SIXTY-SECOND ANNUAL REPORT
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PHILADELPHIA
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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
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Louis XVI Room at 901 Fifth Avenue with its contents
Bequest of Mrs. Alexander Hamilton Rice
SIXTY-SECOND ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
FOR THE YEAR ENDED MAY 51, 1938
with the LIST OF MEMBERS
PHILADELPHIA • 1938
On April 7, 1938, in the Court of Common Pleas No. 3,
the name of the Pennsylvania Museum of Art was
changed to PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART.
OFFICERS FOR 19581959
PRESIDENT
J. STOGDELL STOKES
VICE-PRESIDENTS
JOHN STORY JENKS
GEORGE D. WIDENER
SECRETARY AND TREASURER
JULIUS ZIEGET
ASSISTANT SECRETARY AND
ASSISTANT TREASURER
WILLARD P. GRAHAM
CUSTODIAN
GIRARD TRUST COMPANY
HOARD OF TRUSTEES
EX OFFICIIS
George H. Earle, 3rd, Governor of Pennsylvania
S. Davis Wilson, Mayor of Philadelphia
George Connell, President of Philadelphia City Council
Emory McMichael, President of Fairmount Park
Commission
ELECTED BY THE MEMBERS
William M. Elkins
Chairman of the Board
Paul P. Cret Staunton B. Peck
Charles D. Hart Lessing J. Rosenwald
R. Sturgis Ingersoll Mrs. Wharton Sinkler
Walter C. Janney J. Stogdell Stokes
John Story Jenks Roland L. Taylor
John A. McCarthy George D. Widener
Mrs. John D. McIlhenny Morris Wolf
Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson Charlton Yarnall
STANDING COMMITTEES*
COMMITTEE ON MUSEUM
John Story Jenks
Chairman
Mokris R. Bockius
Joseph Carson
Mrs. Henry Brinton Coxe
Mrs. John T. Dorrance
Henry F. du Pont
Rodman E. Griscom
R. Sturgis Ingersoll
Mrs. Robert McLean
Mrs. William R. Mercer
Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson
Lawrence Saunders
J. Stogdell Stokes
Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury
Carroll S. Tyson
George D. Widener
Mrs. George D. Widener
COMMITTEE ON INSTRUCTION
J. Stogdell Stokes
Chairman
Charles T. Coiner
Mrs. Henry Brinton Coxe
Nicola D'Ascenzo
W. Griffin Gribbel
Stanley H. Hart
Theodore B. Hayward
John Story Jenks
Mrs. Robert R. Logan
Oscar E. Mertz
Mrs. H. S. Prentiss Nichols
Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson
Mrs. Logan Rhoads
Mrs. S. Emlen Stokes
COMMITTEE ON FINANCE
Walter C. Janney
Chairman
Willl^m Fulton Kurtz
Staunton B. Peck
Roland L. Taylor
Morris Wolf
*The President is ex officio a member of all committees.
ASSOCIATE COMMITTEE OF WOMEN
honorary president
Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson
president
Mrs. Edgar W. Baird
VICE-PRESIDENTS
Mrs. H. S. Prentiss Nichols
Miss Margaretta S. Hinchman
Mrs. Henry Brinton Coxe
Mrs. Eli Kirk Price
corresponding secretary
Mrs. Littleton W. T. Waller
treasurer
Mrs. Benjamin Rush, Jr.
recording secretary
Mrs. George S. G. Cavendish
MEMBERS
Mrs.
Lewis Audenried
Mrs.
Mrs
. Henry A. Berwind, Jr.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Nicholas Biddle
Mrs.
Mrs.
William A. Dick
Mrs.
Mrs.
John T. Dorrance
Mrs.
Mrs.
Russell Duane
Mrs.
Mrs.
Ralph Earle
Mrs.
Mrs.
George H. Frazier
Mrs.
Mrs.
Henry C. Gibson
Mrs.
Mrs.
F. Woodson Hancock
Mrs.
Mrs.
Thomas Hart
Mrs.
Mrs.
J. Bertram Hervey
Mrs.
Mrs.
C. Jared Ingersoll
Mrs.
Mrs.
Henry S. Jeanes
Mrs.
Mrs.
John Story Jenks
Mrs.
Mrs.
Robert R. Logan
Mrs.
W. Logan MacCoy
Sydney E. Martin
John D. McIlhenny
Richard Waln Meirs
Thornton Oakley
Alfred Coxe Prime
Logan Rhoads
George A. Robbins
C. Shillard-Smith
Joseph Kennard Skilling
W. Standley Stokes
William P. Wear
John H. Whelen, Jr.
P. A. B. Widener, 2nd
John Wintersteen
C. Stewart Wurts
HONORARY MEMBERS
Mrs. Edward Browning Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury
Mrs. Percival Roberts, Jr.
THE MUSEUM STAFF 1938 1939
DIRECTOR
FISKE KIMBALL
Chief of the Division of American Art
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
HENRI MARCEAU
Chief of the Division of European Art
HORACE H. F. JAYNE
Chief of the Division of Eastern Art
CURATORIAL STAFF
Henri Marceau, Curator of Painting and Sculpture
Boies Penrose, Curator of Prints
Horace H. F. Jatne, Curator of Chinese Art
W. Norman Brown, Curator of Indian Art
Henry Clifford, Associate Curator of Paintings
Henry P. McIlhenny, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts
Carl Schuster, Assistant Curator of Chinese Art
Elizabeth Abel, Assistant, Installation
Jennett Walker, Assistant, Prints
Marianna Merritt Hornor, Assistant, Textiles
ADVISERS
Marcel Aubert, Gothic Art E. Alfred Jones, Silver
Walter W. S. Cook, Spanish Art Richard Offner, Italian Art
Ananda Coomaraswamy, Indian Art Arthur Upham Pope, Persian Art
Nicola DAscenzo, Stained Glass David Rosen, Technical Studies
Marian Hague, Laces Mikhail Rostovtzeff, Ancient Art
Thomas T. Hoopes, Arms and Armour Samuel Yellin, Metalwork
EDUCATIONAL STAFF
E. M. Benson, Educational Supervisor
Alberta Devlin, Information and Sales
Delegated by the Board of Education:
Caroline K. Jones, Art Supervisor
Helen F. Kinset, Art Supervisor
Eleanor L. McGonigal, Art Supervisor
Delegated by the Works Progress Administration:
Helena Fitzpatrick, Project Head
Eliza M. Hayward, Assistant Project Head
Grace Morris, Assistant Project Head
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Elizabeth B. Kunkel, Secretary to the Director
Lilian B. Briggs, Bursar
Charles Whitenack, Photographer
REGISTRAR'S OFFICE
Jane Wolfe, Registrar
Gertrude Toomet, Assistant Registrar
LIBRARY
Paul Vanderbilt, Librarian, Editor
Paul Gay, Assistant
buildings
George C. A. Barbour, Superintendent
Lewis List, Assistant Superintendent, Captain of the Watch
THE SCHOOL STAFF
Edward Warwick, Principal
Edward W. France, Director, Textile School
Willard P. Graham, Registrar
Eugenie M. Fryer, Librarian
FACULTY
ART SCHOOL
Raymond Ballinger
Advertising Design
John F. Barrett
Woodwork and Joinery
Morris Berd
Lettering
Morris Blackburn
Interior Decoration
Carl Bretz
Interior Decoration
Alexey Brodovitch
Lectures: Evolution in
Industrial Arts
Arthur E. Bye
Lectures: History of Painting
J. Frank Copeland
Water Color
Maxwell Coplan
Photography
Edmund de Forrest Curtis
Pottery
John J. Dull
Water Color
Frank Ferg
Wood Carving
Paul Frolich
Painting
John Geiszel
Illustration : Reproduction
Douglas Gilchrist
Metal Work and Jewelry
Mabel B. Hall
Advanced Drawing
Anatomy Drawing
Life Drawing
Earl Horteh
Rendering
Cynthia Iliff
Color and Design
Harold MacNamee
Fashion Illustration
0. Ernest Mertz, Jr.
Perspective
Oscar Mertz
Supervisor: Interior Decoration
Ralph McLellan
Life Drawing
ART SCHOOL (Continued)
J. Kirk Merrick
Nature Drawing
Grace Norcross
Assistant: Advanced Drawing
Anatomy Drawing
Thornton Oaklet
Lectures: Composition
Hilda H. Orth
Director: Costume Design
Dressmaking
Dorothy Parke
Assistant : Costume Design
Dressmaking
Evelyn Pennegar
Supervisor: Teacher Training
Lectures: History of Art
Henry C. Pitz
Supervisor: Illustration and
Decoration
Herbert Pullinger
Pen and Ink Drawing
Graphics
Fred deP. Rothermel
Assistant: Advanced Drawing
Instrumental Drawing
Robert Rtjshton
Fashion Illustration
Life Drawing
Gertrude Schell
Painting
Drawing
Edward Shenton
Illustration and Decoration
Clyde Shtjler
Stage-Craft and Marionettes
Benton Spruance
Interior Decoration
Lithography
Mary B. Sweeny
Drawing
Edward A. Walton
Furniture Design
Perspective
Edward Warwick
Lectures: History of Costume
History of Furniture
AURELIUS RENZETTI
Modeling
i
Althea Lilian Rickert
Supervisor: Costume Design
Dressmaking
Elise Logan Rhoads
Lectures: Subjects of
Interior Decoration
Franklin C. Watkins
Supervisor: Painting
Helen Stevenson West
Stage Costume
Alexander Wyckoff
Advanced Design
Julius Zieget
Instrumental Drawing
PHILADELPHIA TEXTILE SCHOOL
Edward W. France
Director, Lecturer on Raw Ma-
terials, Processes and Fabrics
Bradley C. Algeo
Assistant Director in Charge of
Weave Formation, Analysis and
Structure of Fabrics
Richard S. Cox
Assistant Director in Charge of
Jacquard Design, Drawing and
Colour Work
Elmer C. Bertolet
In Charge of Chemistry, Dyeing
and Printing
A. Ward France
Instructor in Charge of Wool
Carding and Spinning, Worsted
Drawing and Spinning, Knitted
Coating Materials
William Pfeiffer
Instructor in Charge of Power
Weaving and Related Branches
John Naab
Instructor in Charge of Cotton
Carding and Spinning, Silk Manu-
facturing and Hosiery Knitting
Wm. A. McLain
Instructor in Charge of Elemen-
tary Weaving and Related
Branches
Frank L. Giese
Instructor in Weave Formation,
Analysis and Structure of Fabrics
Ercal Kaiser
Instructor in Jacquard Design
and Colour Work
Howard A. Walter
Assistant in Charge of Chemistry
and Dyeing
Percival Theel
Instructor in Chemistry
George G. Byler
Instructor in Chemistry
Joseph E. Goodavage
Instructor in Dyeing, Bleaching
and Printing
Ralph Dunkelberger
Instructor in Free-Hand Drawing
and Figured Design
Wm. B. Williamson
Instructor in Charge of Fabric
Finishing
Arthur T. Cameron, C.P.A.
Lecturer on Cost Systems and
Accounting in Textile Mills
Herman E. Michl
Lecturer on Problems in Textile
Economics
Fulton M. Farrell
Instructor in Materials Used in
the Wool and Worsted Industry
Alan G. Marquart
Assistant in Wool Carding and
Spinning, Worsted Drawing and
Spinning
Robert S. Cunningham
Instructor in Elementary Weav-
ing and Related Branches, Cotton
Carding, Spinning and Twisting
Ervin Wilmer
Assistant in Power Weaving and
Related Branches
10
REPORT OF THE ROARD OF TRUSTEES
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
Ladies and Gentlemen: —
This year was celebrated the tenth anniversary of the formal dedication
of our new building, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, on May 29, 1928.
It is interesting to review the advance of these ten years, years which wit-
nessed economic hardships of unprecedented extent.
They have seen our endowment tripled, from three-quarters of a million
dollars to two and a quarter. They have seen our accommodations quad-
rupled, from twenty rooms and galleries to over eighty, including twenty-
three of antique architecture of various periods. They have seen an increase
in our collections by purchases to the extent of two and a half million dol-
lars, from funds given by private donors, transforming the Museum from
one of provincial scope to one of national and international importance,
covering a wide range in the history of art. During these ten years nearly
seven million visitors came to enjoy our collections and to learn from them.
These advances have not been achieved without struggle, nor without
personal sacrifice on the part of all who have worked or given to make them
possible. Today the community recognizes the Museum as a civic asset of
the first magnitude. We must rely on the generosity of public bodies as
well as of private individuals for more ample support, proportionate with
the wealth of our collections. The field of opportunity is great for develop-
ment of popular education and enjoyment at the Museum as well as of
professional education for the practice of the arts in our Schools.
The organization of a group of Friends of the Museum, undertaken last
year, has been of the greatest assistance in carrying on our work without
curtailment. A still wider participation would enable us to go forward and
carry out many cherished plans for the benefit of our citizens.
S\y/ ^_J President.
11
Degas: Ballet Class
Purchased. Wilstach Fund Income
REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR OF THE MUSEUM
TO THE PRESIDENT AND TRUSTEES OF THE PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
I have the honour to present the following report:
The past year has been equally notable for great bequests, for the purchase
of important works, and for progress in construction.
REQUESTS
FRENCH ART: REQUEST OF MRS. A. HAMILTON RICE
Among collectors of French decorative art none in our generation was
more notable than the late Mrs. Alexander Hamilton Rice. In the drawing
room of her New York house at 901 Fifth Avenue were assembled the
choicest of her treasures in tapestries, sculpture, furniture, rugs, and
Sevres porcelain of the eighteenth century. It has been celebrated as an
ensemble unmatched for the taste of selection and combination, in addition
to the superb quality of the individual works of all classes. This drawing
room, with its entire contents, Mrs. Rice bequeathed to our Museum
Corporation, already enriched by many magnificent benefactions of her
family, as well as by her own previous gift of the Louis XVI Room from
the Hotel Letellier in Paris. We are informed that we may expect to
receive the room and collection in the course of 1938, bringing our installa-
tion in this field into the very first rank.
REQUESTS OF OTHER COLLECTIONS
The late George Horace Lorimer, long a trustee of the Museum, formed a
collection distinguished in many fields, especially in those of glass (both
English and American), of furniture, and of Pennsylvania-German art.
His will bequeathed many of these objects to the Museum, subject, how-
ever, to the discretion of his executors and trustees, to be exercised by
October of 1938. We hope for a generous exercise of this discretion.
The late Arthur H. Lea, who inherited a considerable part of the extensive
collection of paintings formed by his grandfather, Isaac Lea, between
1829 and 1852, bequeathed these paintings and some other objects to the
City of Philadelphia to be placed in the Museum.
13
BEQUESTS OF FUNDS
Mr. Lea also bequeathed 150,000 to the City, the income to be used for
the general purposes of the Museum. Other bequests of funds received
included $2,000 from Miss Mary A. Combs; in addition we had notice of
bequests of $10,000 from Mrs. Edgar V. Seeler and of $5,000 from Miss
Susan S. Miles.
ACCESSIONS
PAINTINGS BY CEZANNE AND DEGAS
By purchase of the Commissioners of Fairmount Park from the trust
income of the Wilstach Fund, Cezanne's Grandes Baigneuses from the
Pellerin Collection was added to the Wilstach Collection. There thus
entered the Museum a work of importance in the history of modern
art. The painting was included in the Cezanne Exhibition organized under
the auspices of the Louvre and given at the Musee de 1'Orangerie in
1936 and was characterized in the catalogue of this exhibition as "the
most important composition of Cezanne." Likewise purchased for the
Wilstach Collection was the Ballet Class of Degas, a work of the first
quality. The painting was selected by Mary Cassatt for the collection of
her brother Alexander J. Cassatt, in whose family it had descended.
Among other accessions we may signalize especially:
AMEBICAN PAINTINGS
Benjamin West: "Death on the Pale Horse," c. 1787 — the sketch for
West's Salon picture of 1801, owned by the Museum — purchased from the
Mcllhenny Fund income; John McClure Hamilton: Portrait of Mrs.
Hamilton, given by George Earle Raiguel.
SCULPTUBE
A stone group "Seals" by Anna Hyatt Huntington, presented on behalf
of the artist.
ARCHITECTUBE
A carved oak door, School of the Ue-de-France, 1516, from the Foulc
Collection, given by Mrs. Herbert Cameron Morris.
14
Wood Block Prints, Japanese, 1740
Purchased. George W. B. Taylor Fund
FURNITURE
A Philadelphia Queen Anne side chair bequeathed by Miss Adeline Worrell
Fisher. Various Pennsylvania-German objects given by J. Stogdell Stokes.
METAL WORK
A pair of bronze candelabra, Venetian, XVI century, from the Foulc
Collection, purchased from the Mcllhenny Fund income.
