Lincoln Discussion Symposium
On the Tarbell Trail - Printable Version

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On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 09-30-2012 09:44 AM

Yesterday marked a major milestone on the Tarbell Trail. I completed going through her Lincoln correspondence and downloaded EVERY letter in that collection. I have well over 5,600 letters (all of which I've read). Now, I am going to work on a preliminary outline of what I want to write, and then I will tackle her non-Lincoln correspondence, which is far more voluminous than her Lincoln material.

I am also patiently waiting for Allegheny College to put up the material related to the books she wrote. However, that probably won't be up before sometime next year.

I hope to have a book proposal ready by the end of the year, or late February at the latest.

We now return you to your original programming.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - RJNorton - 09-30-2012 10:29 AM

Kudos on your progress, Rob!


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - LincolnMan - 09-30-2012 11:57 AM

Amazing. How do you have time to work a job?


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 09-30-2012 12:24 PM

Quote:Amazing. How do you have job to work a job?

I'm supposed to have a job? Smile

Actually, once I'm home, on my days off, and on vacations, I spend every single minute I can in front of my computer. I haven't watched television in weeks, and my wife has taken over our bathroom remodel (which was supposed to have been done a few months ago...oh well, it's still functioning).

What's really going to hurt is when I have to start printing all those letters and other papers out. I've been stocking up on ink and paper, and storage boxes to put the files in. I've got to get my office cleaned out to make more room.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 09-30-2012 05:02 PM

Just to give you an idea what I will be doing in the next few weeks. The stack of papers on the right is the non-Lincoln A-Z finding aid for Tarbell's paper which I just finished printing out. The folder on the left is the A-Z finding aid for her Lincoln-related correspondence.

[Image: 005jfs.jpg]

Uploaded with ImageShack.us

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Joe Di Cola - 10-01-2012 11:06 AM

(09-30-2012 05:02 PM)Rob Wick Wrote:  Just to give you an idea what I will be doing in the next few weeks. The stack of papers on the right is the non-Lincoln A-Z finding aid for Tarbell's paper which I just finished printing out. The folder on the left is the A-Z finding aid for her Lincoln-related correspondence.

[Image: 005jfs.jpg]

Uploaded with ImageShack.us

Best
Rob

Rob,

I noticed the little train on your desk. Are you a train person or model or toy train railroader?

Joe


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-01-2012 11:54 AM

Joe,

Not really, but there is a story behind it.

When I was a little boy, I wanted a train set. My mother, who after my father died was left with four children to raise on her own, barely had enough money to pay bills let alone splurge on a train set. She liked to do ceramics, and made that train set for me one Christmas. On the side is says "RW Railroad." Unfortunately, I lost one of the pieces in a move, and they have chipped a bit, so I keep them on my desk to protect them, plus to remind me of one of the greatest women I've ever known.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-06-2012 03:11 PM

Today I got a package from Smith College in Massachusetts which has some of Tarbell's letters to and from John S. Phillips and J. McCan Davis.

The letters to Phillips were especially moving, given that some of them were written just a few short months before Tarbell's death in 1944. In some she laments her inability to type, which she took up just a few years before her death, as well as how "Mr. Parkinson" is making his presence known (she suffered from Parkinson's Disease). What really struck me, though, was the letters she wrote by hand. She was so insistent on making herself understood that she spent hours on a two-page letter. Her stamina and strength are amazing, and though I'm something of a cynic about such things, they are inspirational.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - LincolnMan - 10-07-2012 07:15 AM

Rob: what are you "somewhat a cynic" about?-didn't quite understand what you meant.


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-07-2012 08:08 AM

Bill,

Cynical about finding inspiration from most people.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Joe Di Cola - 10-07-2012 04:49 PM

(10-01-2012 11:54 AM)Rob Wick Wrote:  Joe,

Not really, but there is a story behind it.

When I was a little boy, I wanted a train set. My mother, who after my father died was left with four children to raise on her own, barely had enough money to pay bills let alone splurge on a train set. She liked to do ceramics, and made that train set for me one Christmas. On the side is says "RW Railroad." Unfortunately, I lost one of the pieces in a move, and they have chipped a bit, so I keep them on my desk to protect them, plus to remind me of one of the greatest women I've ever known.

Best
Rob
Rob,

Those kinds of "treasures" are priceless. I have things like that on my library shelves that keep my parents alive to me every day. Thanks for sharing.

Joe


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-08-2012 11:49 AM

Last night I finished Kathleen Brady's Ida Tarbell: Portrait of a Muckraker (which I highly recommend to anyone wanting a succinct biography of her). Toward the end of the book, in which Brady describes Tarbell's last days, there was a paragraph which I'd like to share which will hit home to anyone who has watched a loved one die whether through old age or a terminal illness.

Brady writes:

Her own fatigue increased her empathy for others. Increasingly, Tarbell found herself thinking of a puppy that she had found in 1906 after she left McClure. She had rented a house in Nantucket and the collie that was there gave birth. The weakest of the litter kept crawling away to die, but Tarbell would bring it back to the sun. Over and over the puppy kept struggling away, trying to find a place to die in peace. She thought she understood that puppy now.

That passage speaks volumes.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-12-2012 09:23 AM

I'm now at the point I had hoped to be at soon.

I'm not going to be around as much for a while, as I've reached a point where I need to start writing. I will still visit here and comment on whatever posts interest me.

Let the writing begin.

Best
Rob


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Gene C - 10-12-2012 09:47 AM

Good luck Rob, of coarse this means we are all going to have to work harder to fill the emptiness and void in you absence.

Seriously though, good luck! I will miss you insight, knowledge and wit. Don't be gone to much, your presence helps the rest of us rise to a higher level of thought and you bring an interestng perspective to our discusions.


RE: On the Tarbell Trail - Rob Wick - 10-12-2012 09:54 AM

Thanks Gene. I doubt the void will be too big, though. Like I said, I will be back from time to time, and once I get to where I need a break from Ida, I'll come back with a ton more of Tough Tarbell Trivia. Big Grin

Best
Rob