- Source: List of sketches of notable people by Marguerite Martyn
This is a list of sketches of notable people, or of their close relatives, drawn by Marguerite Martyn (American journalist, 1878–1948) and published in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
A
Jane Addams, pioneer settlement worker
Judge Glendy B. Arnold of the divorce court
Carrie Thomas Alexander-Bahrenberg, University of Illinois trustee
Helen Dinsmore Huntington Astor, Republican Party activist
Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor, British politician
Rachel Foster Avery, pioneer suffragist
B
Roger Nash Baldwin, a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union
Illinois Congressman-elect William N. Baltz and his daughters
Bertha Barr, delegate to 1936 Republican National Convention
Ethel Barrymore, actress
Alva Belmont, socialite and suffrage benefactor
Mrs. Perry Belmont (Jessie Ann Robbins), wife of the New York politician and diplomat
Sarah Bernhardt, actress
Elizabeth Lucy Bibesco, English writer and socialite
Amelia Bingham, actress
Alice Stone Blackwell, suffrage leader and editor
Emily Newell Blair, writer, suffragist, feminist, Democratic Party leader
Harriot Stanton Blatch, suffragist
Anna E. Blount, president of the National Medical Women's Association
Susan Elizabeth Blow, educator, the "Mother of the Kindergarten"
'Round-the-world journalist Nellie Bly
Film actress Eleanor Boardman
Lawyer and suffragist Inez Milholland Boissevain
Catherine Booth-Clibborn of the Salvation Army,
Louise DeKoven Bowen, financial supporter of suffrage movement
Mary Carroll Craig Bradford, the only woman delegate at the 1908 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado
Catherine Breshkovsky, "grandmother of the Russian revolution"
Helene Hathaway Robison Britton, owner of the St. Louis Cardinals
Sallie Britton, daughter of James H. Britton, mayor of St. Louis, married to James Mackin, New York state treasurer
Izetta Jewel Brown, actress, women's rights activist and Democratic politician
Mary K. Browne, professional tennis player and amateur golfer
Attorney Mary Baird Bryan and her husband, William Jennings Bryan, two-time presidential candidate, and two grandchildren
Actress Billie Burke
Mrs. Adolphus Busch III (Florence McRhea Lambert), first wife of the brewery executive
Sarah Schuyler Butler, Republican activist
C
S. Parkes Cadman, minister and advice columnist
Steelmaker Andrew Carnegie
Anna Ella Carroll, politician, pamphleteer and lobbyist
Anna Case, opera singer
Dancer and animal-rights activist Irene Castle, wife of Chicago businessman Frederic McLaughlin
Dancer Vernon Castle
Carrie Chapman Catt, suffrage leader
Espiridiona Cenda, dancer also known as Chiquita
Cécile Chaminade, French composer
Percival Chubb, Ethical Cultural Society leader
Kate Claxton, actress
Mrs. Cornelius Cole, one of the first three women accredited to a Republican National Convention
Nancy Cook, suffragist, educator, political organizer, businesswoman
Phoebe Couzins, lawyer
Caroline Bartlett Crane, known as "America's housekeeper" for her efforts to improve sanitation
Raymond Crane, comedian and actor
Missouri Lieutenant Governor Wallace Crossley
Mrs. Shelby Cullom (Julia Fisher), wife of the Illinois senator
Pearl Lenore Curran, author and medium, wife of John H. Curran, Missouri immigration commissioner.
D
Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels and his wife, Addie Worth Bagley
Dwight F. Davis, businessman and founder of the Davis Cup
Rose Davis, rodeo rider
Thamara de Swirsky, dancer
Actress Marie Doro
Loren and Dora Doxey, accused of murder
Anne Dallas Dudley, suffragist
E
Aviator Amelia Earhart
Crystal Eastman, feminist and political activist
Catherine (Kitty) Elkins, daughter of Senator Stephen Benton Elkins, who wanted to marry Prince Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi
Effie Ellsler, actress
Julian Eltinge, cross-dressing actor
F
Martha P. Falconer, social reformer
Diomede Falconio, apostolic delegate from the Vatican to the United States
Frank H. Farris, attorney, member of both the Missouri state Senate and its House of Representatives
Beatrice Farnham, artist and entrepreneur, the wife of John Otto (park ranger)
Martha Ellis Fischel, social service worker, mother of Edna Fischel Gellhorn, suffragist and reformer
Judith Ellen Foster, government official
James F. Fulbright, representative, Missouri Legislature
G
Joe Gans, boxer
Mary Garden, actress
Missouri Governor and Mrs. Fred Gardner
Dancer Adeline Genée
Edna Fischel Gellhorn (Mrs. George), suffragist and reformer
James Gibbons, Roman Catholic cardinal
Artist Charles Dana Gibson
Irene Langhorne Gibson, philanthropist and Democratic National Convention delegate, the original Gibson Girl
Catholic Archbishop John J. Glennon
Emma Goldman, activist and writer
Samuel Gompers, labor leader
Edith Kelly Gould, wife of a millionaire Gould
Edward Howland Robinson Green, the only son of the miser Hetty Green
Isabella Greenway (Mrs. John C.), Arizona politician
Minnie J. Grinstead, teacher, Republican politician, and temperance worker
H
Mrs. Herbert S. Hadley (Agnes Lee), wife of Missouri's governor
Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale, English actress, lecturer, and writer
Anna Dall, daughter of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt
Florence Mabel Harding, wife of President Warren G. Harding
Grace Carley Harriman, social leader and philanthropist
Mary Garrett Hay, New York suffragist
Grace Bryan Hargreaves, daughter of the William Jennings Bryans
Millicent Hearst, philanthropist and wife of the newspaper magnate, William Randolph Hearst
Robert Herrick (novelist)
Sallie Aley Hert, Republican activist, married to Alvin Tobias Hert
Dancer and choreographer Gertrude Hoffmann
Helen B. Houston, wife of David F. Houston, secretary of agriculture
Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, wife of the Republican activist
Writer Fannie Hurst
May Arkwright Hutton, Idaho suffragist
J
Charles "Buffalo" Jones, frontiersman, farmer, rancher, hunter, and conservationist
Mary Harris Jones, or "Mother" Jones, labor organizer
K
Annette Kellerman, athlete who swam the English Channel
Florence Kelley, social and political reformer
Araminta Cooper Kern, wife of John W. Kern, the Democratic candidate for Vice-President, and their son, William
Missouri State Senator Thomas Kinney
L
Mrs. Albert Bond Lambert, socialite. Her husband was an industrialist, aviator, and golfer.