Brass bowl, oriental work, XVI century and brass bowl inlaid with silver,
Venice, XVI century, from the Foulc Collection, purchased from the
Temple Fund income. Three pieces of English silver, late XVIII and early
XIX centuries, given by Miss Lena Cadwalader Evans. Silver tea service
by Philadelphia makers, late XVIII century, given by Miss Emily R.
Ashbridge.
CERAMICS
Sevres porcelain, 1772 to 1793, given by Mrs. Frederick W. W. Graham;
and of Louis Philippe period, made for the chateau of Fontainebleau,
bequeathed by Susan M. Watson; English "Delft" vase, Lambeth factory,
XVIII century, purchased from the Elizabeth Wandell Smith Fund income.
EASTERN ART
A group of Japanese ceramics of exceptional quality; a hand scroll of
famous places in China, Ming dynasty, printed from wood blocks, and a
dated first edition of the "Manufacture of Cotton" executed by order of
the Emperor Ch'ien Lung; three volumes of Japanese colour prints, dated
1740; a Chinese cloisonne vase, Ming dynasty, all purchased from the
John T. Morris Fund income. A garniture of ritual objects of cloisonne
enamel on gold filigree, K'ang Hsi period (1662-1722), given by Mrs.
Charles M. Lea.
LOANS
Among the more notable groups of objects lent to the Museum were: the
Gangnat Collection, primarily of the works of Renoir; eleven Chinese
paintings lent by Walter C. Janney; a collection of Chinese porcelains
lent by J. Mitchell Elliot; and several pieces of English and American
silver lent by Mrs. Thomas Evans.
15
CONSTRUCTION
Interior construction by the Works Progress Administration proceeded
with the aid of an additional federal grant of $231,000. Among the units
completed were the Spanish Renaissance Room mentioned later, the West
Foyer with seven galleries surrounding it, and the Chinese palace hall of
the Ming period, given by the late Edward B. Robinette.
Other units which should be completed in the coming year are a portion of
the oriental section, the galleries for transient exhibitions, the print gal-
leries, the administrative offices, and the library.
INSTALLATIONS AND EXHIBITIONS
The Spanish Renaissance Room given by Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson
was installed with fine works of the period and opened with ceremony _on
December 2.
The new galleries on Floor A served to receive various study collections
pending completion of the galleries on the first floor.
Particularly noteworthy has been the installation of the French galleries,
where, with new accessions and with the loan of important collections, the
level of quality has been kept extraordinarily high.
The transient exhibitions of the year, again including some very notable,
were as follows:
May 15 — September 20
CHINESE AET EST PHILADELPHIA COLLECTIONS
May 28— August 9
SIGNERS OF THE CONSTITUTION
September 12 — October 31
PORTRAITS AND RELICS OF COMMODORE JOHN BARRY
The Barry-Hayes Collection.
October 2— October 31
PANORAMAS
French scenic wall papers. The Carlhian Collection.
October 16— November 28
PROBLEMS OF PORTRAITURE
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November 6 — December 12
DAUMIER
December 18 — January 16
SHIP PICTURES
The Laurence John Brengle Collection.
January 22 — February 27
BENJAMIN WEST BICENTENARY
March 5 — April 10
FEDERAL ART PROJECT OF PENNSYLVANIA
April 16-^Tune 19
RENOIR: LATER PHASES
Substantial sums to finance these exhibitions were generously given by
Mrs. John A. Brown and Mrs. John D. Mcllhenny.
The exhibition Problems of Portraiture was a feature of our demonstration
of possibilities of aesthetic interpretation, financed by the Carnegie Cor-
poration and conducted by Mr. Benson. It offered confrontations of
related or contrasting interpretations of the portrait from its beginnings
in Mesopotamia and Egypt to its current manifestations in photography
and the film. An illustrative brochure was published by The American
Federation of Arts. The exhibition was shown also with great success by
the Phillips Memorial Gallery in Washington.
In the Daumier exhibition, organized by Mr. Mcllhenny, the works
assembled were of the first importance for merit, rarity and authenticity.
A large number of the paintings were shown for the first time in America,
the Louvre lending its Blanchisseuxe and La sowpe. The scientific catalogue
was given additional permanent value through an interpretation by Claude
Roger-Marx, and technical analyses by Messrs. Marceau and Rosen.
For the Benjamin West exhibition Mr. Marceau assembled substantially
the whole body of his work in America. The catalogue represented the
first scientific study of the artist to be undertaken in a century and rectified
many misstatements long current, beside placing in clear relief the extra-
ordinary influence which West exercised.
Beginning in February, we successively gave special prominence to a
selected work under the title of the "Treasure of the Week," which was
also illustrated weekly in the Evening Bulletin. With interpretative labels
17
and photographs these showings ministered effectively to the enjoyment
and enlightenment of visitors.
The Museum also participated in exhibitions elsewhere through numerous
loans of works of art to other institutions in America and abroad.
EVENTS
Several events held specially for members of the Museum emphasized the
privileges of membership. The annual reception for members this year
was on the occasion of the private view of the Daumier exhibition, Novem-
ber 5. On March 4 a reception and private view of the Benjamin West
exhibition was offered by the generosity of the Associate Committee of
Women.
Through the courtesy of their owners two notable Philadelphia private
collections were opened to members of the Museum on particular days —
the Joseph E. Widener Collection in November and the John D. Mcllhenny
Collection in May, each with a large and appreciative attendance.
On several other occasions the Museum was used for important civic
functions, notably in connection with the celebration of the 150th anniver-
sary of the signing of the Constitution. On May 12, during the 25th an-
niversary of the founding of The Garden Club of America, a great dinner
was served in the Museum with notable musical performances. For this
occasion members and friends of the Garden Club undertook the adorn-
ment of the Cloister, Chapel, and antique rooms of the Museum with
historical flower arrangements of a beauty which will long be memorable.
The Association of Art Museum Directors and the American Association
of Museums held their meetings this year in Philadelphia, with suitable
hospitality on the part of the Museum and its friends.
EDUCATIONAL WORK
In pursuance of our demonstration in aesthetic interpretation, financed
by the Carnegie Corporation, the possibilities of several means were ex-
plored : visual comparison in exhibitions (as already described) ; the written
word; oral interpretation.
The use of this last means was greatly facilitated by the renewal of our
large WPA educational project, including this time, a number of qualified
"exhibits lecturers," who gave daily gallery talks on different aspects of
18
the collections. Training of the entire personnel continued throughout the
year. Such a trained force of "Museum guides," while more expensive,
has obvious advantages over one of attendants whose duty is merely to
guard the objects, and we must hope for its continuance.
The series of endowed lectures was devoted this year to "Vital Issues in
American Art," the speakers being Lewis Mumford, Lin Yutang, Herbert
J. Spinden, Mary R. Beard, and Rhys Carpenter.
CATALOGING
Under the efficient direction of Miss Wolfe great progress has been made
on the immense task of cataloging objects received prior to 1917, with an
organization of over forty specialized workers supplied by the Works
Progress Administration. With the advice of Mr. Vanderbilt a system of
microphotography for record has been devised which has attracted much
attention in other institutions.
Miss Wolfe also had the assistance of several effective volunteer workers:
the Misses Elinor Stewart Carson, Joan Hopkinson, and Elizabeth M.
Rivinus.
RESEARCH AND PURIFICATION
The catalogues published by the Museum in connection with the Daumier
and West exhibitions represented important contributions to knowledge,
as did papers by Mr. Marceau and Mr. Rosen appearing in Technical
Studies, and by Mr. Schuster in the learned journals devoted to oriental art.
PERSONNEL
David Rosen, who has collaborated with Mr. Marceau in several publica-
tions, was appointed Adviser in Technical Studies. Robert A. Franks, Jr.,
generously undertook during the year the study and care of the Museum's
collection of watches.
FINANCIAL
INCOME
Our City appropriation, in spite of great efforts, has remained at $60,000,
the same level as in 1937 — only about 35% of that in 1931. It is quite
insufficient by itself to insure even the minimum requirements of protec-
tion of the works of art belonging to the City and the ordinary maintenance
of the building erected at municipal expense, to say nothing of making
them largely available for the service of the public.
19
To continue our most essential services we have fortunately had help from
many quarters. The Commissioners of Fairmount Park appropriated
$3,000 from the income of the Wilstach Fund to keep the galleries of the
Wilstach Collection open to the public. As proposed by our President last
year there was organized a group of Friends of the Museum, listed else-
where, who contribute substantial sums for operation. The total of such
contributions this year, including those to support our exhibitions, was
$43,725, without which it would have been quite impossible for our work
to continue. Only a large increase of endowment by unrestricted bequests
would relieve us of the heavy task of raising such sums by subscription
annually.
Gifts of money for special purposes included: for flagpoles, flags, and
floodlighting the Museum building, as well as for hospitality to the As-
sociation of Museums, from Mr. and Mrs. A. Atwater Kent; for painting
at the Letitia Street house, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paul Busch; for boxwood
on the parterres at Mount Pleasant, from Messrs. Charles Townsend
Ludington, Nicholas S. Ludington, and Wright S. Ludington.
Another source of financial assistance, not available for expenses of ordinary
operation, has enabled us, during the depression, to enlarge our educational
service and to catch up with arrears of bygone years in the matter of
records. During the past fiscal year the sums expended under grants of
the Works Progress Administration have been as follows: for educational
services, $36,097; for recording and photographing objects, $30,164. The
grand total of funds made available for Museum operation from all sources
for the year, including relief funds, was $222,449.
EXPENSE
It is not generally realized that the Philadelphia Museum of Art presents a
most creditable record in economy of operation as compared with other
similar institutions. While we realize that the services offered the public
may differ in extent, we do feel that the economy of operation achieved
here justifies the belief that any additional funds would be fruitfully
employed.
Respectfully submitted,
7^/W^2_,
Director.
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STATISTICAL TABLES
ACCESSIONS 1957- 1938 WORKS OF ART
Classes of Objects Bequests Gifts Purchases
Architecture 2
Arms and Armour 3
Ceramics 4 6
Elizabeth Wandell Smith Fund . . 1
John T. Morris Fund 40
Costumes 9 2
Drawings and Water Colours ... 48
Enamels
John T. Morris Fund 1
Furniture 1 1
Jewelry 4
Lacquer 2
Metal 1
Temple Fund 2
John D. Mcllhenny Fund .... 2
Miniatures 1 1
Miscellaneous 2
Paintings 2
John D. Mcllhenny Fund .... 1
Wilstach Fund 2
Prints 18
George W. B. Taylor Fund ... 3
Sculpture 3
Silver 10
65 55 52
Total
2
3
51
11
48
1
2
4
2
5
2
2
21
3
10
172
BOOHS
Gifts
129
Purchases
70
Total for Year
199
Grand Total
18,354
21
LOANS OF WORKS OF ART
1937 1938
Arms and Armour 1
Ceramics 32
Costumes 15
Coins and Medals 269
Drawings and Water Colours 231
Enamels 1
Furniture 1
Jade 1
Jewelry ... ... 7
Lacquer 1
Manuscripts 11
Miniatures 31
Miscellaneous 2
Mosaics 1
Paintings 274
Photographs 140
Prints and Books of Prints 222
Sculpture 40
Silver 13
Textiles 4
Wall Paper 39
1,336
22
ATTENDANCE
FISCAL YEAR, JUNE t, 1957-MAY 51, 1958
Philadelphia Museum of Art 281,497
Memorial Hall 107,883
Rodin Museum 44,765
Mount Pleasant 2,656
Cedar Grove 2,106
Letitia Street House 2,225
441,132
(FISCAL YEARS, JUNE 1-MAY 51)
Philadelphia Memorial
Museum Hall
1929-30 793,103 294,433 ^
1930-31 439,727 370,781
1931-32 346,074* 189,498*t
1932-33 312,132* 109,948*
1933-34 317,892* 33,082f
1934-35 252,592* 21,246f
1935-36 235,864* 62,178f
1936-37 271,969 108,819
1937-38 281,497 107,883
*Museum closed on certain days of the week.
fMuseum closed entirely for part of year.
Rodin
69th St.
Mount
Cedar
Letitia
Vluseum
Branch
Pleasant
Grove
St. House Total
174,373
2,798
2,265
1,366,972
•82,532
15,686
2,919
2,228
1,113,873
90,975*
212,483
3,152
1,684
27
843,893*
50,051*
66,889 f
2,051
1,519
2,428
545,058*
17,309*
1,444
1,109
1,844
372,680*
13,890*
2,129
1,484
2,113
293,454*
24,025*
2,166
1,540
2,041
327,814*
42,353
2,905
2,104
2,738
430,888
44,765
2,656
2,106
2,225
441,132
25
EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES
June 1, 1957 to May 51, 1958, Incl.
EVENTS AT THE MUSEUM
Adults Events Attendance
Endowed lectures 5 946
Clubs 2 45
Other groups 57 2,041
Total adults 64 3,032
Children
Visits of School classes 334 10,430
Regular courses 80 2,355
Total children 414 12,785
Total in building 478 15,817
24
Cezanne: Grandes Baigneuses
Purchased. Wilstaeh Fund Income
DONORS OF WORKS OF ART
Miss Emily R. Ashbridge
The Misses Atkinson
Albert C. Barnes
Mrs. Margaret Brecht
Mrs. Clarkson Clothier
Mrs. Thomas B. Ellis
Miss Lena Cadwalader Evans
Leonard D. Frescoln
A. E. Gallatin
Paul Gouvert
J. Stogdell
Mrs. Frederick W. W. Graham
Mrs. Archer M. Huntington
Miss ELatharine Kimball
Mrs. Charles M. Lea
Miss Rachel Lowrie
Mrs. Herbert Cameron Morris
Mrs. Charles C. Perkins
William Drown Phelps
Print Club of Philadelphia
George Earle Raiguel
Stokes
REQUESTS OF WORKS OF ART
delivered to the museum during the year
Winifred Bell Emma Waln Hires
Adeline Worrell Fisher Anne Maria Meeteer
Susan M. Watson
25
DONORS OF BOOKS TO THE LIBRARY*
Addison Gallery of American Art,
Andover
American Academy of Arts and
Letters
American Antiquarian Society
American Association for Adult
Education
Jules S. Bache
E. M. Benson
Paul Bergse
Mrs. Grace Hall Blashfield
Mrs. Edward Bok
Mrs. Maurice Brix
Carnegie Corporation of New York
M. A. Downing
Mrs. Michael Ermillio
Mrs. W. B. Force
J. Francez, S. J.
Free Library of Philadelphia
Frick Collection
Garde-Meuble Royal, Stockholm
Hallwyl Museum, Stockholm
Hannover Landesmuseum
President and Fellows of Harvard
University
Martin Heydrich
Miss Margaretta S. Hinchman
Hispanic Society of America
Honolulu Academy of Arts
John S. Jenks
Fiske Kimball
Mrs. William E. Lloyd
J. Arthur MacLean
Malmo Museum, Malmo, Sweden
Henri Marceau
Henry P. McIlhenny
Jaume Miravitlles i Navarra
Frederick John Nettlefold
Mrs. Eli Kirk Price
Charles H. Sawyer
Robert Scholz-Forni
J. Stogdell Stokes
Studio Publishers
U. S. Federal Housing
Administration
Vatican Library, Rome
Georges Wildenstein
Edwin Wolfe, 2nd
C. C. Zantzinger
*The Museum exchanges its publications with many other institutions.
26
LENDERS OF WORKS OF ART
Addison Gallery op American Art
Miss Louise Adolphson
W. G. Russell Allen
American Folk Art Gallery
Art Institute of Chicago
Harry Bakwin
Baltimore Museum of Art
Ahron Ben-Shmuel
Bignou Gallery
Hon. and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Braun
Estate of Laurence John Brengle
John Nicholas Brown
Mrs. Edward Browning
Mrs. Earl Martin Buck
Mrs. Edwin Burk
Carlhian of Paris, Inc.
Carnegie Institute
Cleveland Museum of Art
Columbia University Teachers
College Library
Concord Art Association
Mrs. John E. Cornwell
Lucius A. Crowell, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Dale
Detroit Institute of Arts
Mrs. Joseph Dohan
Downtown Gallery
William Rush Dunton, Jr.
durand-ruel, inc.
Abram T. Eastwick
Willett L. Eccles
J. Mitchell Elliot
H. A. Elsberg
Wharton Esherick
Mrs. David J. Evans
Mrs. Thomas Evans
Walker Evans
Federal Art Project of
Pennsylvania
Dr. and Mrs. Henry Middleton
Fisher
Fogg Art Museum
Franklin Institute
Free Library of Philadelphia
Mrs. John C. Fremont
A. E. Gallatin
Philippe Gangnat
Miss Deborah Norris Glover
Madame Paul Guillaume
Mrs. Arthur H. Hacker
John H. Halford
Henry R. Hallowell
Miss Laura Harding
Horace Binney Hare
James Russell Harris
Harvard University
Edward S. Hawes
The Misses Hawes
Barry Hepburn
Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Hepburn
Estate of Elizabeth B. Hepburn
Miss Margaretta S. Hinchman
F. H. Hirschland
Historical Society of Pennsylvania
Mrs. R. P. Hollingsworth
Miss Hannah Mee Horner
Independence Hall, National
Museum
R. Sturgis Ingersoll
William M. Ivins, Jr.
