Crane family papers

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Collection Data

Description
Members of the Crane family included Colonel Alexander Baxter Crane (1833-1930), soldier, lawyer and businessman of Indiana and New York; his wife, Laura Mitchell Crane; and their children, Elizabeth, Caroline, Helen, Aurelia, Laura, and Alexander. Colonel Crane served in the U.S. Army during the Civil War, had a prominent law practice in New York City, and was active in Westchester County, N.Y., affairs. Collection consists of correspondence, journals, military records, legal papers, accounts, writings, photographs, and printed matter. Materials include correspondence of Colonel Crane and his wife with their children, relatives and friends; Civil War records of Alexander Crane; and miscellaneous legal papers, accounts and writings. Also correspondence, 1877-1933, of Elizabeth Crane and drafts of her literary works; correspondence, 1819-1852, of the Mitchell and Green families; correspondence, 1847-1884, 1889, of Caroline Crane Marsh and her husband, George P. Marsh, scholar and United States Minister to Italy; photographs and news clippings pertaining to the Crane family; and diaries, 1861-1864, and 1878-1879, of Caroline Marsh and others.
Names
Crane family (Creator)
Crane, Alexander Baxter, 1833-1930 (Creator)
Crane, Alexander Mitchell, 1871-1936? (Contributor)
Crane, Elizabeth Green (Contributor)
Crane, Helen Cornelia (Contributor)
Crane, Laura Mitchell, 1833-ca. 1920 (Contributor)
Crane, Laura Vernon, 1873-ca. 1960 (Contributor)
Marsh, Aurelia Blair (Contributor)
Marsh, Caroline Crane (Correspondent)
Marsh, George P. (George Perkins), 1801-1882 (Correspondent)
Dates / Origin
Date Created: 1819 - 1944
Library locations
Manuscripts and Archives Division
Shelf locator: MssCol 687
Topics
Diplomatic and consular service, American -- Italy
Social service -- New York (State) -- New York
New York (N.Y.) -- Social conditions
New York (State) -- Commerce
United States -- Personal narratives -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865
Crane family
Green family
Mitchell family
Genres
Diaries
Photographs
Personal narratives
Correspondence
Records (Documents)
Notes
Biographical/historical: Alexander Baxter Crane, Union colonel, New York lawyer, and active citizen of Scarsdale, New York, was born in 1833 in Berkley, Massachusetts. He was the son of Abial Briggs and Emma Porter Crane and a descendent of Henry Crane, who settled in Dorchester, Massachusetts, in 1640. Alexander graduated from Amherst College in 1854 and subsequently relocated to Terre Haute, Indiana, where he read law, was admitted to the bar, and served a term as district attorney. In 1862, he and Colonel John Baird organized the 85th Indiana Volunteers, which fought for the Union in the Civil War. Alexander had a distinguished army career, leading the regiment in the Atlanta Campaign and Sherman's March to the Sea. As a judge advocate on a special military commission in Kentucky, he called negroes to testify against whites, drawing challenges from local individuals. He argued successfully for negro testimony, applying principles of international law. After the war, Alexander married Laura Cornelia Mitchell in New York City. Laura Cornelia was the daughter of John W. Mitchell, originally of Charleston, South Carolina, and Caroline Green Mitchell of New York. Caroline Green Mitchell was the daughter of Timothy R. Green, who was a cousin of Mary Martin Crane, wife of Alexander's uncle Silas Axtel Crane. Alexander's aunt Caroline Crane Marsh had taught in a school run by John Mitchell's sister-in-law, Martha L. Mitchell. Alexander entered law practice in New York with his father-in-law and brother-in-law Clarence G. Mitchell, forming the firm of Mitchells & A. B. Crane in 1865, the year of his marriage. This firm continued until 1879, when Crane formed a partnership with Stephen Lockwood, Crane & Lockwood, which lasted until 1915. In both practices, Alexander represented large estates and prominent corporations and individuals, including the railroad baron John I. Blair. Exceptions in his clientele were the near-indigent and publicly despised Reverend Robert Holden and Francis Edward Eldredge, whom he defended against a libel suit filed by Mrs. Dennis McMahon in 1873. Alexander and Laura Cornelia had six children - Elizabeth Green, Caroline Emma, Helen Cornelia, Aurelia Blair, Alexander Mitchell, and Laura Vernon. In 1873, the family moved to its estate, Holmhurst, in Scarsdale, New York. With the move, Alexander became one of the first suburban commuters, traveling by railroad to his office in New York. He was active in Westchester County affairs as one of the governors of the White Plains hospital and a leader in the movement to prevent White Plains from using the Bronx River for sewage disposal. Laura Vernon, a relation of Alexander's for whom his youngest daughter was named, came to live with the family in Scarsdale, serving, in effect, as governess to the children. In 1881, the Crane girls moved with her to Italy, where Alexander's aunt Caroline Crane Marsh, an author, had lived for years with her husband, George Perkins Marsh, a linguist and U. S. minister to Italy. Among Alexander's other relations abroad was Edward A. Crane, a doctor who had worked for the U. S. Sanitary Commission during the Civil War and edited the American Register in Paris. Alexander had desired that his daughters be acquainted firsthand with European culture, and so they studied in Florence in German schools. Two of than were inspired to take up careers in the arts. Elizabeth became a dramatist and poet, and Helen became a pianist and composer, performing in New York, Germany, and Austria. Alexander and Laura Cornelia visited their children and the Marshes in Italy in 1882. The family vacationed together in Geneva in 1890 and traveled to see Egypt and Palestine in 1897. Alexander spent the last years of his life in Scarsdale, surrounded by his children and the family of his daughter Laura, who had married Thomas F. Burgess. He died in 1930 at the age of 96.
