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Thursday, December 7, 2023

Finals Study Break: Tuesday, December 12!

Come out next Tuesday for a study break during finals!  
 
Grab coffee and fresh-baked donuts outside the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center. 
 
When: Tuesday, December 12, 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. 
Where: Outside the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center (N30, on the subplaza past Student Orgs. in N20)
What: Coffee and donuts!  
 
Good luck on finals, and best wishes for the holidays from the Law Library!
 
Festive Snowflakes


 
 
 

Friday, December 1, 2023

New Darrow Acquisitions & Darrow’s Library

Sketch of Clarence Darrow
The Riesenfeld Center has recently acquired several new items relating to Clarence Darrow’s interests and career, as well as those of his wife, Ruby. These items join the Law Library’s Darrow collection, which includes more than 1,000 letters, as well as books, speeches, debates, trial briefs and transcripts, and other material about Darrow and his noteworthy career and life. To learn more about Darrow, you can visit our award-winning digital research site, which makes available extensive material from our collection.

 

Two of the library’s newest acquisitions are pamphlets featuring some of Darrow’s work. The first, an issue of the leftist periodical The Debunker published in 1931, features Darrow’s essay, “Absurdities of the Bible.” Darrow, a known agnostic, delves into a handful of stories from the Bible, including the creation of Adam and the performing of several miracles. Darrow states that “I am an agnostic because I trust my reason…Anybody who can believe those old myths and fables isn’t governed by reason.”


Cover of pamphlet, The 'Ruby Red'
Another new pamphlet to the collection relates to Benjamin Gitlow, a communist whose civil liberties Darrow defended in a noted ‘Red Scare’ trial in 1920. Gitlow, a member of the Labor Committee of the Communist Labor Party and a staffer for the left-wing magazine The Revolutionary Age, was tried under New York’s Criminal Anarchy Act of 1902. This was done on the grounds that the magazine’s printing of the Left Wing Manifesto constituted encouragement of the violent overthrow of the government. Darrow was hired as part of the defense team, and his speech in Gitlow’s defense is excerpted in this pamphlet. Ultimately, Gitlow was found guilty and sentenced to five to ten years of hard labor, being released in 1922 after successful appeals.


Title page of The Summing Up
We have also acquired several books belonging to Darrow and members of his family. The first, Darrow’s wife Ruby’s copy of The Summing Up, by Somerset Maugham, connects to several letters in our collection, in which Ruby discusses Maugham, his books, and his relationship to Darrow. This copy features pasted-in newspaper clippings related to Maugham and penciled-in annotations by Ruby, showing her admiration for Maugham and proving this to be a well-read copy of his work. We also acquired two books belonging to Darrow’s son, Paul. The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball that Floats in the Air was a Christmas gift inscribed to Paul from Darrow in 1889, when Paul was six. The other, Sailor on Horseback, by Irving Stone, was inscribed to Paul and his wife with a note about Stone’s biography on Darrow that was to come: “I pledge myself to give everything I’ve got to make the Clarence Darrow biography at least as good as this book, and I hope a great deal better.”


Handwritten inscription to Clarence Darrow
Two other books with inscriptions to Darrow also join our collection. The Life and Adventures of Carl Laemmle, by John Drinkwater, includes a warm inscription written to Darrow by the author. Laemmle was an influential German-American film producer, who produced Mystery of Life (1931), a film about evolution, which Darrow narrated and appeared in. The Child You Used to Be was sent by the author, Leonora Pease, to Darrow. While most of our collection includes kind notes to Darrow, this one includes a criticism of Darrow’s novel, Farmington: “To Clarence Darrow--A man who wrote a human boy’s book, with allusions in it to little girls, all dressed up and sitting in a row like dolls or painted angels, I offer this c[h]ronicle of real ‘little girlhood.’”


This assortment of books joins our growing collection of materials owned by Darrow and members of his family. We are excited to have created a new collection designation for these materials, which allows for browsing the interests and relationships found through this associative ownership. All of these new acquisitions provide additional context and depth to what we know about Darrow’s beliefs, career, and relationships, viewed through the collection.

 

- Sophia Charbonneau, Special Collections Assistant