Walter C. Janney
27
LENDERS OF WORKS OF ART (Continued)
H. H. F. Jatne
Mrs. Walter Jennings
Mrs. Allen A. Johnson
oskar kakoschka
Joseph Katz
Mrs. Elizabeth Lentz Keim
Kennedy and Company
Frederick Keppel and Company, Inc.
Karl Knaths
M. Knoedler and Company
John Frederick Lewis Collection
Library Company of Philadelphia
Musee du Louvre
John Marin
The Maryland Institute
McClees Gallery
Henry P. McIlhenny
Mrs. John D. McIlhenny
Miss Henrietta J. Meeteer
F. H. Meserve
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Mills College
Minneapolis Institute of Art
John Pierpont Morgan
Estate of Marian Mott
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Museum of Modern Art
The National Gallery of Canada
William Rockhill Nelson Gallery
of Art
J. B. Neumann
Mrs. Edward Norman
Numismatic and Antiquarian Society
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
Institute of the Pennsylvania
Hospital
Philip B. Peruvian
Phillips Memorial Gallery
Herbert Lee Pratt
Princeton University
Percy R. Pyne, 2nd
Raymond and Raymond
Renaissance Galleries
Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Claude Roger-Marx
A. S. W. Rosenbach
Lessing J. Rosenwald
Mrs. Harold Rugg
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sachs
Charles Sessler
Herman Shulman
Hon. Charles Sinkler
Mr. and Mrs. Wharton Sinkler
Smith College Museum of Art
Mr. and Mrs. George V. Smith
Maurice J. Speiser
Arthur J. Sussel
Swarthmore College
Miss Agnes Taylor
Miss Elinor Taylor
University Museum
Robert C. Vose Galleries
Wadsworth Atheneum
Walters Art Gallery
William G. Warden
The Benjamin West Society
The Weyhe Gallery
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. White, 3rd
wlldenstein and company
Mrs. John Wintersteen
Worcester Art Museum
28
French Renaissance Doorway, 1518
From the Foulc Collection
Given by Mrs. Herbert Cameron Morris
REPORT OF THE PRINCIPAL OF THE SCHOOL
TO THE PRESIDENT AND TRUSTEES OF THE PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
I have the honor to present the following report of the two Schools — The
Philadelphia Textile School and The School of Industrial Art :
ATTENDANCE
The number of students registered in the two schools for the scholastic year
of 1937-1938 was 1,614— divided as follows:
ART SCHOOL
Day School 522
Evening School 300
Saturday School 204 1,026
TEXTILE SCHOOL
Day School 178
Evening School 410 588
Total 1,614
GRADUATION
Art School 65
Textile School 35
TEXTILE SCHOOL
The Philadelphia Textile School has just closed its fifty-fourth year. The
student body was sufficiently large to tax the facilities both as to faculty
and general equipment. While the greater portion of students came from
Pennsylvania, there were also students from twenty-two other States, and
three from foreign countries.
The two lecture courses pertaining to the field of textile economics were
well attended, and justified the hopes of their sponsors. Professor H. E.
Michl's course on "Problems in Textile Economics" was brought to an
interesting conclusion on January 5 by a visit of forty-five students to
29
New York City as guests of The New York Cotton Exchange. At the head-
quarters of The National Association of Wool Manufacturers, the students
were addressed by Mr. M. D. C. Crawford of the staff of The Fairchild
Publishing Company.
Professor A. E. Cameron's lecture course on "Cost and Accounting in
Textile Mills" was also well attended.
The upper classes have been taken on visits to numerous textile plants,
and on May 17, the Senior Class, by invitation of Colonel W. A. McCain,
spent a profitable afternoon inspecting the U. S. Army Quartermasters
Depot.
"FIBERGLAS"
The Textile School occupied a booth at the Thirty-fourth Knitting Arts
Exhibition, held in Philadelphia April 25-29. Among their exhibits was
the showing of a new glass fabric that was woven in the Jacquard Depart-
ment, utilizing the "Fiberglas" developed by the Owens-Illinois Glass
Company. For the first time, fabrics combining fibers with glass were
shown in the Annual Exhibition of Students' Work.
DONATIONS TO TEXTILE SCHOOL
The Textile School is deeply indebted to twenty-four firms who have con-
tributed machinery and miscellaneous supplies totaling $2,802. The out-
standing gifts were:
Stainless Steel Kier for scouring and bleaching, by Wm. Allen & Sons
Company, Worcester, Mass. — value $1,200.
Reconditioning two sample wool cards and putting them in working
condition by Proctor & Schwartz, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. — -value $511.
Cadmium-plated flat steel heddles and harness frames by Steel Heddle
Manufacturing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. — value $319.
ART SCHOOL DESIGN
Last year the students in the Design classes in the Art School had assigned
to them various problems within the specific limitations of commercial use.
This year, enlarging this policy, designs in wall paper were criticised from
the standpoint of commercial acceptance. Mr. Henry Allman assigned a
30
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problem with specific paper limitations, and later criticised the results
from the standpoint of a design buyer.
Art students in the Design course, who last year enrolled in the Textile
School Night Class in order to further their work in Textile Pattern Design
as worked out on the looms, have this year extended their work into more
advanced courses, and have continued the work with notable success.
Upon the request of prospective students, a night class in Industrial Design
was tentatively introduced, and met with sufficient response and encourag-
ing results as to justify its continuance and expansion next season.
An ambitious project in collaboration with the Sculpture Department,
involving the designing of monumental bronze doors, is well under way
and should show interesting results by next term.
Several students of the Design class assisted members of the faculty in the
preliminary drafting of designs for flags which in their final form are to be
the property of the Philadelphia Museum, a gift from Mr. Atwater Kent.
ILLUSTRATION
This year, in the Illustration course, increased use was made of the motion
picture in the teaching of drawing and composition. There has been a
great deal of interest exhibited in the field of Art Education as to the
development of drawing along these lines, so much so, in fact, that the
first comprehensive exhibition of drawings done from the motion picture
was held this winter in Boston. Our students in the Illustration class con-
tributed largely to this exhibition, and the work received the highest praise.
During the school year, Mr. Herbert Johnson, the famous cartoonist, Mr.
Roy Spreter, widely known illustrator, and Mr. Thornton Martin of The
Saturday Evening Post were guests of the School and greatly assisted the
class by giving special problems and professional criticism.
A considerable amount of professional work was done by the students,
including three books, a series of illustrations for a magazine article, and
numerous advertising and poster drawings.
ADVERTISING DESIGN
In keeping with the ideas of the class in former years, many activities,
outside of regular class problems, have been sponsored. These have included
three trips to New York to visit special galleries and exhibits and to get a
review of the publicity scene in New York; visits to industrial, cultural,
31
and merchandising events and places in Philadelphia, including an espe-
cially arranged meeting with Mr. Leon Marks of the Curtis Publishing
Company for the study of reproduction methods.
Among some of the interesting practical problems done by the Advertising
Design class this year was in a contest sponsored by The Tasty Baking
Company for their outdoor publicity, in which the problem was the crea-
tion of new ideas for a current campaign. The prizes were won by Mr.
Douglas Franklin, 1st; Mr. Benjamin Greber, 2nd; Mr. Jay Garbutt,
Evening School, 3rd. Because of the satisfaction of the Company with the
character of the student work, a special Honorable Mention was awarded
to Miss Marie Berner.
It is interesting to note the interest the work of the students of the School
is promoting in the industrial field. The W. H. Hoedt Studios are offering
a prize this year to the student in the graduating Advertising Design class
who has produced, in their regard, the best work for advertising purposes.
This prize was unsolicited and came as a result of the belief of this Company
that students of this school are producing outstanding material.
STAGE-CRAFT COURSE
The Department of Stage-Craft had a very busy season. Seven models
were entered in the Stage Model Contest, held annually under the auspices
of The Art Alliance. The model for the Stage Set R. U. R. received third
prize.
In order to give the advanced students in the Stage-Craft course more
practical experience, arrangements were made with the Germantown
Theatre Guild to have the students design, paint and erect the scenery
for their productions. To this end, they devoted one day a week in the
Guild's theatre.
COSTUME DESIGN
The Annual Spring Fashion Show was presented by the students of the
Costume Design Department on April 19 and 20 to more than 4,000
persons at the Manufacturers and Bankers Club. The stage settings, with
clever vignettes, were designed by the class in Stage-Craft, and represented
the 1910 period.
One of the most acclaimed gowns, "White Vision," was selected to repre-
sent the work of the Costume Design Department, in the Fifth Fashion
32
Two XVI Century bowls
From the Foulc Collection
Purchased. Temple Fund Income
Congress at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel the following week. It was
awarded one of the blue ribbons, the highest honor.
Since our Spring Fashion Show enables us to exhibit only those clothes
for the spring and summer seasons, and represents the work accomplished
for only three months prior to this time, the department showed a smaller
and more informal collection of winter coats, suits, and dresses in November.
Two members of the graduating class spent the last five weeks of the School
year as apprentices at the establishment of Dorothy Diehl, one of our
former students who has a design studio at State College, Pa.
In September and in March, students were given the opportunity of going
to New York to see the import collections at Ellerbe Wood, Inc., repre-
senting the trend of Paris influence on American fashions. They also
attended "Fashion Futures — American Edition" in New York, the larg-
est fashion show given in this country. Others were guests at Fashion
Group luncheons in Philadelphia.
POTTERY
Students in the Pottery class were again represented in the Sixth Annual
Memorial Exhibition to Mrs. Robineau, at Syracuse. Also, several students
in this course were represented in an American Exhibition of Ceramics
shown in Paris that was under the auspices of the American Federation of
Arts. This exhibition has returned to America and is now on tour in this
country.
The School was also represented by two pieces of pottery in a carefully
selected exhibition that was sent to Denmark, Sweden, and England.
LIBRARY
Of the sixty-four books added to the Library this year, twenty-one have
been gifts. Of these, the Associate Committee of Women have given four
volumes of von Boehn's Modes and Manners of the Nineteenth
Century, and the Beta Gamma Sigma Sorority four volumes of von Boehn's
Modes and Manners, the eight volumes thus covering the history of
costume from Roman times through the 19th century. Mrs. Frank Thome
Patterson's gift of Twenty Birds of Mt. Desert by Carroll Tyson is also
a great addition to the Library. Some two hundred and forty plates and
photographs have also been given us.
The Lending Shelf has been much appreciated by the students. We are
always glad of donations to this shelf.
55
The attendance has been very good, 12,000 visits having been paid the
Library during the school year. Of that 12,000, 674 of that number repre-
sent students from the Night School.
Following is a list of those who have contributed books to the Library:
Associate Committee of Women Mr. John Story Jenks
Associate Committee of Women Mr. Thornton Oakley
(Library Fund) Mrs. Thornton Oakley
Beta Gamma Sigma Sorority Mrs. Frank Thorne Patterson
Class of 1932 Mrs. Eli Kirk Price
Class of 1937 Mrs. John Wintersteen
Dr. Frederick Fraley W. P. A. Museum Extension
EXHIBITIONS
Of the exhibits presented in the School's gallery during the year, the most
important were: the exhibition of Outdoor Advertising sponsored by the
McCandlish Lithograph Corporation; an exhibition of the Lithographs of
Daumier; photographs by Alfredo Valente; exhibition of Russian Graphic
Art; and a group of Commercial Illustrations from N. W. Ayer & Son.
Representative work in the courses of Drawing, Painting, Perspective,
Anatomy, and Modeling is shown in this year's exhibition. A careful study
of these different subjects reveals considerably more unification than
formerly. We have reason to be encouraged by the fine attitude on the
part of the instructors who have sincerely endeavored to bring their work
into closer relationship, not only with the major courses but also with
each other.
We wish to acknowledge the stimulating effect upon the students of the
many prizes offered by the Associate Committee of Women that were
presented at the Commencement Exercises, and to thank them, not only
for generosity in this matter but also for their most generous help and co-
operation in so many matters pertaining to the welfare of the School.
In concluding this report, I wish also to express my appreciation to the
President and Officers of the Corporation, to the Trustees, the Committee
on Instruction, and the Staff and Faculty.
Respectfully submitted,
Principal.
34
REPORT OF
THE ASSOCIATE COMMITTEE OF WOMEN
TO THE PRESIDENT AND BOARD OF TRUSTEES
I herewith present the Fiftieth Annual Report of the Associate Committee
of Women.
It is with profound sorrow that we announce the death of Mrs. William H.
Walbaum who was elected to membership in 1914 and to Honorary Mem-
bership in 1932; also the death of Mrs. Charles Wolcott Henry, who became
a member of the Committee in 1920 and who was elected to Honorary
Membership in 1934. The resignation of Mrs. Charles Francis Griffith
was accepted with deep regret. We are happy to welcome as new members,
Mrs. Nicholas Biddle, Mrs. Benjamin Rush, Jr., Mrs. William P. Wear
and Mrs. John H. Whelen, Jr. The Associate Committee and its members
have been extraordinarily active this year in the work at both the Museum
and the Schools. The Committee contributed $420 as prize money which
provided twenty-seven school prizes. These prizes covered work of the
students in Advertising Design, Costume Design, Design Laboratory,
Illustration and Decoration, Jewelry, Fashion Illustration and Sketching,
and were awarded at the Annual Commencement which was held at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, June 2. Mrs. Logan MacCoy, in the absence
of Mrs. Nichols, presented the awards. At the Annual Fashion Show of
the Costume Design Department six members of the Committee acted as
judges. For some time the Committee has felt that it would be stimulat-
ing to the students if one or more of the gowns designed and made by the
students were entered in the Annual Fashion Congress. This year the
Committee contributed the fee necessary to display one of the gowns. It
was a source of gratification to the Associate Committee to have the
student's gown awarded a blue ribbon, one of the highest awards.
Members of the Committee have extended to the students in Interior
Design the privilege of visiting their homes. These visits are deeply ap-
preciated by both the faculty and the students. Regarding its work at
the Museum, the Committee is happy to report that at one of the major
exhibitions of the year, the Benjamin West Bicentenary, the Committee
arranged an evening reception in connection with its opening and the
officers of the Committee received.
55
During the year two of our members gave delightful parties in connection
with the opening of important Museum events. In November, Mrs. John
D. Mcllhenny gave a reception at the Museum inaugurating the Daumier
Exhibition. In December, our Honorary President, Mrs. Frank Thorne
Patterson, gave a delightful tea in connection with the opening of the
recently installed Spanish Room of the fifteenth century which she so
generously gave to the Museum. Mrs. John D. Mcllhenny also graciously
opened her house for the enjoyment of the entire membership of the
Museum on the afternoons of May 2, 3 and 5, on which occasions tea was
served. During the celebration held in Philadelphia in October, commem-
orating the Birth of the Constitution, members of the Committee acted
as hostesses in costume of the period in two of the houses of the Colonial
Chain, Mount Pleasant and Cedar Grove.
Respectfully submitted,
iaJLU. i. CcnOlc^
Corresponding Secretary.
36
REPORT OF THE TREASURER
TO THE PRESIDENT AND BOARD OF TRUSTEES
In submitting the Treasurer's Report for the fiscal year 1937-1938, there
are certain items which seem to be worthy of special mention.
THE MUSEUMS
The Trustees approved in June, 1937, a Museum Budget which called for
the raising of approximately $40,000 by voluntary contributions. During
the summer of 1937, however, the Federal Project of the Works Progress
Administration for Museum Gallery Guides was suddenly stopped. The
Corporation was then faced with the difficult task, if the Museums were
to be kept open to the public, of raising additional funds to supply the
necessary attendants. The officers were encouraged to believe that such
additional funds would be forthcoming from the City Treasury, and acting
upon such assurances incurred additional expenses for attendants to replace
those released. Unfortunately, in this expectation they were to be dis-
appointed and it became necessary to raise additional funds by voluntary
contributions to carry on the work of the Museum. The President again
assumed this great burden and was successful in raising over $42,000 among
his friends to balance the Museum Budget for the fiscal year. In December,
1937, the Federal Project for Gallery Guides was renewed so that from
that date the Corporation was relieved of the burden of supplying these
additional attendants, which the limited funds of the Museum cannot
afford, but which are so necessary for the proper protection of its and the
City's valuable collections.
The Corporation, in addition, has contributed sponsor's share of money
and materials to carry on work in connection with the installation of new
galleries and interiors under Works Progress Administration projects.
THE SCHOOLS
Regarding the work at the Schools, it has been the policy to be cautious
in making estimates of expenditures and income. During times of economic
stress, schools such as ours, which must depend in large part upon the
collection of tuition fees for their successful operation, often are among
the first to feel the paralyzing effects of financial distress. We are happy
to report that in the year just closed we were fortunate to receive in income,
37
an amount in excess of our estimate, so that we were able to continue the
wise policy of reducing the excessive mortgage now placed on the present
school building by an additional $15,000.