Content: The Crane Family Papers span the years 1819 to 1944, with the bulk falling between 1860 and 1900. They begin with the correspondence of the Mitchell and Green families, from which Laura Cornelia Mitchell Crane descended, and end with that of her daughters. Although the collection is chiefly correspondence, it also includes journals, military records, legal papers, accounts, writings, photographs, and printed matter. The papers are divided into 19 series, the largest of which is the correspondence of Alexander Baxter (A. B.) Crane and his wife. His letters from the years 1860 to 1865 offer a view of his Civil War expedience. Letters to Alexander from his brother Samuel detail the latter's service in the Southwest. These and other incoming and outgoing letters are interfiled in the series chronologically. A separate series is A. B. Crane - Civil War Records, which are his official Union army records. Alexander's later correspondence sheds light on his relationship with his children, with his expatriate cousin Edward A. Crane, and with his family in Berkley, which he in part supported. There is little correspondence that illuminates his legal career, except for a collection of crank mail from Mrs. Dennis (Lucy) McMahon, harassing Alexander for his defense of Holden and Eldredge. Family Accounts reveal the considerable wealth of the Crane family, over $1 million in the 1870s, The legal papers for John W. Mitchell, Elizabeth H. Green, and Peter Van Schaick reveal the wealth of the extended Crane family, including substantial real estate holdings in lower Manhattan. Family photographs range from Civil War cartes-de-visite of Alexander in uniform to photographs of him in his later years with his grandchildren, photographs of his children, of the Berkley Homestead, of Holmhurst, and of the Marshes' Villa Farini in Florence. Most of the Crane daughters' letters received, arranged chronologically, are of a routine nature. Clippings for Elizabeth and Helen detail the critical reception of their creative work, generally unfavorable for the former, more enthusiastic for the latter. The few letters received by Mary E. Crane, a member of the extended family, are from a Sing Sing prisoner whom she served as a spiritual sponsor. Theron Damon's lively correspondence details life in the expatriate community of Rumelihisari, a suburb of Istanbul, in the 1920s. It is not clear how Damon is related to the Cranes, although one letter mentions a visit from Clarence B. Mitchell, a Miss Mitchell, and a Miss Ruggles. George P. and Caroline Marsh's correspondence - interfiled and arranged chronologically - Mrs. Marsh's journal, and Miss Mitchell's (Laura Cornelia's?) travel journal likewise provide a view of upper-class Americans abroad. Perhaps most interesting in the Crane Family Papers is Miss R's journal, which details a Christian missionary's visits to the homes of the poor in lower Manhattan. These volumes give a vivid picture of the ethnic, racial, and religious diversity of the area and record Miss R's evangelical success in statistics for "hopeful conversions," "backsliders reclaimed," and "young women rescued from vice". It is not clear how Miss R is related to the Cranes. It is believed she is the Miss "Robertson of Renwick Street", whose name and address are penciled in the first volume. Elizabeth Green's name is also penciled in on another page of the same volume. The two may have been friends engaged in the same social work. Prominent correspondents include: Ames, Winthrop.Bacon, Henry.Blair, John Insley.Booth, Newton.Boutwell, George S.Brown, Francis.Brown, Samuel Gilman.Bryant, William Cullen.Beresford, Charles W.Childs, George W.De Peyster, John Watts.Drake, Charles D.Edmunds, George F.Edmunds, Susan (Mrs. George F.).Emerson, Ralph W.Eyre, Laurence.Fiske, Harrison Grey.Goodwin, W. W.Greenslet, Ferris.Green, Andrew H.Hallock, Charles.Hosmer, Harriet G.Kelly, Edmond.Langdon, William C.Lathrop, George Parsons.Marsh, George Perkins.Minghetti, Marco.Montez, Lola.Muller, Mrs. Max (Georgina).Park, Edwards A.Peabody, George Foster.Ross, Janet Anne.Schurz, Carl.Schuyler, Louisa Lee.Sickles, Daniel.Tarkington, Elizabeth Booth.Tarkington, John S.Tarkington, Newton Booth.Taylor, Bayard.Upton, Emory.Washington, Booker T.
Acquisition: Received from Mrs. Thomas F. Burgess, 1956-1958
Physical Description
Extent: 8.7 linear feet (19 boxes, 6 v.)
Type of Resource
Text
Still image
Identifiers
NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b12354886
MSS Unit ID: 687
RLIN/OCLC: NYPW89-A403
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): 76034030-0042-0139-ae77-0242ac110002
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