Difference between revisions of "Julia Burnell (Bernie) Smade Babcock"

From FranaWiki
(New page: '''Julia Burnell (Bernie) Smade Babcock''' (1868-1962) was a writer and founder of the Arkansas Museum of Natural History and Antiquities in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was the author o...)
 
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Julia Burnell (Bernie) Smade Babcock''' (1868-1962) was a writer and founder of the [[Arkansas Museum of Natural History and Antiquities]] in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was the author of ''The Daughter of the Republican'' (1900), ''The Martyr'' (1900), ''Justice to the Women'' (1901), ''A Political Fool'' (1902), and ''By Way of the Master Passion''.
 
'''Julia Burnell (Bernie) Smade Babcock''' (1868-1962) was a writer and founder of the [[Arkansas Museum of Natural History and Antiquities]] in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was the author of ''The Daughter of the Republican'' (1900), ''The Martyr'' (1900), ''Justice to the Women'' (1901), ''A Political Fool'' (1902), and ''By Way of the Master Passion''.
  
In 1927 she opened the Museum of Natural History on Main Street in Little Rock. One of the earliest displays centered on King Crowley, an inauthentic pre-Columbian artifact. The museum moved to the third floor of [[City Hall]] later that same year. Henry Fairfield Osborn of the Natural History Museum in New York augmented the collection in 1928 with crates full of stuffed animals. The museum was closed during the depths of the Great Depression, reopening in 1941 in the [[Arsenal Building]] in what would eventually be called [[MacArthur Park]].
+
In 1927 she opened the Museum of Natural History on Main Street in Little Rock. One of the earliest displays centered on King Crowley, an inauthentic pre-Columbian artifact. The museum moved to the third floor of [[City Hall]] later that same year. Henry Fairfield Osborn of the Natural History Museum in New York augmented the collection in 1928 with crates full of stuffed animals. The museum was closed during the depths of the Great Depression, reopening in 1941 in the [[Tower Building (arsenal)|Tower Building]] of what would eventually be called [[MacArthur Park]].
  
 
Smade was born in Union, Ohio, and raised in Russellville, Arkansas. She attended college for one year at [[Little Rock College]] before marrying William Franklin Babcock in 1886.
 
Smade was born in Union, Ohio, and raised in Russellville, Arkansas. She attended college for one year at [[Little Rock College]] before marrying William Franklin Babcock in 1886.
Line 10: Line 10:
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
 +
*[http://ualr.edu/archives/uploads/2010/04/UALR.0092%20Babcock.%20Bernie%20Collection.pdf UALR - Bernie Babcock Collections]
  
 
[[Category:1868 births]]
 
[[Category:1868 births]]
 
[[Category:1962 deaths]]
 
[[Category:1962 deaths]]

Latest revision as of 17:43, 22 May 2011

Julia Burnell (Bernie) Smade Babcock (1868-1962) was a writer and founder of the Arkansas Museum of Natural History and Antiquities in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was the author of The Daughter of the Republican (1900), The Martyr (1900), Justice to the Women (1901), A Political Fool (1902), and By Way of the Master Passion.

In 1927 she opened the Museum of Natural History on Main Street in Little Rock. One of the earliest displays centered on King Crowley, an inauthentic pre-Columbian artifact. The museum moved to the third floor of City Hall later that same year. Henry Fairfield Osborn of the Natural History Museum in New York augmented the collection in 1928 with crates full of stuffed animals. The museum was closed during the depths of the Great Depression, reopening in 1941 in the Tower Building of what would eventually be called MacArthur Park.

Smade was born in Union, Ohio, and raised in Russellville, Arkansas. She attended college for one year at Little Rock College before marrying William Franklin Babcock in 1886.

References

  • Marcia Camp, "The Soul of Bernie Babcock," Pulaski County Historical Review 36 (Fall 1988): 50-62.

External links