THE PORTFOLIO OF SECURITIES
The portfolio of our securities has been given constant and careful study
by the members of our Committee on Finance whose arduous and disin-
terested labours cannot be praised too highly. The income received from
our invested funds exceeded our estimates. Our endowment has been
enriched during the year by over $100,000, principally through the bequest
of the late Edward I. H. Howell.
Respectfully submitted,
Treasurer.
38
FRIENDS OF THE MUSEUM
The Friends of the Philadelphia Museum of Art contribute substantial
sums toward the annual operating cost of the Museum and its exhibitions.
For 1937-38 the list of these is as follows:
Mrs. John A. Brown, Jr.
Major Aaron E. Carpenter
Mrs. John T. Dorrance
William M. Elkins
Clarence H. Geist
Joseph V. Horn
Atwater Kent Foundation
Howard A. Loeb
George Horace Lorimer
Jerome H. Louchheim
Mrs. John D. McIlhenny
Staunton B. Peck
Lessing J. Rosenwald
Lawrence Saunders
Mrs. C. Morton Smith
Roland L. Taylor
Morris Wolf
Charlton Yarnall
39
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED MAY 31, 1938
GENERAL FUND
RECEIPTS
State of Pennsylvania $ 33,750.00
Commissioners of Fairmount Park . . . 60,000.00
Contributions for Maintenance and
Research 2S.541.01
Income from Endowment and
Unrestricted Funds 45,224.45
Membership Dues 18,050.00
Tuition Fees 186,055.47
$371,620.93
Due from State of Pennsylvania .... 11,250.00
♦Excess of Expenditures 29,525.76
$412,396.69
EXPENDITURES
Schools $230,853.00
Museums 155,772.11
Administration 25,771.58
$412,396.69
*This excess of expenditures has been met by contributions.
40
♦ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
ASSETS
Cash in Bank .... $108,910.79
Cash on Hand .... 250.00
$ 109,160.79
Restricted Income Invested .... 41,000.00
Real Estate (cost) . . . 550,778.99
Less Mortgages .... 475,000.00
75,778.99
Investments (cost) 2,370,657.91
Due by State of Pennsylvania .... 11,250.00
— $2,607,847.69
Balance 219,015.89
$2,826,863.58
LIABILITIES
Endowment and Restricted Funds . . . $2,457,716.20
Miscellaneous 172,147.38
Loans from Museum Fund 197,000.00
$2,826,863.58
"The value of the Art Collections is not included in this -statement.
Respectfully submitted,
Treasurer.
We have examined the books and accounts of the Philadelphia Museum
of Art for the year ended May 31, 1938, and we hereby certify that the
foregoing Report of the Treasurer and the Statement of Assets and Liabili-
ties correctly set forth the true financial position of the Institution as of
that date.
Respectfully submitted,
June 10, 1938.
Certified Public Accountant.
41
MEMBERSHIP
CLASSIFICATION OF MEMBERS
Benefactors, who contribute or bequeath $25,000 or more to the Cor-
poration.
Patrons, who contribute or bequeath $5,000 to the Corporation.
Fellows, who contribute $1,000 at one time.
Life Members, who contribute $500 at one time.
Associates, who contribute $250 a year.
Sustaining Members, who contribute $100 a year.
Contributing Members, who contribute $25 a year.
Annual Members, who contribute $10 a year.
Any person may be elected a Benefactor, Patron, Fellow or Life Member,
who shall have made a gift to an amount requisite for admission to the
respective class, and an Honorary Benefactor, Honorary Patron or Honor-
ary Fellow, who shall have made a loan of an important work of art or
collection of a value equal to the gift of the corresponding class of members
of the Corporation.
Benefactors, Patrons, Fellows, and Life Members are not liable to annual
dues.
42
MEMBERS OF THE CORPORATION
Benefactors, Patrons and Fellows are enrolled in perpetuity. The names
of those deceased are indicated by italics.
BENEFACTORS
Baugh, Margaret L.
Bok, Mary Louise Curtis
Bowman, Elizabeth Malcolm
Brock, Alice G.
Carnegie Corporation
Chandler, Percy M.
Clark, Edward W.
Curtis. Cyrus H. K.
Darley, Francis F. S.
Dolfinger, Henry
Eakins, Susan Macdowell
Elkins, William M.
Frishmuth, Sarah S.
General Education Board
Gibson, Mary K.
Harding, Dorothea Barney
Helme, William E.
Henry, Mrs. Charles Wolcott
Howell, Anna Hazen
Howell, Edward I. H.
Janney, Walter C.
Jenks, John Story
Johnson, Eldridge Reeves
Keehmle, M. Theresa
Lea, Charlotte Augusta
Loeb, Howard A.
Lorimer, George Horace
Ludington, Charles H.
Magee, James R.
Martin, John C.
McIlhenny, John D.
McIlhenny, Mrs. John D.
McLean, William L.
Moore. Clara J.
Morris, John T.
Morris, Lydia Thompson
Pilling, William S.
Rice, Mrs. Alexander Hamilton
Robinette, Edward B.
Shippen, Elizabeth Swift
Sinkler, Wharton
Sinkler, Mrs. Wharton
Stokes, J. Stogdell
Rockefeller, John D., Jr.
Taylor, Roland L.
Temple, Joseph E.
Warden, William G.
Weightman, William
Widener, George D.
Williams, Mary Adeline
Wood, William
HONORARY BENEFACTORS
Dixon, Mrs. Widener
Garvan, Mrs. Francis P.
Parsons, Ella
Pitcairn, Raymond
Stotesbury, Mrs. Edward T.
Tyson, Carroll S.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S.
Williams, Mrs. Charles F.
45
PATRONS
Baird, John
Barton, Susan R.
Ber wind, Harr y A .
Bispham, George Tucker
Blanchard. Anna
Blanchard, Harriet
Bodine, Samuel T.
Bok, Edward
Bonsal, Mrs. Stephen
Braun, John F.
Brown, Henry I.
Brown, Mrs. John A., Jr.
Browning, Mrs. Edward
Busch, Henry Paul
Carson, Mrs. Hampton L.
Cheston, Radcliffe, Jr.
Cheston, Mrs. Radcliffe, Jr.
Childs, George W.
Clark, Clarence M.
Collet, Mark Wilkes
Collins, Philip S.
Collins, Mrs. Philip S.
Combs, Mary A.
Cramp, Mrs. Theodore W.
Crane, John A.
Cresson, James H.
deForest, Mrs. Robert W.
Dick, William A.
Dick, Mrs. William A.
Disston, Henry and Sons
Dobbins. Mary A.
Dolan, Clarence W.
Dolan, H. Yale
Dolan, Isabelle W.
Dolan, Thomas
Dorrance, Mrs. John T.
Drexel, A. J.
Drexel, F. A.
Fitler, Mrs. William W.
Flagg, Stanley Griswold
Foster, Frank B.
Foster, Mrs. E. L.
Fuguet, Howard
Garrett, Julia
Garrett, W. E., Jr.
Geist, Clarence H.
Gibson, Henry C.
Gibson, Henry C.
Gibson, Susan W. P.
Gribbel, John
Griffith, Mrs. Charles Francis
Griscom, Rodman E.
Harkness, Mrs. Edward S.
Harrison, Emily Leland
Harrison, Thomas Skelton
Helme, Mrs. William E.
Henry, Mrs. J. Norman
Hoffman, Benjamin R.
Houston, H. H.
Ingersoll, Charles E.
Janney, Mrs. Walter C.
Jenks, John Story
Kent, A. Atwater
Kent, Mrs. A. Atwater
Larner, Chester W.
Laughlin, Anne Irwin
Laughlin, Henry A.
Lea, Mrs. Arthur H.
Lea, Henry C.
Lea, Nina
Leiper, Mrs. James G., Jr.
Lewis, Francis W.
Lippincott, Agnes
Lippincott, Walter
Ludington, Wright S.
Madeira, Betty Campbell
Magee, Fannie S.
Martin, Mrs. John C.
McCarthy, John A.
McClatchy, John H.
McFadden, George
McFadden, John H.
44
PATRONS (Continued)
Meigs. Mrs. Arthur V.
Morris, Mrs. Herbert C.
Morris, Samuel W.
Munthe, General J. W. N.
Neuman, Charles V.
Nichols, Mrs. H. S. Prentiss
Page. Louis Rodman
Patterson, Mrs. Frank Thorne
Peck, Staunton B.
Peck, Mrs. Staunton B.
Pell. Alfred Duane
Penrose, Boies
Pepper. John W.
Poe, Mrs. Edgar Allan
Price. Eli Kirk
Purves. Elizabeth Gilkison
Rea. Samuel
Re a. Mary Black
Ritchie. Craig D.
Roberts, Mrs. Howard
Rosenwald, Lessing J.
Scott. Anna D.
Seabrease, N. M.
Search. Theodore C.
Seeler. Edgar V.
Seeler. Mrs. Edgar V.
Simpson. Alex. Jr.
Smith, Albert L.
Smith. Elizabeth Wandell
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton
Smith, Edward B., Jr.
Smith, Geoffrey S.
Smith, John Story
Smith, W. Hinckle
Starr, Isaac Tatnall
Stirling. Anne Biddle
Sullivan. James F.
Sulzberger. Mayer
Taylor. Mary E.
Thompson, Mrs. William Boyce
Tyler, Mrs. John J.
Tyson, Carroll S., Jr.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S., Jr.
Wasserman, Joseph
Whitney, A. and Sons
Williams, Mrs. Charles F.
Wister, Sabine d'Invilliers
Wister. Sarah Tyler
Wolf, Morris
HONORARY PATRONS
First Baptist Church of
Philadelphia
duPont, Henry F.
Fleisher, Walter A.
Numismatic and Antiquarian
Society of Philadelphia
Paumgarten, Mrs. Harald
Powel, T. I. Hare
Rotan, Mrs. Samuel P.
Scott, Mary Howard Sturgis
Steel, Mrs. Alfred G. B.
Stout, C. Frederick C.
Stout, Mrs. C. Frederick C.
White, Samuel S., 3rd
Widener, Joseph E.
FELLOWS
Adger. Willian
Allen, La ura
Armstrong, F. Wallis
Artman, Caroline Foerderer
Baird, Mrs. Edgar Wright
Baker, Mrs. Samuel M.
45
FELLOWS (Continued)
Ballard. Ellis Ames
Battles, Frank
Beeber. Dimner
Belfield, T. Broom
Belmont, E. A.
Benson, Mrs. Edwin N., Jr.
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A.
Bettle, Mrs. Samuel
Biddle, Mrs. Arthur
Blair, Andrew
Blair, Mrs. Andrew
Blum, Albert
Bochman, Charles F.
Bockius, Morris R.
Bond, Charles
Bowen, Samuel B.
Boyd, William
Bracken, Francis B.
Brinton, Christian
Brown, James Crosby
Brubaker, Mrs. Albert P.
Bullitt, Orville H.
Burnham. Mrs. George, Jr.
Cardeza, Charlotte D. M.
Carpenter, Aaron E.
Carruth, John G.
Carson, Hampton L
Carter, Mrs. William T.
Cassatt, Gardner
Cassatt, Robert K.
Chamberlin, William B.
Clifford, Henry
Coleman, Fanny B.
Coles, Mary Roberts
Colton, Mrs. Sabin W '., Jr
Coxe, Mrs. Alexander Brown
Coxe, Mrs. Henry Brinton
Crane, T. I.
Crane, Mrs. Theron I.
Cret, Paul P.
Curtin, William Wilson
Davis, Mrs. Charles P.
Day, Charles
Day, Mrs. Charles
de Cerkez, Mrs. Euphemia P.
deSchauensee, Mrs. Rodolphe
Dickson, Arthur G.
Dixon, Mrs. Samuel G.
Dodge, Mrs. James Mapes
Dorrance, John T.
duPont, Bertha Taylor
du Pont, Lammot
du Pont, Pierre S.
du Pont, Mrs. Pierre S.
du Pont, Mrs. William K.
Earle, Mrs. George H., Jr.
Eisenlohr, Charles J.
Evans, Lena Cadwalader
Evans, Ralph B.
Fels, Samuel S.
Fisher, Edith T.
Flagg, Mrs. Stanley G
Fox. L. Webster
Frazier, George Harrison
Frazier, Mrs. George Harrison
Fry, Wilfred W.
Fuller, Mrs. Sara K.
Fuller, Walter D.
Fuller, Mrs. William M.
Gates, Thomas S.
Gest, William P.
Gibson, Mrs. Henry C.
Goodhart, Howard L.
Greenfield, Albert M.
Griswold, Mrs. Frank Tracey
Groome, Mrs. John C.
Hall ah an, Walter J.
Hart, Charles D.
Hart, Mary M.
Hatfield, Henry Reed
Hen son, Edward F.
Hepburn, Mrs. Philip R.
46
FELLOWS (Continued)
Hinchman, Mrs. Charles S.
HlNCHMAN, MARGARETTA S.
Hockley, Amelia D.
Hodgson, Miss Ella
Hopkinson, Edward, Jr.
Horn, Joseph V.
Horner, Samuel, Jr.
Hubbard, Mrs. Henry V.
Huff, Mrs. George F.
Humphreys. Letitia
Hunt, Rebecca Mandeville
Rozet
Hutchinson, Mrs. Joseph B.
Hutchinson, Sydney E.
Ingersoll, Henry McKean
Ingersoll, R. Sturgis
Jayne, Mrs. Henry LaBarre
Jayne, Horace H. F.
Jenkins, Charles F.
Johnson, Alba B.
Johnson, Mrs. Edwin J.
Johnson, Mary Warner
Keen, Edwin F.
Kuehnle, C. Albert
Ladd, Mrs. Westray
Lavino.E. J.
Lee, Henry Livingston
Leeds, Morris E.
Lippincott, J. Bertram
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Bertram
Loeb, Arthur
Louchheim, Jerome H.
Mansure, Edmund L.
Mason, John H., Sr.
Mason, Rebecca P. Stevenson
Mastbaum, Mrs. Jules
McCreary, Mrs. George D.
McFadden, J. Franklin
McGill, Mary E.
McMichael, Emory
McMurtrie, Ellen
McVitty, Albert E.
Meirs, Mrs. Richard Waln
Mercer, William R.
Mercer, Mrs. William R.
Miller, George
Moore, Mrs. William H.
Morgan, Mrs. Randal
Morris, Lawrence J.
Morris, Mrs. Samuel W.
Moss, Frank H.
Moss, Anna Hunter
Munson, George S.
Munson, Mrs. George S.
Newbold, Arthur E., Jr.
Newton, A. Edward
Norton, Mrs. Nathaniel R.
Pell, Cornelia Livingston
Pepper. Henrietta Dallas
Pew, J. Howard
Price, Mrs. Eli Kirk
Price. War wick James
Prime, Mrs. Alfred C.
Randolph, Anna
Reath, Mrs. B. Brannan, 2nd
Rebmann, Godfrey
Rebmann, Mrs. Godfrey
Reifsnyder, Howard
Reilly, George
Roberts, Mrs. Edward
Robins, Thomas
Rockefeller, Mrs. Nelson A.
Rodenbough, Elmer E.
Roosevelt, Nicholas G.
Rosenbach, A. S. W.
Rosenbach, Philip H.
ROSSMASSLER, Mrs. RlCHARD
Rozet, Marie Josephine
Santa Eulalia, Countess Eliz-
abeth de
Saunders, Lawrence
Saunders, Mrs. Lawrence
47
FELLOWS (Continued)
Schaum, Otto
Simon, Edward P.
Sinkler, Caroline S.
Sinkler, Mrs. James M. R.
Smith, Lewis Lawrence
Starr, Mrs. Isaac Tatnall
Stengel, Mrs. Alfred
Stewart, W. Plunket
Stimson, Anna K.
Stokes, Mrs. J. Stogdell
Stotesbury, Mrs. Edward T.
Strawbridge, Frederic H.
Strawbridge, Mrs. Frederic H.
Sullivan, John J.
Thomson, Anne
Thomson, Mrs. Frank Graham
Thomson, Walter S.
Townsend, Mrs. David
Tubize Artificial Silk Co.
VanDtke, John W.
Van Sciver, George D.
Vaux, Henry Pepper
Vaux, Mrs. Henry Pepper
Wainwright, F. King
Waller, Mrs. Littleton W. T., Jr.
Wanamaker, Rodman
Ward, T. Johnson
Warriner, Samuel D.
Williams, David E.
Williams, John B.
Wills, Mrs. William M.
Windrim, John T.
Wurts, Mrs. C. Stewart
Yarnall, Charlton
Yarnall, Mrs. Charlton
Yeatman, Mrs. Pope
Zimmermann, John E.
HONORARY FELLOWS
Davis, Bernard
Harrison, H. Norris
Harrison, John, Jr.
