
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
EMILY PUTNAM SCHRAMM
(1864-1889)
1 linear inch
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ACQUISITION: |
The sketchbooks (donor no. 250) were
purchased by the Special Collections Department in 1996. |
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ACCESS: |
The sketchbooks are open for research. |
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COPYRIGHT: |
Copyright has been transferred to The University of Iowa. |
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PROCESSED BY: |
Margaret Richardson, 1998 |
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Biography
Emily Louise Putnam was born in 1864 in Burlington, Iowa,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Putnam.
She had one sibling, age and sex unknown. James Putnam had been prominent in Burlington but moved to
Kentucky. Emily Putnam married Charles
E. Schramm, a successful dry goods businessman, while in her early twenties. She buried her only child on November 8,
1889 and died of puerperal fever November 11, 1889.
Scope and Content Note
The
Emily Putnam Schramm sketchbooks date from 1887 to 1889 and measure one linear
inch. They accompany three obituary
notices from Burlington newspapers announcing the deaths of Emily Schramm’s
mother Louise Ruble Putnam in 1878, Emily Putnam Schramm in 1889, and Emily’s
husband Charles E. Schramm on August 26, 1913.
Each of the sketchbooks is dated inside the front cover, one 1887 and
the other 1888. Each sketch is also
dated, the last dated sketch February 21, 1889.
Emily Schramm sketched landscapes, concentrating a great deal on the Mississippi River. She labeled several of her drawings, including “Maiden’s Rock,” “Rush Slough,” “Picnic Point,” and “Shady Isle.” To one she gave a few words; she drew a boy, a horse, and a fish. She labeled each and gave the weight: “horse, 228 class,” “boy (age 9) 225 lbs.,” “ fish, 18 lbs.” She drew many isolated trees, several homesteads with meticulous detail of windows, porches, chimney and fences. One series of sketches may be self-portraits: a young woman seated at the piano, a young woman leaning against a tree, and a young woman sitting on a riverbank. She sketched mostly in pencil but occasionally used ink.