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Saturday, September 23, 2023

"The Eyrie," September 1923

Letter writers in Weird Tales, September 1923:

  • Zahrah E. Preble (1880-1934), writing from Zuni, New Mexico, where she was on expedition with her future husband Frederick Webb Hodge (1864-1956). She was a singer, dancer, and educator and had keen interests in American Indians and their culture.
  • Franklin A. Over, writing as F.A. Ells-Over (1902-1972) of San Diego, California. (Ells was his mother's maiden name.) It looks as though Ells-Over submitted a story with his letter, but I don't know where that story went. Ells-Over was a photographer, writer, and orchid enthusiast.
  • Curtis F. Day (1898-1968) of Somerville, Massachusetts, who had a peculiar interest in people who had been buried alive. He mentioned Edgar Allan Poe in his letter of course. Day was a writer and bookseller.
  • Catherine H(artley) Griggs (1893-1941) of Waterbury, Connecticut. She was a member of the Society for Psychic Research. She had an article in the journal of the society in the issue of November 1918 in which she described a sighting of a ghost by her mother and aunt while they were in Vienna.
  • Paul Ellsworth Triem (1882-1976), whose letter was presumably to accompany the submission of his story "The Evening Wolves," serialized in the issues of June and July/August 1923.
  • H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937). This was Lovecraft's first appearance in Weird Tales. He would next have a story, "Dagon," and a letter in the issue of October 1923. I'll have more next on the first of Lovecraft.
  • Just Another Weird One.
  • Charles White of Quebec City, Quebec, who may have been the same Charles White who had an entry in "The Cauldron" in the issue of July/August 1923.
  • Maxine Worthington of Lincoln, Nebraska.
  • Paul Bratton of Sacramento, California.
  • Richard R.  "Dick" Tooker (1902-1988) of Minneapolis, Minnesota. In all, Tooker had six letters and one story in Weird Tales from 1923 to 1943, an admirable career as a reader of and contributor to "The Unique Magazine."
  • Mrs. E.L. Depew of San Francisco, California.
  • John James Arthur, Jr. of Oak Grove Farm, Coleman, Texas. I found a John James Arthur, Jr., with dates of 1903-1978, buried at Ballinger, Texas.
  • William Moesel of New York City, possibly William H. Moesel (1903-1991), a draftsman and structural engineer.
  • V. Van Blascom Parke of Arlington Heights, Massachusetts, in actuality Lavinia "Venie" Van Blarcom Parke aka Mrs. H.B. Parke (1850-1937), a writer, poet, and author of Dorothy and the Christ-Child (1896), illustrated by Will Phillip Hooper, as well as stories in St. Nicholas and other magazines. She claimed to have lived in a haunted house and even to have embraced a ghost!
  • C.D. Bradley of Oakland, California.
  • R(obert) Linwood Lancaster (Jr.) (1904-1978) of Raleigh, North Carolina, who predicted "a very bright future" for Weird Tales magazine. Now here we are a hundred years later observing its anniversary.
  • H. Cusick of New York City.
  • V.H. Bethell of San Francisco, California.

Jessie Burns Parke (1889-1964) was the daughter of Lavinia Van Blarcom Parke, letter-writer to Weird Tales. The mother was an author and poet, the daughter an artist and illustrator. Here is one of her drawings, of Halloween harlequins, close to the season for such things. Jessie Burns Parke also drew the pictures for a deck of Tarot cards that she co-created with occultist Paul Foster Case (1884-1954). His October birthday is coming up, too.

Original text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

4 comments:

  1. Another excellent post. One very minor correction - V. Van Blascom Parke in your list should, of course, be V. Van Blarcom Parke.

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    Replies
    1. Hi, Phil,

      I have "V. Van Blascom Parke" because that's how her name showed up in print in "The Eyrie." It took me a while to find her because I was using the wrong name in my search.

      Thanks for writing, and as always thanks for your work. It makes my work that much easier.

      Terence Hanley

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    2. Whoops, my bad! I thought I had checked all the letters carefully for mis-spellings but that one slipped through - must be my aging eyesight :-(

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    3. Hi, Phil,

      I read that a lot of the letters (manuscripts, too) were handwritten, and so plenty of errors got through. The letter writers to "The Eyrie" are a neglected bunch. It's fun to find out about them and to set the record straight.

      Thanks for writing.

      TH

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