Hayward, Nathan
Hayward, Mrs. Nathan
Kuhn, C. Hartman
Lea, Van Antwerp
McIlhenny, Henry P.
Newbold, Clement B.
Pennsylvania Hospital
Pitcairn, Theodore
Smith, Esther Morton
Society of the Sons of St. George
Thomson, Archibald G., Jr.
Tilghman, Benjamin C.
Wanamaker, Thomas B., Jr.
Wells, Helen Douw
Williams, Mrs. John S.
Wister, Frances A.
Wister, Owen
Yellin, Samuel
LIFE MEMBERS
Allen, Joseph
Audenried, Mrs. Lewis
Barney, Charles D.
Barney, James W.
Battles, H. H.
Battles, Mrs. H. H.
Beardwood, Mrs. Joseph T.
Beck, Adele M.
Bein, August
Bell, Mrs. Samuel
Blaetz, Jacob H.
Bland, Pascal Brooke
48
LIFE MEMBERS (Continued)
Bland, Mrs. Pascal Brooke
Boericke, Gideon
Boger & Crawford
Bok, Cart William
Bower, Frank B.
Bower, William H.
Brazier, E. Josephine
Bready, Edwin F.
Breck, Mrs. William Rogers
Brengle, Henry G.
Bright, Stanley
Brock, Henry G.
Bromley, John
Bttdd, Edward G.
Busch, Emilie Smith
Busch, Mrs. Henry Paul
Busch, Miers
Butler, Mrs. Edgar H.
Cadwalader, Sophia
Caldwell, J. E. & Co.
Campbell, Milton
Canby, Mrs. W. Marriott
Capp, Seth Bunker
Chase, Mrs. Joshua Coffin
Clapp, Mrs. B. Frank
Clark, Mrs. Walton
Clarke, Louis S.
Cochran, M.
Collins, Alfred M.
Cope, Caroline E.
Crosby, Everett U.
D'Ascenzo, Nicola
De La Cour, J. Carl
De La Cour, Mrs. J. Carl
Dobson, John and James, Inc.
Donner, W. H.
Dreer, Mrs. William F.
Drexel, Mrs. John R.
Drinker, Henry S., Jr.
duPont de Nemours, E. I. & Co.
Dwier, W. Kirkland
Eagleson, John
Easby, Mrs. William, Jr.
Eddystone Mfg. Co.
Elkins, George W., Jr.
Ellis, Mrs. William Struthers
Eshner, Augustus A.
Evans, Charles
Evans, Thomas
Evans, Mrs. Thomas
Eyre, Mrs. Lawrence
Fay, Leonard A.
Fels, Mrs. Samuel S.
Fleisher, Arthur A.
Ford, Mrs. Bruce
Foulkrod, Mrs. John J., Jr.
Fromuth, August G.
Galloway, Walter B.
Gest, Mrs. John Marshall
Geyelin, Mrs. Emile C.
Greene, Mrs. William Houston
Griscom, Frances C.
Groves, Mrs. F. Stanley, Jr.
Hacker, Mrs. Caspar W.
Halstead, Mrs. David
Harper, Mrs. William Warner
Harrison, Henry Norris
Harrison, John, Jr.
Harvey, J. S. C.
Harvey, Mrs. J. S. C.
Harvey, R. Wistar
Heimerdinger, Leo H.
Hill, George W.
Hinchman, Anne
Hoffman, Mrs. J. Ogden
Holmes, Mrs. Christian R.
HOLTON, J. S. W.
Horn & Hardart Baking Co.
Horrocks, Chas. M. & J. Howard
HORSTMANN, WlLLIAM H. Co.
Ingersoll, Mrs. Charles E.
Ingersoll, Charles Jared
49
LIFE MEMBERS (Continued)
Irwin, H. DeWitt
Jackson, Albert Atlee
Jackson, Mrs. Albert Atlee
Jarden, Mrs. Mary Templin
Jayne, David & Sons, Inc.
Johnson, Herbert
Johnson, R. Winder
Jordan, Mrs. Frederick
Keen, Florence
Klauder, Charles Z.
Klebansky, Mrs. Wolf
Kohn, Harry E.
Kohn, Irving
Kohn, Mrs. Isadore
Krumbhaar, Mrs. Edward B.
Landenberger, J. William
Leisenring, Edward B.
Lloyd, Malcolm, Jr.
Loeb, Mrs. Herman
Logan, Mrs. Robert R.
Ludlow, Benjamin H.
MacCoy, W. Logan
MacCoy, Mrs. W. Logan
MacNeill, William
Madeira, Louis C. & Sons
Martin, Mrs. Sydney E.
Mason, Jane Graham
Matteossian, Mrs. Herant
Baron
McLean, Mrs. Robert
McLean, William L., Jr.
McMichael, Mrs. Emory
McNeely, Florence
Meigs, Arthur I.
Mertz, Mrs. Oscar E.
Mertz, Oscar E., Jr.
Miles, Thomas H.
Miller, Mrs. E. Clarence
Millville Mfg. Co.
Milne, David
Minds, John H.
Montgomery, Robert L.
Montgomery, Mrs. Robert L.
Moore, Mrs. Amory C.
Morton, Mrs. Arthur V.
Newbold, Mrs. John S.
Newton, Mrs. A. Edward
Newton, E. Swift
Newton, Mrs. Jewett B.
Oehrle Brothers
Peck, Arthur
Perot, T. Morris, Jr.
Pitcairn, Raymond
Powers, Thomas Harris
Proctor and Schwartz
Provident Trust Co.
Quaker Lace Co.
Robbins, George A.
Roberts, George Brinton
Roberts, Mrs. George Brinton
Robins, Mrs. Thomas
Robinson, Anthony Wayne
rossmassler, walter h.
Ryan, James J.
Schmidt, Charles E.
schoettle, edwin j.
Scholes, William, Sons, Inc.
Schwehn, Harry J.
Segal, Adolph
Semple, Helen
Sewall, Arthur W.
Sewall, Mrs. Arthur W.
Smith, Horace Eugene
Smith, J. Willison
Smith, Mrs. Lewis Lawrence
Steel Heddle Mfg. Co.
Steele, Joseph M.
Stokes, Mrs. Horace
Stork, Mrs. Theophilus B.
Supplee- Wills-Jones Milk Co.
Sutro, Paul E.
Sykes Brothers, Inc.
50
LIFE MEMBERS (Continued)
Taylor, John C.
Thayer, Mrs. Sydney
Thomas, T. Lewis
Thropp, Mrs. Joseph E.
Todd, Mrs. Forde Anderson
Tonner, Mrs. William T.
Townsend, John Barnes
Townsend, Mrs. John Barnes
Vaughan, Mrs. Ira
Warner, Langdon
Weimer, Albert B.
Welsh, Francis Ralston
Wetherill and Brother
Wheeler, Janet D.
Whitall, Tatum Co.
White, Thomas Raeburn
White, Mrs. Thomas Raeburn
Williams, Mrs. David E.
Williams, Mrs. John S.
Williams, Parker S.
Wistar, J. Morris
Wood, Mrs. Charles Martin
Wood, Mrs. Richard D.
Woodward, Mrs. George
Wriggins, Charles C.
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond D. B.
Zimmerman, Mason W.
SI
SUSTAINING MEMBERS
Fairmotjnt Pahk Art Association
Jeffords, Walter M.
Wurts, Robert Kennedy
CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS
Abbott, Harry S.
Aitkin, A. King
Atwood, Mrs. John C, Jr.
Bachman, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank H.
Bates, Daniel Moore
Berwind, Mrs. Charles G.
Bloch, Arthur
Bodine, William W.
Bolles, Mrs. E. M.
Bonnell, Mrs. Henry H.
Bradford, Mrs. Robert
Breyer, Henry W., Jr.
Bromley, Henry S.
Brownell, Eleanor O.
Converse, Mary E.
Cooke, Mrs. Morris
Llewellyn
Cuyler, Mrs. T. DeWitt
Degn, William L.
Dodge, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald D.
Doerr, Herbert E.
Drexel, Mrs. George W.
Childs
du Pont, Mrs. Alfred I.
Dykeman, Loeb and
Company
Eckert, Samuel B.
Ely, Anna W.
Fearon, Charles
Fearon, Mrs. Charles
Fels, Mrs. S. S.
Fischer, A. Koerting
Freeman, Mrs. Samuel M.
Freund, Rudolph
Garrett, R. E.
Gates, Mrs. Thomas
Geist, Mrs. Clarence H.
Gibbs, Benjamin
Griscom, William B.
Groff, Mrs. Charles G.
Haas, Otto
Henderson, Mrs. Samuel J.
Howland, Alice G.
Ingersoll, Jeannie Hobart
Jenkins, Theodore F.
Kolb, Sarah E.
Legge, Percy A.
Lewis, Mrs. Anna B.
Lippincott, C. Carroll
Lloyd, H. Gates, Jr.
McCurdy.Mrs.Josephine B.
Miller, Earle
Mitchell, Allen R. and
Sons
Morris, H. C.
Moss Rose Manufacturing
Company
Murtagh, Mrs. J. C.
Newbold, Eugene S.
Newbold, Mrs. Eugene S.
Pepper, William
Price, Eli Kirk, III
Quinn, Richard Lewis
Rhoads, Charles J.
Rhoads, William G.
Rivinus, E. F.
Roberts, Graham
Rosenbach Galleries, The
Saltus, Mrs. R. Sanford
Scheffey, Lewis C.
Simon, Mrs. Stephen J.
Snowden, Mrs. George G.
Spahr, Boyd Lee
Stokes, Mrs. S. Emlen
Stout, F. Sturgis
Thomas, Arthur H.
Thompson, Mrs. Arthur W.
Thomson, Anne
Thun, Mr. and Mrs.
Ferdinand
Tily, Herbert J.
Turner, William Jay
Warden, Mrs. Clarence A.
Welsh, Mrs. C. Newbold
Wheeler, Mrs. Walter S.
Willard, Mrs. De Forest P.
Williams, Mrs. Rogers
Wood, Clement B.
Wood, Marion Biddle
Woodward, Mrs. Charles H.
Woolman, Josephine T.
Woolston, Stephen Stockton
ANNUAL MEMBERS
Aaron, Mrs. Max N.
Abbott, Gertrude
Abbott, J. Herman
Aberle, Mrs. Elsie
Acker, Mrs. Finley
Acton, Kesniel C.
Adams, John Stokes
Adamson, Mrs. C. B.
Adelhelm, John S.
Adler, Cyrus
Adler, Francis Heed
Aertsen, Mrs Guilliaem, Jr.
Albrecht, H. Carl
Allen, Agnes
Allen, Clifford P., Jr.
Allen, Curtis
Allen, Mrs. Curtis
Allen, Mrs. Frederick H.
Allen, Mrs. Maria McKean
Allen, William J. P.
Altermatt, Marie E.
Ambler, Harry S., Jr.
Ames, Mrs. Winslow
Amram, Philip W.
Amsterdam, Mrs. Gustave
Ancker, Mrs. Laurence L.
Andersen, William E.
Anderson, Mrs. Alfred B.
Anderson, Mrs. John F.
Anderson, W. M.
Anderson, Mrs.Wm. Downs
Anglin, Eleanor M.
Apel, Mrs. Elizabeth
Archer, Mrs. F. Morse
Archer, Wilbur L., Jr.
Armistead, Mrs. W. M.
Armstrong, Mrs. F. Wallis
Ashbridge, Emily R.
Ashbrook, Roland C.
Ashmead, Duffield, Jr.
Ashton, George T.
Ashton, Mrs. Leonard
Ashton, Mrs. Thomas G.
Aspden, Mrs. Newton J.
Atkinson, Elizabeth A.
Atkinson, Gertrude
Atkinson, James H.
Atkinson, Robert H.
Austin, Richard L.
Aydelotte, Frank
52
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Babaian, Andrew
Babbitt, Niles S.
Babcock, Mrs. W. Wayne
Bache, Caroline D.
Bache, Margaret Hartman
Bacon, Mrs. Albert E.
Bacon, Mrs. Ellis W.
Bacon, Mrs. Francis L.
Badenhausen, Phillips
Baer, B. F., Jr.
Bailey, Walter C, Jr.
Bains, Edward
Bains, Erskine
Baird, Joseph
Baker, Mrs. Louis C, Jr.
Baker, Mrs. William Spohn
Baker, Mrs. William Y.
Balch, Mrs. Edwin Swift
Balderston, Mrs. H. L.
Baldi, Mrs. C. C. A., Jr.
Ball, Alfred J.
Ballard, Frederic Lyman
Baltzly, Mrs. C. C.
Banes, Mrs. Walter D.
Barclay, Mrs. William
Lyttleton
Baringer, Milton F.
Barnes, George Emerson
Barnes, Mrs. John Hampton
Barratt, Alfred
Barringer, Mrs. Daniel
Moreau
Barrows, Mrs. Donald B.
Barrows, Mrs. Kenneth
Bartol, Eleanor G.
Bartol, Mary Grier
Bateman, T. H.
Bathe, Mrs. Greville I.
Baton, H. E.
Battles, Mrs. Frank
Bauer, Harold
Bauer, Mrs. Russell J.
Baur, Marie A.
Bausher, Mrs. Solon D.
Baxter, C. C.
Bayard, Elise Gill
Bayfield, Mrs. Arthur T.
Baylis, Mrs. William
Bayliss, Charles W.
Beale, Leonard T.
Beath, E. R.
Beaumont, Charles O.
Bechmann, Mrs. William
Beck, Charles W., Jr.
Becker, Abraham J.
Bedford, J. Claude
Bein, Amelia E.
Belding, Mrs. Wm. Squire
Bell, C. Herbert
Belmont, L. A.
Bennett, Mary H.
Benson, Mrs. James F.
Benson, R. Dale, Jr.
Bernstein, Edgar
Bernstein, Mrs. Edgar
Bertolette, Helen
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A., Jr.
Beta Gamma Sigma
Sorority
Bettison, William Reese
Beury, Charles E.
Bickley, George Howard
Biddle, Christine W.
Biddle, Mrs. Clement
Biddle, Edith F.
Biddle, Edward M.
Biddle, Mrs. Edward W.
Biddle, Francis
Biddle, Mrs. George
Biddle, Mrs. H. W.
Birdsall, Amos, Jr.
Birdsall, Joseph C.
Bissell, E. Perot
Blackburne, Mrs. John S.
Blagden, Mrs. A. S.
Blaisdell, Viola Margaret
Blakiston, Emma
Blakiston, M. E.
Blechschmidt, Jules
Bloch, Mrs. Bernard
Block, Mrs. Gordon A.
Bloomfield, Mrs. M. D.
Blumenthal, Mrs. Jacob
Blumenthal, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph
Blumenthal, Moses L.
Boisseau, Bernard
Bok, W. Curtis
Bole, Mrs. John Clark
Bond, Earl D.
Bonet, Evora
Bonsall, Alice R.
Borie, Charles L., Jr.
Bostoek, Edward C.
Bostwick, Mrs. Margaret B.
Bovell, Bernice Elizabeth
Bower, Mrs. George R.
Boyer, Mrs. Francis
Boyer, Mrs. Henry C.
Bradford, J. S.
Bradley, Mrs. Newell C.
Bragdon, George D.
Branin, Dorothy A.
Brasington, Elizabeth H.
Brazier, Mrs. H. Bartol
Bregy.Mrs. Caroline Harrah
Bretz, Carl
Breyer, Mrs. Henry W.
Brice, Mrs. C. Fred
Bright, John Irwin
Brinton, Clarence C.
Brinton, Mrs. Clarence C.
Brinton, Mrs. Joseph Hill
Brock, Anne Biddle
Brock, Mrs. Arthur
Brock, Elizabeth N.
Brock, Mrs. John Penn
Brockeroff, Margaret
Brodsky, Jacob H.
Bromley, Mrs. Charles S.
Bromley, Joseph H., Jr.
Brooke, Cornelia
Brooks, A. J.
Brown, Arthur Emlen
Brown, Mrs. C. M.
Brown, Mrs. Charles T.
Brown, Clarence M.
Brown, Coleman P.
Brown, Dee Carlton
Brown, Elizabeth S.
Brown, Everett H., Jr.
Brown, Mrs. Francis Shunk
Brown, Mrs. George W.
Brown, Herbert
Brown, Lydia Wellington
Brown, Paul G.
Brown, Mrs. Richard P.
Brown, Mrs. Samuel B.
Brown, Mrs. T. Wistar, 3rd
Brown, Mrs. Wilson H.
Browning, Mrs. Edward
Bruen, Catherine A.
Buckley, Edward S., Jr.
Budd, Edward G., Jr.
Bullard, Alfred
Bullen, J. Warren, Jr.
Bullitt, Margaret E.
Bullitt, Mrs. Orville H.
Bullock, Mrs. Benjamin
Burke, Harry
Burlap, Martin
Burnham, E. Lewis
Burnham, Mrs. George, 3rd
Burnshaw, Mildred R.
