Doris Holmes Blake - Correspondence with Lucy Wentworth Holmes, April - December 1939

About the Project

Through correspondence from Lucy Wentworth Holmes, to her daughter, Smithsonian entomologist Doris Holmes Blake, researchers get even more evidence of the scientist’s steadfast work ethic and some commentary on world affairs. After a visit between the two women in 1939, Holmes wrote: “I have missed you much since you rode home Thursday morning and feel sorry you worked so hard all through your vacation.” We not only get a sense of Blake’s devotion to the Smithsonian, but also Holmes’ judgment about world affairs. In April 1939, the 84-year-old woman referred to President Franklin D. Roosevelt as a “darn fool” and claimed she “felt ashamed” when she read the transcript of his recent speech. Join a group of #volunpeers in transcribing mother-daughter letters between April and December 1939.

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Completed!

Project Progress (details)
152 pages completed
Difficulty
2 out of 5
(details)

93

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152

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