark and Nora Houston, with whom she shared\n         a studio, founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and\n         Handicrafts in an attempt to revive the Chevalier Quesnay de\n         Beaurepaire's Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts. This soon\n         became the Virginia League of Fine Arts, which merged with the\n         Richmond Academy of Arts in 1931. This collection contains a\n         copy of the league's constitution, amendments and reports as\n         well as a few items of correspondence. Minutes of the board of\n         trustees of the Richmond Academy of Arts document the merger\n         and the two years following. Lecture notes and student papers\n         from the College of William and Mary extension in Richmond\n         (Richmond Professional Institute) precede WPA materials. The\n         latter mainly consists of letters with Campbell Bascom Slemp\n         about the Southwest Virginia Museum at Big Stone Gap, but also\n         include a scrapbook, located in box 3, and the transcript of a\n         1963 interview.","From 1941 to 1964, Adele Clark served on the State Art\n         Commission, an organization she helped establish in 1916.\n         Materials, primarily reports and minutes, span her entire\n         affiliation with the commission, but mostly pertain to her\n         last three years of service. Materials of the Virginia Society\n         for Crippled Children and Adults include correspondence,\n         reports and notes on patients and demonstrate Clark's interest\n         in using art in rehabilitation. In 1947, a portrait gallery of\n         state police officers who died in the line of duty was\n         established at state police headquarters in Chesterfield\n         County. Adele Clark was commissioned to paint one of these\n         portraits. Materials concerning the dedication include\n         clippings and a program that contains biographical sketches of\n         artists and subjects.","In 1956, the Richmond Artists Association was founded to\n         encourage local appreciation and patronage of contemporary\n         art. Among these materials are copies of the constitution,\n         by-laws, rosters, and a directory. Materials concerning the\n         dedication of the Nora Houston Gallery at St. Paul's School in\n         1972 follow. A copy of the dedication address by Edmund Minor\n         Archer recounts Nora Houston's contributions to Richmond art.\n         Notes and articles, invitations, announcements and exhibition\n         information, a visitor's roster to a 1946 exhibition, two\n         sketchbooks and loose sketches, and miscellany conclude this\n         section.","The rest of Adele Clark's papers concern her role as a\n         political activist. These materials are relatively few in\n         number and often individual folders contain only several items\n         that span a large date range. For example, the first folder in\n         this section contains materials concerning women's rights\n         (excluding the League of Women Voters) from 1912 to 1976. This\n         material includes correspondence, clippings, notes, and\n         miscellany concerning various women's issues from suffrage to\n         the Equal Rights Amendment. As previously mentioned Adele\n         Clark's Equal Suffrage League and Virginia League of Women\n         Voters papers were given to another institution. An index to\n         those papers donated to the James Branch Cabell Library at\n         Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond follows folders\n         on the Richmond and Virginia Leagues. In 1923, the Virginia\n         League of Women Voters established the Virginia Women's\n         Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to\n         coordinate lobbying efforts among like-minded organizations.\n         In the mid-1950's this became the Virginia Council on State\n         Legislation. Materials concerning these organizations mainly\n         include bulletins and reports. In 1921, Governor E. Lee\n         Trinkle appointed Adele Clark to the Commission on\n         Simplification of state Government. A few items of\n         correspondence, reports and bulletins, mostly from budget\n         director LeRoy Hodges, document the commission's work.","Materials that pertain to Prohibition and the National\n         recovery Administration consist almost entirely of newspaper\n         clippings. Minutes and resolutions from a meeting on economic\n         security held in Richmond on March 7, 1935, with Secretary of\n         Labor Frances Perkins precede miscellaneous information\n         concerning a variety of labor and racial issues. A transcript\n         of an interview (ca. 1920) with an ex-slave from Maryland is\n         found with this material. A folder of political miscellany and\n         one concerning Adele Clark's activities on behalf of the\n         Diocesan Council of Catholic Women conclude Adele Clark's\n         papers.","The papers of Adeline Harmon (Cowles) Cox (1907- ) and\n         miscellaneous family items are located at the end of box\n         2."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eInclude scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Include scattered business and\n         personal correspondence, ca. 1916-1950, as well as newspaper\n         clippings, organizational minutes, notes and other published\n         and manuscript materials pertaining to a wide array of Clark's\n         political and artistic interests. Among the organizations with\n         which Miss Clark worked were the Equal Suffrage League of\n         Virginia, the League of Women Voters of Virginia, and the\n         Federal Art Project in Virginia. Correspondence, 1916-1940 and\n         1926-1939, with Nora Houston (1883-1942) and Willoughby Ions\n         (1881-1977) illuminates the relationship between women's\n         personal and professional networks and their political\n         activities. The correspondence, 1906-1929, of Clark's mother,\n         Estelle (Goodman) Clark (1847-1893) with her three daughters\n         offers insights into relationships between mothers and their\n         adult children. The collection also contains information on\n         teaching art history in a variety of contexts, on women's\n         suffrage and women's rights, and on other civic and political\n         activities."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":45,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00010"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Virginia Historical Society","value":"Virginia Historical 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