Burr, Charles W.
Burt, Edith B.
Burt, M. Theodora
Butcher, Mrs. Howard, Jr.
Buten, Harry
Butler, Mrs. Charles
Noble, Sr.
Butler, Mrs. George
Thomas
Buzby, Charles E., Jr.
Buzby, Ethel M.
Buzby, Marion E.
Bye, Mrs. Arthur Edwin
Byrnes, William C.
Cadwalader, Mrs. Lambert
Cadwalader, Mary Helen
Cadwalader.Mrs.William B.
Cahn, Tillman
Calder, Mrs. W. C.
55
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Caldwell, Mrs. J. E.
Calvert, Mrs. F. H.
Calwell, Mrs. Charles S.
Caner, Mrs. Harrison K.
Cardeza, T. D. M.
Carey, Bruce A.
Carpenter, John T.
Carr, Mrs. Charles D.
Carr, William A.
Carson, Elinor Stewart
Carson, Joseph
Carter, Mrs. Charles L.
Carwithen, Mrs. Van Court
Cary, Egbert S.
Cavendish, Mrs. George
S. G.
Chamberlain, Mrs.
William B.
Chamberlin, W. Edward
Chambers, Francis T.
Chambers, Francis T., Jr.
Chambers, J. Howard
Chance, E. M.
Chance, Mrs. Edwin M.
Chapman, Mrs. John P.
Chapman, Mrs. S. Hudson
Chase, Mrs. Randall
Cheston, Mrs. J. Hamilton
Chew, Anne S. P.
Chew, Elizabeth B.
Chrystie, Walter
Church, Herbert
Church, Mrs. Herbert
Clapp, Mrs. Algernon R.
Clark, Bertha
Clark, Mrs. Clarence H.
Clark, E. W., Jr.
Clark, Mrs. Edward W., 3rd
Clark, Mrs. Edward Lyon
Clark, Mrs. H. Ross
Clark, Hazel C.
Clark, Henry F.
Clark, Mrs. John G.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph Sill
Clark, Lewis Neilson
Clarke, A. Vinton
Clarke, Mrs. John M.
Clement, Mrs. John Stokes
Clement, M. Withington
Clement, Mrs. M.
Withington
Clement, Mrs. Samuel
M., Jr.
Clements, Samuel M., 3rd
Clerf, Louis H.
Clothier, Isaac H., Jr.
Clothier, Mrs. Isaac H., Jr.
Clothier, Mr. and Mrs.
Morris L.
Cluett, George A.
Coady, Mrs. Bartine
Coale, Edith S.
Coates, Mrs. J. Lloyd
Cobden, Mrs. A. B.
Coles, Mrs. Strieker
Coley, Walter R.
Colket, Mrs. C. Howard
Collingwood, Jennie
Conlan, Mrs. Walter A.
Conlen, William J.
Connelly, Mrs. John P.
Connett, Mrs. Harold
Connor, John J.
Connor, Sophie H.
Cook, Mrs. Chester P.
Cook, Gustavus W.
Cooke, Jay
Cooke, Mrs. Jay
Cooper, John Wendall
Cooper, Walter I.
Cope, Elizabeth M.
Corey, William B.
Corson, Mrs. Newton W.
Coulston, Charles Woods
County, A. J.
Coward, Mrs. Joseph
Cowperthwait, Charles T.
Coxe, Mrs. Charles E.
Coxe, Herman Wells
Craig, Mary H.
Crane, A. Ross
Crawford, Mrs. Andrew
Wright
Creighton, Edward B.
Croft, Samuel G.
Crosby, Arthur U.
Crossan, Mrs. Edward T.
Crouter, Gordon
Crowder, Emma A.
Crozier, Mrs. David E.
Culver, Mrs. Theodore B
Cummings, Howard C.
Curran, James
Curtiss, Elliott
Cutler, Walter P.
Dale, Edward C.
Dales, E. Lewis
Dalton, William J.
Dannenbaum, H. M.
Dannenbaum,
Mrs. Hermann
Dashiell, Mrs. Phillip T.
Davenport, Mrs. Russell W.
David, Mrs. Edward W.
Davids, Richard W.
Davidson, Philip L.
Davis, Bernard
Davis, Dorothy W.
Davis, Edna C.
Davis, Edward
Davis, Mrs. Edward
Davis, Eleanor Bushnell
Davis, H. L., Jr.
Davis, Jenness H.
Davis, Mrs. Norris D.
Davis, W. John
Dawes, James H.
Day, Mrs. Frank Miles
Dean, Georgeanna F.
Dearden, Mrs. Edward
Chapin
Deaver, Mrs. John B.
Dechert, Mrs. Henry
Taylor
Decker, T. Frank
Deckert, Mrs. Robert
deForest, Mrs. Robert W.
Delaplaine, Meribah
Delcher, Irving B.
Delta Finishing Company
DeLuca, Charles Q.
Denby, Charles, Jr.
Denckla, Mrs. C. Paul
Dercum, Mrs. Francis X.
Dercum, Mary DeHaven
Desmond, Mrs. M. L.
De Wolf, Mrs. Kalsey
De Wolf, Mary Howe
Dexter, Charles L.
Dickey, Mrs. Charles D., Jr.
Dickey, Eloise P.
Dickinson, Philemon
Dickson, Mr. and Mrs.
William T.
Diess, C. A.
Dietrich, D. W.
Dill, Alfred
Dillon, Edward Saunders
Dilworth, Richardson
Disston, S. Horace
Disston, Sophie
Dixon, Mrs. Edwin
Saunders
Dixon, F. E.
Dixon, Mrs. George Dallas
Doak, Charles B.
Dodd, Vernon
Dolbey, Edward P.
D'Olier, Mrs. Francis W.
Doll, Josephine
Dominick, Mrs. DeWitt
Donaldson, Mrs. Henry H.
Donnelly, L. M.
Doran, Josephine L.
Dorrance, Arthur C.
Dougherty, Mrs. Thomas
Harvey, Jr.
Doughten, William S.
Doughten, William W.
Douglass, Earl L.
Dowling, E. Marjorie
Downs, Mrs. Norton
Downs, Mrs. W. Findley
54
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Drabenstadt, George R.
Drain, John W.
Draper, Mrs. Arthur F.
Drucker, Jerome
Drueding, Caspar
Duane, Mrs. Russell
DuBarry, William H.
Duck, Mrs. George
Hepworth
Dudley, Mrs. Charles B.
Duer, John VanBuren
Duer, Mrs. John VanBuren
Duer, Mrs. S. Naudain
Duffield, Helen Morris
Dulles, Mrs. Heatly C.
Dunham, Mrs. Lloyd
Dunlap, Andrew M. E.
Dunlap, Mrs. James A.
Dunn, Mrs. Charles B.
Dunn, Mrs. George Garrett
du Pont, Mrs. H. B.
Duveen Brothers
Earle, Carolyn H.
Earp, Anne Tucker
Eastman, Mrs. Nedom A.
Eastwick, Abram T.
Eastwick, Joseph L.
Edmonds, Franklin Spencer
Edmonds, Mrs. Franklin
Spencer
Ehle, Mrs. Archibald Hyde
Ehret, Mrs. Harry
Eichholz, Adolph
Eisenbrey, Charles Henry
Elliott, Mrs. William J.
Elliott, George A.
Elliott, William C.
Ellis, Mrs. D. Rowland
Ellis, Mrs. Thomas Biddle
Ely, Gertrude S.
Ely, Mrs. VanHorn
Ely, William Newbold
Emerson, Edith
Emerson, Victor Frederick
Emerson, Mrs. Victor
Frederick
Emhardt, William H.
Emlen, Mary Carpenter
Emlen, Mrs. Samuel
Engle, Howard C.
English, Caroline C.
English, Mrs. Chancellor C.
Erie, John R.
Erdman, W. Kenney
Eshleman, Mrs. Benjamin
Essig, Joseph Richards
Esty, Mrs. Robert P.
Ettelson, Henry J.
Etting, Mrs. Emlen Pope
Evans, Mrs. Edmund C.
Evans, Mrs. George B.
Evans, Mrs. James D.
Evans, Rowland
Eves, Mrs. Curtis C.
Eysmans, Julien L.
Fable, Frederick A.
Fagan, Emma Lowry
Fairman, Mrs. William P.
Farley, Mrs. M. N.
Farnum, Henry W.
Farnum, Mrs. Henry W.
Farraday, Thomas P.
Fassitt, Mr. and Mrs.
John H.
Febiger, Mrs. Christian
Feldman, Jacob B.
Felton, Mrs. Edgar C, Jr.
Felton, J. Sibley
Felton, William C, Jr.
Fenninger, Mrs. Carl W.
Fernberger, Samuel W.
Fernley, Hattie M.
Fetter, Theodore R.
Fetterolf, Edwin H.
Fiechter, Clara M.
Fife, Mrs. Charles A.
Finckel, Eliza Royal
Finletter, Mrs. Edwin M.
Fish, Helen S.
Fisher, Mrs. E. Monroe
Fisher, Mrs. Philip B.
Fisher, Samuel
Fisher, Thomas
Fitler, Mrs. Harrison
Fittipold, Nicholas
Flanagan, Thomas J.
Fleisher, Henry H.
Fleisher, Jean
Fleisher, Mrs. Louis M.
Fleisher, S. S.
Fleisher, Walter A.
Fletcher, Mrs. Jane Gordon
Flint, George
Flood, Mrs. T. Bromley
Foerderer, Mrs. Edward
Foerderer, Elsie
Foerderer, Percival E.
Fogarty, William J.
Folz, Stanley
Ford, Mrs. Frank J.
Forster, H. Walter
Foster, Richard W.
Foulke, Hazel M.
Foulkrod, Emily
Fownes, Mrs. William
Clarke
Fox, Mrs. Alexander M., Jr.
Fox, Mrs. Caleb F., Jr.
Fox, Helen A.
Fox, Joseph Craig
Fox, Thomas J.
Frack, Mary A.
Franklin, Mrs. Walter S.
Freed, Morris A.
Freeman, Addison B.
Freeman, Albert L.
Freeman, George C.
Freeman, Mrs. Harold A.
Freeman, Mrs. M. M.
Freeman, Samuel Miller
Freeman, William C.
Freihofer, Charles
Freney, Margaret M.
Fries, Emma R.
Fritsche, Mrs. John
Fry, Mrs. James W.
Funk, Nevin E
Funsten, Mrs. Francis B.
Fussell, Robert
Gage, Clinton
Galey, William T., Jr.
Gallaudet, John C.
Gardiner, Mrs. John, Jr.
Gardner, Clarence
Garrett, Alfred C.
Garrett, Mrs. Alfred C.
Gates, Jay
Gates, Mrs. Jay
Gavaghan, Mary F.
Geauque, Marianna
Geist, Mrs. Bradley
Gendell, Elizabeth B.
Gerenbeck, Franklin C.
Gerenbeck, George
Gerhard, Albert P.
Gerstell, Nancy
Gerstley, Mrs. Isaac
Gessler, Grace M.
Gessner, Howard R.
Gest, Lillian
Gest, Mrs. William P.
Getty, Harry S.
Geyelin, Mrs. Anthony L.
Gibbon, Mrs. John H.
Gibbs, George
Gibbs, Mrs. Ralph A.
Gibson, Mrs. John
Hollenback
Gideon, Winfred S., 3rd
Gilbert, Mrs. John
Gilkyson, Hamilton H.
Gill, Mrs. Charles D.
Gill, John D.
Gillek, A. A.
Gillespie, Kate S.
Gillingham, Harrold E.
Gillingham, Mrs.Harrold E.
Gilmour, Mrs. Monroe T.
Gilpin, Mrs. John C.
Gimbel, Daniel
Goldberg, Mrs. Samuel
Goldberg, Samuel A.
Goldschmidt, Mrs. Samuel
55
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Goldsmith, Sidney
Good, Lloyd
Goodall, H. W.
Goodman, Mrs. Charles E.
Gorman, Bernadette M.
Graham, Mrs. Fred W. W.
Grange, Mrs. William D.
Grant, Mrs. Francis Clark
Grasselli, Mrs. T. S.
Graves, Russell B.
Gray, William F.
Green, Mrs. Robert M.
Greenberg, Joseph J.
Greene, Ryland Warriner
Greenough, Cornelia
Gribbel, Mrs. J. Bancker
Gribbel, W. Griffin
In memory of
Mrs. J. P. Crozer Griffith
Griest, Thomas H.
Groff, Mrs. Walter C.
Guetter, Julius
Guggenheim, S. E.
Gunthrop, Mrs. William P.
Gutekunst, William J.
Haas, Mr. and Mrs. Harry J.
Haas, Mrs. Kathryn N.
Hacker, Mrs. Arthur H.
Hacker, Elizabeth D.
Hackett, H. Berkeley
Haehnlen, Mrs. Walter L.
Hagan, Peter P.
Hagen, Constance H.
Hagstoz, Arthur T.
Halbkram, Albert R.
Haley, Daniel J.
Hall, Clarence E.
Hall, Mabel Bruce
Hallowell, Helen R.
Hallowell, Henry R.
Hallowell, Mrs. J. Wallace,
Jr.
Hallowell, Mrs. William S.
Halton, Thomas H., Sr.
Hamill, Mrs. Samuel McC.
Hamilton, Charles R.
Hammann, Ellis Clark
Hammond, Mrs. L. Jay
Hancock, Mrs. F. Woodson
Hancock, James H.
Hand, Helen G.
Hansbury, Charles C.
Hansche, Maude B.
Harbison, Helen D.
Harding, George M.
Harding, J. Morgan
Hardt, Frank M.
Hardt, J. William
Hare, Esther B.
Hare, T. Truxtun
Harlan, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph M.
Harper, Clarence L.
Harris, David W.
Harris, Mrs. Frazer
Harris, J. Andrews, 3rd
Harris, Mrs.J.Andrews, 3rd
Harris, Mrs. James Russell
Harris, Linden T.
Harrison, Charles Custis, Jr.
Harrison, Mrs. Charles
Custis, Jr.
Harrison, Mrs. Charles
C, 3rd
Harrison, George L.
Harrison, Mrs. George L.
Harrison, Mrs. Harry W.
Harrison, Mrs. John, Jr.
Harrison, William Welsh, Jr.
Harshaw, Edward
Hart, Olive Ely
Hart, Mrs. Thomas
Hart, Mrs. William H.
Hartshorne, Mrs. Edward
Yarnall
Hartung, Francis C.
Haskell, Harry G.
Haskins, Mrs. Harold
Hastings, Mrs. Donald W.
Hatfield, James S.
Hatfield, Mrs. James S.
Haupt, Grace G.
Hauptle, Mrs. C. H.
Havey, Charles F.
Haviland, James T.
Hawthorne, Mrs. Herbert
Reid
Hay, Mrs. Charles
Hay, Mrs. J. Howard
Haydock, Mrs. H. W.
Hayt, Mrs. Todd
Hayward, Anna Howell
Hayward, Mrs. Nathan
Hazard, Spencer P.
Hazlett, James V.
Head, Mrs. Joseph
Headman, Anna E.
Heberton, Robert M.
Heim, Oscar E.
Heineberg, Mrs. Hazel M
Helbert, George K.
Hellerman, Mrs. Harry
Hemphill and Company
Henderson, Mrs. George R.
Henderson, Walter G.
Henning, Mary E.
Henry, Mrs. Bayard
Henry, George W, Jr.
Henry, Mrs. H. P.
Henry, Mrs. Seton
Hensel, Mrs. E. Caven
Hepburn, Mrs. Charles J.
Hepburn, Mrs. Wm. W.
Hepworth, John M.
Herkness, Mrs. Lindsay C.
Herman, Mrs. Elliott F.
Herman, Mrs. Leon
Hetherington, Mrs.
Albert G.
Heuer, Henry F.
Heyl, Juliet F.
Heymann, Roy A.
Heyward, Mrs. R. B.
Hibbs, Helen
Hiergesell, Valentine
Highley, Mrs. George N.
Hill, Mrs. J. Bennett
Hill, Mrs. John Parker
Hilles, Franklin S.
Hinchman, Mrs. C. Russell
Hindle, H. L., Jr.
Hires, Mrs. Charles E., Jr.
Hoare, Daniel W.
Hochstrasser, John H.
Hockaday, Agnes
Hoffman, Mrs. C. F.
Hoffman, C. Fenno
Hogg, J. Renwick
Hogg, Mrs. J. Renwick
Hogue, Robert M.
Hogue, Mrs. Robert M.
Holden, Hallie K.
Hollingsworth, John P.
Hollingsworth, Mrs. John P.
Hood, Mrs. George Gowen
Hooper, Mrs. Robert P.
Hopkinson, Mrs.
Edward, Jr.
Hopper, Mrs. Charles
Sterling
Hopper, Marie Louise
Horn, Herman C.
Horner, Hannah Mee
Horstmann, I. J.
Horstmann, Mrs. Walter
Horstmann.Mrs.William H.
Houston, Samuel F.
Houston, Mrs. Samuel F.
Howard, Mrs. Edgar B.
Howard-Smith, Mrs. Logan
Howell, Cooper
Howell, Josephine F.
Huber, Mrs. John Y., Jr.
Huey, Mrs. Arthur B.
Hughes, Esther M.
Huntoon, D. T. V.
Hurlburt, Frank
Hurlburt, W. Merritt
Huston, Laetitia P.
Huston, Mary Perot
Hutchinson, A. P.
Hutchinson, Arthur Emlen
56
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Hutchinson, Katharine P.
Hutchinson, Meta H.
Hutchinson, Mrs. S.
Pemberton
Huttinger, Mrs. E. Pau]
Hylands, Frank F.
Hyslop, Jane
Hiff, Mrs. Arthur R.
Illman, Adelaide
Indahl, M. C.
Ingersoll, Anna Warren
Ingersoll, Mrs. C. Jared
Ingersoll, Mrs. Edward
Ingersoll, George E.
Ingersoll, Mrs. R. Sturgis
Irving, Mrs. James
Irwin, Mrs. Samuel B.
Jackson, Mrs. Joseph Taylor
Jacobs, Mrs. Geo. W., Jr.
Jacobs, Mrs. John
Jacobs, Mrs. Yarnall
Jameson, Norman Lee
Jameson, Mrs. Norman Lee
Jamison, John M.
Jarden, Mrs. Walter H.
Jastrow, Mrs. Morris
Jeanes, Mrs. Henry S.
Jeanes, Mrs. Isaac W.
Jeanes, Mrs. Joseph Y.
Jefferys, Mrs. Edward M.
Jefford, W. Shermer
Jenkins, H. Lawrence
Jenkins, Mrs. Theodore F.
Jenks, Mrs. John Story
Jennings, Annie Burr
Jennings, Mrs. Charles B.
Jepson, Mrs. Paul
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Jr.
Johnson, Florence M.
Johnson, Mrs. Mary D.
Johnson, Walter H.
Johnson, Walter James
Johnston, D. V.
Joiner, Franklin
Jones, Mrs. A. E.
Jones, Arthur Woodruff
Jones, Frances E.
Jones, Henry Hand
Jones, Horace C.
Jones, Livingston E.
Jones, Mrs. Livingston E.
Jones, Peyton B.
Jones, Mrs. Spencer L.
Jones, Thomas E.
Jones, Winston
Joraleman, Mrs. L. D.
Jordan, Frederick
Jordan, Joseph J.
Judson, Mrs. Charles F.
Junkin, George B.
Junkin, Mrs. George B.
Justice, Mrs. George L.
Justice, William Warner
Kaeser, Charles W., Jr.
Kain, Mrs. Peter
Katz, Mrs. William H.
Kaufman, Frank M.
Keator, Mrs. John Frisbee
Keen, Mrs. Kennard G.
Keiser, Elmer E.
Keith, Mrs. Mary C.
Keith, Mrs. Sidney W.
Keller, Joseph S.
Kelley, George E.
Kelly, Frank Brooks
Kendall, Mrs. Paul
Kendrick, Mrs. Murdock
Kenworthy, Mrs. Thomas
Kerr, Mrs. George M.
Kessemeier, R. T.
Ketcham, Howard
Kilburn, Mary S.
Kimball, Fiske
Kincaid, William
Kind, Mrs. Paul A.
King, Katharine S.
King, Lydia E.
Kinnard Mrs. Leonard
Kinsey, Helen F.
Kirk, Mrs. Edward C.
Kirkpatrick, Samuel
Kitchen, Mrs. Edith M.
Custis
Klahr, Emma
In memory of
Wilbur Paddock Klapp
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur
Paddocks, Jr.
Klauder, George C.
Klein, Alfred M.
Klein, Louis F.
Klein, Max D.
Klein, Samuel A.
Klemm, Mrs. J. George, Jr.
Knabe, Pauline G.
Kneass, Edwards
Knight, D. Allen
Knipe, Walter E.
Knowles, Frank Crozer
Knowles, Richard
Knup, Jacob, Jr.
Kohn, Alfred
Kohn, Bernard
Kolb, Alice May
Koyl, George Simpson
Koyl, Mrs. George Simpson
Kraus, Gilbert J.
Krauss, Mrs. Sydney L.
Kremer, John
Kress, Mrs. C. C.
Krewson, W. Stanleigh
Krumbhaar, Mrs. C.
Hermann
Kuch, Mrs. Herman F., Jr.
Kuemmerle, Gustave C.
Kuhn, C. Hartman
Kunkel, Elizabeth B.
Kurtz, William Fulton
LaBoiteaux, Mrs. Isaac
Lacey, Mrs. J. Madison
Laird, Mrs. J. Packard
Lakey, Arthur B.
Lakey, Mrs. Arthur B.
Lamb, Mrs. William H.
Lamberton, Robert E.
Landenberger, Mrs. J. L.
Langston, Samuel M.
Langston, Mrs. Samuel M.
La Rue, Joseph N.
Larzelere, John L.
Latham, Margaret V. D.
Lauer, Conrad N.
Lauer, Harry I.
Lavino, Edwin M.
Law, Edward
Law, Margaret L.
Lawler, Percy E.
Lawson, Harry
Lea, Van Antwerp
Lear, John B.
Leas, Mabel Alice
Lechner, Harvey L.
Lee, Mildred W.
Leedom, Mrs. Charles
Leeds, Arthur N.
Leeds, Mrs. Morris E.
Lefton, Al Paul
Leisenring, Mrs. Edward B.
Lennig, Rufus King
Lenz, David M.
Leopold, Mrs. R. S.
Lesley, Mrs. Robert W.
Lester, Joseph G.
Levering, Frank D.
Levinson, Max
Levy, Alexander S.
Levy, Howard S.
Levy, Lionel Farraday
Levy, Mrs. Lionel Farraday
Lewis, Anna Shippen
Lewis, Charles A.
Lewis, Mrs. Clarence J., Jr.
Lewis, Clifford, Jr.
Lewis, Mrs. Clifford, Jr.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 3rd
Lewis, H. G.
Lewis, Mrs. Howard W.
Lewis, Isabel Jenkins
Lewis, Mrs. John
Frederick, Jr.
Lewis, Shippen
Lewis, S. Weir
57
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Lewis, Mrs. William Draper
Ligget, Mrs. Howard B.
Lincoln, Mrs. George
Jones, Jr.
Lindenmeyer, Mrs. M. M.
Lindley, George W.
Linea weaver, Mrs. Charles P.
Lingelbach, William E., Jr.
Linn, Mrs. William B.
Linton, M. Albert
Linville, Mrs. Walker E.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph W.
Lippman, Robert
Little, Mrs. Royal
Lloyd, Mrs. Horatio Gates,
Jr.
Lloyd, Mrs. Stacy B.
Lochhead, Catherine P.
Locke, Mrs. Robert W.
Loeb, Mrs. Adolf
Loeb, Ludwig
Logan, Mrs. John W.
Logan, Robert R.
Logan, William H.
Long, Walter E.
Longaker, Daniel
Longbottom, Mrs. John E.
Longshore, William A.
Longstreth, Mrs. Howard
Lorimer, Graeme
Lotz, Nellie
Louchheim, Mrs. Joseph A.
Louchheim, Mrs. William S.
Loux, Susanna M.
Lovell, J. Barton
Low, Mrs. Howe
Lucas, Mrs. H. Spencer
Lucas, Mrs. William W.
Lukens, Margaret M.
Lull, George D.
Lyons, Mrs. John E., Jr.
Mabie, Walter C.
MacCoy, Marjorie N.
Macdonald, Robin
MacGeorge, Beatrice
Mackinnon, Robert, Jr.
Maddock, Henry A.
Madeira, Mrs. Louis C.
Madeira, Percy C, Jr.
Magee, George W.
Magill, Mrs. James P.
Magill, Mrs. Samuel N.
Major, Mrs. Edward K.
Mallery, Otto T.
Manning, Frederick J.
Manship, Edith
Marceau, Henri
Margerum, Bess
Maris, Mrs. Henry J.
Markland, Geo. L., Jr.
Markmann, Nathan
Markoe, Mrs. Henry
Marshall, C. J.
Marshall, Sara T.
Marshall, Thomas R.
Marston, Mrs. C. Harold
Martin, E. Gwen
Mason, Mary T.
Mason, William Clarke
Mason, Mrs.William Clarke
Massey, Frank H.
Mathers, Frank F.
Mathers, Mrs. Frank F.
Mathewson, Robert J.
Matthews, Frank C.
Matthews, Mrs. Louis I.
Mattis, Robert N.
Maule, Mrs. Edmund W.
Maule, Margaret C.
Maulsby, Matilda
Mauran, Frank
Maxwell, Mrs. John R.
Mayer, Alfred
Mayer, Mrs. Clinton 0.
Mayer, Mrs. Henry C, Jr.
McAdoo, Mrs. Henry M.
McAllister, Mrs. J.
Rutherford
McBride, Thos. D.
McBurney, Mrs. Andrew M.
McCahan, Mrs. William J.
McCall, Virginia A.
McCarthy, D. J.
McCarthy, Mrs. D. J.
McCarthy, Edmund Burke
McCawley.Mrs.William M.
McCloskey, Mrs. John F.
McCook, Mrs. Walter
McCormick, Mrs. Vance
McCouch, Mrs. Eric A.
McCouch, Mrs. H. Gordon
McCracken, Robt. T.
McCreery, Mrs. Samuel
McCullough, Mrs.
Edmund H.
McCurdy, Mrs. J. Aubrey
McDonald, Mrs. Ellice
McDowell, Charles
McEldowney, Mrs. J.
McElroy, Mrs. Clayton
McFall, Henry F.
McGeehan, James
McGettigan, Daniel I.
McGlone, Bartgis
McGowin, Mrs. R. S.
Mcllhenny, Selina B.
Mcllvain, Mrs. J. Gibson
Mclntire, A. Reed
McKean, Mrs. Bispham
McKean, Nancy B.
McKeever, William
McKenna, Bernard A.
McKenna, John A.
McLain, Mrs. Louis
McLean, Mrs. Charles V.
McLean, Charlotte F.
McLean, Robert
McLean, Robert L.
McLean, Mrs.WilliamL., Jr.
McLellan, Ralph
McManus, Charles J.
McMichael, Mrs.Charles B.
McMillan, Thomas M.
McMulIan, James
McMullan, Mrs. James
McOwen, Mrs. Frederick
McShea, John B.
McVitty, Mrs. Albert E.
Meehling, Mrs. B. Franklin,
Jr.
Meigs, Mrs. John F., 2nd
Meil, William J.
Mellor, Walter
Meltzer, Mrs. Leon
Meranze, Mrs. David R.
Merchant, Mrs. Thos. E.
Merrick, Mary R.
Merrick, Mrs. Samuel
Vaughan
Mertz, Oscar E.
Meyer, Mrs. Johanna
Meyers, Clarence L.
Miller, Mrs. Charles C.
Miller, E. Spencer
Miller, George
Miller, Walter P., Jr.
Millville Manufacturing
Company
Milne, Mrs. David
Milne, Francis F., Jr.
Milne, Mrs. Warren
Mink, George W., Jr.
Mirkil, I. Hazleton
Mitchell, Mrs. J. Clayton
Mitchell, George
Mitchell, Mrs. James F.
Mitchell, Samuel P.
Mock, Mrs. Henry
Moffatt, Mrs. J. H.
Monroe, Eleanor P.
Montgomery, Mrs.
Grenville D.
Montgomery, Mary Binney
Montgomery, W. W., Jr.
Monty, Mrs. Austin
Moore, Edgar B.
Moore, Mrs. H. McKnight
Moore, J. Clark, Jr.
Moorhouse, Mrs. H. Wilson
Moranz, Vincent
Morford, W. B.
Morgan, Mrs. F. Corlies
Morgan, Mrs. Marshall S.
58
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Morgan, Mrs. Reed A.
Morrell, Mrs. Edward deV.
Morris, Mrs. A. Saunders
Morris, Caspar Wistar
Morris, Mrs. Caspar Wistar
Morris, Ellen
Morris, F. W., Jr.
Morris, I. Wistar
Morris, Mrs. I. Wistar
Morris, Marriott C.
Mortimer, Stockton H.
Mortimoore, Mrs. Charles
Mosley, R. V.
Moyer, Allen B.
Mueller, Charles G.
Murtha, Mrs. Patrick L.
Musser, Mrs. Charles S.
Musser, Mrs. John H.
Myers, George deB.
Myers, W. Heyward
Nalle, Mrs. Jesse
Neale, James B.
Nehrbas, Mrs. George E.
Neilson, Mrs. Lewis
Neubauer, Lorenz
Newbold, Mrs. Arthur E.
Newburger, Frank L.
Newhall, C. Stevenson
Newhall, Mrs. Daniel A.
Newhall, Mary
Newkirk, Martha Bacon
Newlin, Mrs. Richard M.
Newton, A. G.
Newton, C. S.
Niblo, James M.
Nicholson, Mrs. J. Whitall
Nicholson, Mrs. Margaret
Niesson, Arthur A.
Norberg, Mrs. Rudolph C.
Norris, Mrs. Chas. C, Jr.
Norris, George W.
North, C. Ruth
North, John Paul
Noyes, Mrs. B.
Nye, Mrs. Robert B.
Oakford, Frances S.
Oakley, Mrs. Thornton
Obermayer, Leon J.
Odman, Mrs. Nelson
Oelbermann, Mrs. Julius
Oeters, Edgar O.
Okie, R. Brognard
O'Nan, C. H.
O'Neill, W. Paul
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Paul
Orlemann, Henry P.
Orr, George P.
Ortlip, Harry S.
Osborne, Mrs. Charles F., Jr.
Osterlund, O. W.
Otto, John Henry
Packard, Mrs. Francis R.
Packard, Mrs. George R.
Packard, Mrs. John H., 3rd
Page, Mrs. Howard Wurts
Page, Mrs. Robert H.
Painter, Mrs. Herbert B.
Palmer, Mrs. Frederic
Pancoast, Mrs. Albert
Park, Marion Edwards
Parlin, Charles C.
Parrish, Hugh R.
Parrish, Mrs. Hugh R.
Parrish, Morris L.
Parsons, Ella
Patterson, Mrs. George
Stuart
Patton, Mrs. J. Lee
Patton, Mrs. John W.
Paul, A. J. Drexel
Paul, John Rodman
Paul, W. P.
Paulson, Frances E.
Peabody, Malcolm E.
Peacock, William
Pears, Thomas C, Jr.
Pearson, Mrs. Joseph T.
Pearson, Joshua Ash
Pease, Mrs. Henry H
Peck, Mrs. Arthur
Peiffer, Alfred H.
Peirce, Thomas May, Jr.
Peirce, Wilmot Grant
Peirce, Mrs. Wilmot Grant
Pendleton, Constance
Penington, Mrs. Albin G.
Pennegar, Mrs. Lee A.
Pennsylvania Society of
Miniature Painters
Penny packer, Bevan A.
Penrose, Mrs. d'Este
Pepper, Mrs. B. Franklin
Pepper, Mrs. George Willing
Pepper, Mrs. O. H. Perry
Pepper, Mrs. William
Perkins, Charles C.
Perkins, Mrs. T. H. Dudley
Perrin, Charles C.
Perris, Mrs. N. M.
Peters, Mrs. Thomas
Willing
Pettit, Mrs. Horace
Pew, Arthur E.
Pew, Mrs. J. Edgar
Pew, J. N., Jr.
Pew, Mrs. John G.
Pew, Mrs. Walter C.
Pfaelzer, Mrs. Frank
Pharo, Mrs. Walter W.
Philler, William R.
Philler, Mrs. William R.
Phillippe, Mrs. B.
Pemberton
Pierce, Guy C.
Pierie, Mrs. George Gorgas
Piper, Mrs. Edmund B.
Piatt, Mrs. Charles, 3rd
Piatt, Henry N.
Piatt, John O.
Pocock, J. J.
Polk, Florence
Polk, Mrs. William D.
Pollock, Margaret P.
Pollock, Roxanne W.
Pomeroy, John Nevin
Pope, Mary
Porcher, Samuel
Porter, Mrs, Charles A., Jr.
Porter, Elva
Porter, Mrs. W. Hobart
Post, August E.
Post, Mrs. L. Arnold
Post, William
Potsdamer, Joseph S.
Potts, William M.
Powel, Mrs. T. I. Hare
Powers, Mrs. Fred Perry
Price, Franklin Haines
Price, Mrs. Franklin Haines
Price, Philip
Price, Walter F.
Prime, Alice M.
Prince, David Chandler
Purcell, William P.
Purviance, Julia Evelyn
Pusey, George T.
Putnam, Mrs. Earl B.
Pyle, Mrs. Chester N.
Quin, Katherine McK.
Rader, Mrs. Archibald
Fleming
Raditz, Lazar
Raffetto, Marian E.
Rainear, Mrs. C. J.
Raiziss, Mrs. Anna
Randolph, Mrs. Evan
Ranken, Harold R.
Ransley, Mrs. Harry Clay
Rawle, Louisa
Rea, Robert W.
Read, William B.
Reath, Mrs. Benjamin
Reath, Thomas
Reber, J. Howard
Rebman, Henry J.
Rebmann, G. Ruhland, Jr.
Rebmann, Mrs. Walter
Redman, Mrs. John L.
Reed, Mrs. Alan H.
Reed, Mrs. Arthur J.
Reed, Jacob, Sons
Reed, Luther D.
59
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Reel, Ida Virginia
Reese, Warren S.
Reeves, Mrs. A. S.
Reeves, Mrs. F. B., Jr.
Reeves, Mrs. Horace A.
Reeves, Mrs. Samuel, J.
Reich, Nathaniel Julius
Reichert, Emma H.
Reilly, Mrs. Joseph H.
Reisner, Herbert W.
Remmey, Robert H.
Revise, Charles W.
Rhoads, Mrs. Logan
Rhoads, Lydia W.
Rhoads, Owen B.
Rhoads, William E.
Richardson, Grace P.
Richardson, Tolbert N.
Richmond, Francis H.
Richter, B. Nathaniel
Riesman, David
Riggs, Robert
Riley, Rose Markley
Ring, Mrs. Mark D.
Ristine, Mrs. Charles S.
Riter, Mrs. Michael M., Jr.
Rivel, Thomas
Rivinus, Mrs. E. Florens
Robb, Mrs. Henry B.
Robb, Max
Robbins, Frederic R.
Robbins, George S.
Roberts, Charles B., 3rd
Roberts, Clarence V.
Roberts, George W. B.
Roberts, H. Radclyffe
Roberts, Isaac W.
Roberts, Rowland E.
Robertson, Samuel E.
Robertson, Wilfrid H.
Robinson, Mrs. Dwight
Parker
Robinson, Mrs. Louis
Barclay
Robinson, Mrs. Samuel
Rodgers, Mary L.
Roma, Mrs. Frank
Root, Joseph L.
Rosenbaum, Robert
Rosenbaum, Samuel R.
Bosengarten, Mrs.
Adolph G.
Rosengarten, Frederic
Rosengarten, George D.
Rosengarten, Mrs. Harold
Rosengarten, Howard D.
Rosengarten, Mrs. J.
Clifford
Rosengarten, Joseph G.
Rosenwald, Mrs. Lessing J.
Ross, Mrs. Henry A.
Ross, Sophia L.
Ross, T. Edward
Rossmassler, Elfrida
Rothschild, Mrs. Harry S,
Rowland, Mrs. Louis fl.
Rowland, Mrs. Wm. 0., Jr.
Royal, Thomas M.
Rumpp, Marie W.
Rumpp, William A.
Runk, Louis B.
Rush, Julia
Russell, Mrs. C. J.
Russell, Norman F. S.
Rust, Harry R.
Ryder, Grace G.
Sachsenmaier, George
Sackett, Mrs. Franklin P.
Sailer, A. Jackson
Sailer, Emily W.
Samuel, Bernard
Sanson, Mrs. Albert W.
Sargent, Mrs. Winthrop
Sartori, Mrs. Frank A.
Saul, Mrs. Maurice B.
Saul, Maurice Bower
Saul, Walter Biddle
Saul, Mrs. Walter Biddle
Savage, Mrs. Ernest C.
Sax, Percival
Saxe, Nathaniel
Saylor, Harold D.
Sayre, Frank G.
Scattergood, Mrs. Alfred G.
Scattergood, J. Henry
Scattergood, Mrs. Thomas
Schaeffer, Mrs. S. H.
Schaffer, William I.
Schaffer, Mrs. William I.
Scheckter, I. Jerome
Schell, S. Gertrude
Schenck, Eunice Morgan
Schenck, Julius
Schick, Elma H.
Schireson, Henry J.
Schirmer, Walter F.
Schmidt, Henry R.
Schnader, Mrs. William A.
Schneider, Mrs. Karl J.
Schoettle, Mrs. Edwin J.
Schoettle, Ralph, Jr.
Schoettle, Wm. C.
Schoff, Mrs. Leonard H.
Schofield, Mrs. Everett A.
Scholl, John R.
Schor, Arthur R.
Schorr, George J.
Schulte, August B.
Schwartz, Mrs. H. W.
Scott, Mrs. Alexander H.
Scott, Alice A.
Scott, Edgar
Scott, Ernest
Scott, Florence B.
Scott, Mrs. John Scanlin
Scott, John T., Jr.
Scott, Richard S.
Scott, Thomas M.
Scrivanich, D.
Scull, William Ellis
Scull, Mrs. William S.
Sebring, Henrietta
Seeley, Mrs. Oscar
Seitchik, Louis
Selig, Solomon
Sellers, Mrs. Horace Wells
Sellers, Mrs. Howard
Serody, Michael
Serrill, A. M.
Serrill, Helen P.
Serrill, Mrs. William J.
Sessler, J. Leonard
Shakespeare, Mrs.
Edward 0.
Shand, Helen E.
Shannon, Amanda J.
Sharpies, Mrs. Philip T.
Sharpless, S. Franklin
Sharpless, T. Wilson
Shaw, Dexter, N.
Sheaffer, Mrs. Theodore C.
Sheble, Mrs. Frank J.
Sheer, Philip L., & Son
Shellenberger, Betty
Shellenberger, Mrs.
Charles D.
Shelton, Mrs. F. H.
Shepard, William V. K.
Sheppard, Mrs. A. Maxwell
Shewbrooks, D. M.
Shields, J. Franklin
Shillard-Smith, Mrs. C.
Shipley, Thomas Emlen
Shoemaker, Benjamin H.
Shoemaker, Mary Williams
Short, Joseph A.
Shriver, Mrs. Mel H.
Shryock, Genevieve
Shupp, Mary R.
Shuster, Frank H.
Sibley, Florence
Sibley, Walter G.
Sill, Mrs. Harold Mont-
gomery
Silverman, Samuel S.
Simon, Elmer D.
Sinclair, John S.
Singer, Edgar A., Jr.
Singer, Jacob
Sinkler, Charles
Sinkler, Ella Brock
Sinkler, Julia U.
Sinkler, Mildred P.
60
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Sinkler, Wharton, Jr.
Sinnickson, Mrs. Charles
Sinnock, John Ray
Siter, Mrs. E. Hollings-
worth
Skilling, Mrs. Joseph
Kennard
Skinker, Mrs. Alexander R.
Slade, Mrs. Alexander T.
Slattery, Joseph A.
Slifer, Levina
Small, Mrs. Francis
Smedley, William H.
Smith, Alfred Percival
Smith, Mrs. Edward W.
Smith, Ethel
Smith, Mrs. Frederic W.
Smith, Mrs. G. Allen
Smith, Geoffrey S.
Smith, Mrs. George Mark
Smith, Mary C.
Smith, W. D.
Smith, Mrs. Wikoff
Smith, Winfield H.
Smythe, Stewart
Snedaker, E. Raymond
Snedaker, Mrs. E. Raymond
Snellenburg, A.
Snellenburg, Mrs. Harry H.
Snellenburg, Joseph N.
Snellenburg, Mrs. Morton E
Snow, Mrs. Philip C.
Snyder, Allen G.
Snyder, George H.
Snyder, M. L.
Sonneborn, George A.
Spaeth, Edmund B.
Spangler, John L.
Spellissy, Mrs. Amy W.
Spretor, Mrs. Roy F.
Standen, Edith A.
Stansfield, Mrs. William
Starkweather, John K.
Starr, Mrs. Edward
Starr, Floyd T.
Steel, A. G. B.
Steel, Mariana J.
Steere, Jonathan M.
Steiner, George R.
Steiner, Mrs. Kathryn
Stem, Samuel G.
Stem, Mrs. Samuel G.
Stern, Bertha
Stern, Edward & Co., Inc.
Stern, Mrs. Horace
Sternberger, Mrs. M. K.
Stevens, John
Stevens, Mrs. John
Conyngham
Stewardson, Eleanor P.
Stewart, Frank G.
Stewart, Mrs. John
Stewart, Mrs. W. Plunket
Stifel, Virginia
Stirling, Edmund
Stockwell, David
Stokes, Mrs. Charles P.
Stokes, F. Joseph, Jr.
Stokes, Mrs. F. Joseph, Jr.
Stokes, Francis J.
Stokes, Henry W.
Stokes, Mrs. J. Tyson
Stokes, Mrs. W. Standley
Stout, Mrs. A. L.
Stout, Philip S.
Strauss, Berthold
Strawbridge, Edward R.,
2nd
Strawbridge, Mrs.
Francis R.
Strawbridge, Louise
Strawbridge, Mrs. Robert E.
Strawbridge, Mrs. Welsh
Stroock, Bertram A.
Stroud, Edward A.
Stroud, Morris W.
Stuart, Mrs. George H., 3rd
Sullivan, Edith
Sundheim, Harry G.
Sunstein, Mrs. Leon C.
Sussel, Arthur J.
Sweeny, Barbara
Sweeny, Mary B.
Swoyer, A. Elizabeth
Talimer, Mrs. Bernard
Tatnall, Mrs. H. Chace
Tatnall, Henry
Tatum, Mrs. Richard Parry
Taws, Henry M.
Taylor, Florence E.
Taylor, Mrs. Fred W.
Taylor, Mrs. Frederick
Winslow
Taylor, Mrs. J. Madison
Taylor, Mrs. John M.
Taylor, Louis B.
Taylor, Martha
Taylor, Mrs. Otis Ellery
Taylor, Mrs. Presley
Morgan
Taylor, Mrs. W. T.
Teitrick, Ruth V.
Temple, Edward B.
Thatcher, Mrs. A. G.
Thayer, Mrs. Alexander D.
Thayer, Mrs. G. C.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., 3rd
Thomas, Mrs. Arthur H.
Thomas, Mabel L. H.
Thompson, Mrs. Charles I.
Thompson, Mrs. Justice M.
Thompson, Mrs. R. Ellison
Thompson, Mrs. William A.
Thorington, Mrs. J. Monroe
Thorn, Mary
Tidball, Mrs. William
Timanus, Mrs. J. H. R.
Titus, Mrs. Robert R.
Todd, Anne Hampton
Toland, Mrs. Owen J.
Torrey, Robert G.
Townsend, Caspar W. B.
Townsend, Edward Y.
Townsend, Mrs. Frederick
E. A.
Trask, Mrs. John E. D.
Trimble, Mrs. Francis C.
Trump, Mrs. William H.
Tucker, Mrs. Gabriel
Tucker, Mrs. Helen
Turner, J. Archer
Tustin, Mrs. Ernest L.
Tuttle, William C.
Tyler, Charles A.
Tyler, George F.
Tyler, Mary Graham
Underdown, Mrs. Henry T.
Utile, Mrs. William F., Jr.
Valentine, Mrs. John R.
VanDusen, Katharine P.
VanDusen, Lewis H.
VanLeer, Mrs. William M.
VanPelt, Gertrude
VanSciver, Earl J.
VanSciver, J. Bishop
Vauclain, Mrs. Andrew C.
Vauclain, Anne
Vauclain, Samuel M.
Vaughan, Charles Z.
Vogdes, Joseph J.
Vogleson, Mrs. John
Von Moschzisker, Mrs.
Robert
Vrooman, Mrs. Samuel B.
Wagner, Mrs. George
Ellwood
Wagner, John
Wagner, Mrs. William M.
Walker, Mrs. Robert C.
Walker, William W.
Walkling, Adolph A.
Walton, Mrs. Charles S., Jr.
Walton, Horace Andrews
Walton, Mrs. Thomas W.
Walz, Mrs. Edward A.
Warden, Mrs. Clarence
A., Jr.
Warner, Mrs. M. B.
Warner, Walter
Warrick, William H, Jr.
Warriner, Mrs. Samuel D.
Warthman, Mrs. J. Harris
Wasserman, William Stix
61
ANNUAL MEMBERS (Continued)
Waterworth, Mrs. Harold A.
Watkins, Mrs. Franklin C.
Watson, Frank R.
Wayne, Joseph, Jr.
Wayne, Mrs. Joseph, Jr.
Wayne, William
Wear, Mrs. William Potter
Webber, Mrs. Harold
Weber, David
Weber, Ernest G.
Weber, F. W.
Weihenmayer, Harry W.
Weil, Mrs. Edwin
Weill, Mrs. Alfred S.
Weinberg, Sol
Welchy, Mrs. Albert
Wells, Mrs. G. Harlan
Wendler, Mrs. Paul B.
Wenger, Mrs. Morris
Wentz, Mrs. Daniel B.
Wescott, Lucille H.
West, William Morton
West, W. Nelson L.
Weston, Mrs. Frederick W.
Wetherill, Mrs. Francis M.
Wetherill, John Price, Jr.
Wetherill, Samuel P., Jr.
Wetherill, Mrs. Samuel
P., Jr.
Wetter, Mabel H.
Weyl, Esther M.
Wheelwright, Robert
Whelen, Mrs. John H, Jr.
Whelen, Mrs. Lewis Bell
Whelen, Mrs. T. Duncan
Whelen, Mrs. William
Baker
Whitaker, Ralph
White, Elizabeth Gibbons
White, Margaret Gibbons
White, Mrs. William
Whitridge, Mrs. Roland B.
Widener, Mrs. P. A. B., 2nd
Wiederseim, Theodore E.
Wiedersheim, Mrs. William
A., 2nd
Wigton, Mrs. Frank H.
Wilhelm, Charles
Willard, DeForest P.
Willcox, Mrs. William J.
Willet, Henry Lee
William Penn Charter
School
William, Mrs. Carroll R.
Williams, F. Churchill
Williams, Horace J.
Williams, Joseph D.
Williams, Thomas S.
Willing, Charles
Willing, Mrs. Elizabeth G.
Willing, Mrs. James Kent,
Jr.
Willing, Mrs. Joseph K.
Wills, Frank A.
Wilmeth, James L.
Wilson, Mrs. Stanley E.
Wiltbank, Mrs. George M.
Winsor, Mrs. Curtin
Winsor, Ellen
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Jr.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., 3rd
Winston, Maurice J.
Wintersteen, Mrs. A. H.
Wintersteen, Mrs. John
Wirkman, Emanuel W.
Wirz, Mrs. H. M.
Wistar, Edward M.
Wistar, Rebecca B.
Wister, Mrs. Lewis W.
Wolf, Mrs. Albert
Wolf, Mrs. Benjamin
Wolf, Howard A.
Wolf, Louis
Wolfe, Joseph L. N.
Wolstenholme, Mrs.
Frederick
Wood, Mrs. Alan D.
Wood, Mrs. Alexander
C, Jr.
Wood, Mrs. Charles R.
Wood, Mrs. Edward F. R.
Wood, George Bacon
Wood, Grahame
Wood, M. Louise
Woodall, John
Woodall, Mrs. John
Woodcock, Mrs. Floyd W.
Woods, Mrs. Ralph
Woodward, Mrs. Samuel
Woolman, Mrs. Edward
Woolman, Henry Newbold
Woolman, Mrs. Henry
Newbold
Wright, Alice M.
Wright, Mrs. F. S.
Wright, Hannah C.
Wright, Harrison B.
Wright, Mrs. Harrison B.
Wright, Mrs. Joseph V.
Wright, Mrs. Philip H.
Wright, Mrs. Sydney L.
Wunder, Clarence E.
Yarnall, Mrs. D. Robert
Yeatman, Georgina Pope
Yeats, Mrs. J. Wilbur
Yellin, Samuel
York, Mrs. Edward H., Jr.
Young, Eva Gregg
Young, Mrs. Marie LeM.
Zantzinger, Mrs. Alfred
Zantzinger, Mrs.
Clarence C.
Zieget, Julius
Ziegler, Mrs. Carl A.
Ziegler, J. Charles
Zimmerman, Anna W.
Zimmerman, Mrs. John E.
Zimmermann, William
Zion, Harry F.
62
FORM OF BEQUEST OF PERSONALTY
I give 'and bequeath unto the Philadelphia Museum of Art the
sum of i i,
■ - - dollars,
free of all taxes.
Witnesses .
FORM OF DEVISE OF REAL ESTATE
I give and devise unto the Philadelphia Museum of Art all that
certain {here insert a description of the property) free of all taxes.
Witnesses.-
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Contributing Member $05 a year
Sustaining Member $10o a year
Associate $250 a year
Life Member $500 at one Ume
FeIlow $1,000 at one time
Patron $5,000 or more
Benefactor $25,000 or more
The Museum Bulletin and notifications of special exhibitions and
Museum events and School lectures may be sent to
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Address
Gifts or bequests for either the Museum or the School should be
made to the PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART.
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