Mrs. William Palmer Ladd, wife of the dean of the Berkeley Divinity School
Jacob M. Lashley, lawyer, debated film censorship
Judge Ben Lindsey, social reformer
Ruth Bryan Leavitt, politician and the first woman appointed as a United States ambassador
Fifi Widener Leidy, daughter of Pennsylvania art collector Joseph E. Widener and wife of New York politician George Eustis Paine
Lydia Lipkowska, opera singer
Jack London, writer
Alice Roosevelt Longworth, celebrity and daughter of Theodore Roosevelt
Daniel A. Lord, American Catholic writer
Joan Lowell, actress
Felice Lyne, singer
M
Mrs. Norman E. Mack, wife of the editor and publisher of the Buffalo Daily Times, with their daughter, Norma
Percy MacKaye, actor, director, playwright
Elliot Woolfolk Major, Missouri governor, and his wife
Richard Mansfield, actor
Lois Marshall, wife of Vice-President Thomas R. Marshall
Elisabeth Marbury, theatrical and literary agent and producer
Anne Henrietta Martin, president of the National Woman's Party
Frederick Townsend Martin, New York society leader and writer
Ned Martin, dancer and choreographer
Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo, daughter of President Wilson and wife of William Gibbs McAdoo
Ellen Wilson McAdoo, daughter of Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo and William Gibbs McAdoo
Sterling H. McCarty, representative, Missouri Legislature
Edith Rockefeller McCormick (Mrs. Harold), socialite and opera patron
Katrina McCormick, Republican activist
Ruth Hanna McCormick (Mrs. Medill), Republican politician
Catherine Waugh McCulloch, lawyer and suffragist
Mary McDowell, social reformer
George McManus, cartoonist, and Florence Bergere
"Countess" Candido Mendes de Almeida, wife of the Brazilian politician
Elizabeth Avery Meriwether, author and suffrage advocate
Mrs. Lee Meriwether, wife of the author
Patsy Ruth Miller, motion picture actress
Tamaki Miura, opera singer
Anne Tracy Morgan, philanthropist
Alexander Pollock Moore, diplomat, editor and publisher
Isabel Morrison, wife of New York politician Timothy Woodruff
"Czar" Thomas E. Mulvihill Sr., St. Louis excise commissioner
Actress, dancer, film producer, and screenwriter Mae Murray
N
Alla Nazimova, actress
Oscar Nelson, boxer
Ione Page Nicoll, worked for repeal of the 18th (Prohibition) Amendment
Lillian Nordica, opera singer
O
Barbara Blackman O'Neil (Mrs. David), socialite and suffragist
Mrs. John E. Osborne (Selena Smith), wife of the governor of Wyoming
P
Theophile Papin, society leader and "squire of debutantes"
Sylvia Pankhurst, English suffragist
Charles Henry Parkhurst, social reformer
Cissy Patterson, journalist and publisher
Irene Pavloska, opera singer
Anna J. Hardwicke Pennybacker (Mrs.Percy), president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs
Alexandra Carlisle Pfeiffer, actress and suffragist
Gifford Pinchot, forester and politician
Florence Collins Porter, newspaper editor, clubwoman, political campaigner, a Republican
Ruth Baker Pratt, Republican politician
Florence Pretz, inventor of the Billiken doll
R
Mrs. James A. Reed (Lura M. Olmsted), wife of the former U.S. senator from Missouri
Ben Reitman, anarchist and medical doctor
Agnes Repplier, essayist
Mrs. Alexander Revell, wife of the Illinois businessman
The young Florence Wyman Richardson, daughter of the older Florence Wyman Richardson and sister-in-law to Ernest Hemingway
Lucyle Roberts, rodeo rider
Margaret Dreier Robins, labor leader
Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, writer and lecturer
Duchesse de la Rochefoucauld, Parisian property owner
Ginger Rogers, actress
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt
Kermit Roosevelt, writer and businessman, son of Theodore Roosevelt
President Theodore Roosevelt, his wife (Edith Roosevelt) and his daughter (Ethel Roosevelt)
Nellie Tayloe Ross, Republican politician and ex-governor of Wyoming
Charlotte Rumbold, St. Louis and Cleveland social reformer
Lillian Russell, the actress
Patrick John Ryan, Catholic prelate
S
Pauline Sabin, Republican activist opposed to Prohibition
Katherine Sandwina, circus strongwoman
Birth-control advocate Margaret Sanger
Nathaniel Schmidt, educator
Rose Schneiderman, labor-union executive
Mrs. Nathan B. Scott, wife of the U.S. senator from West Virginia
Cecil J. Sharp, who introduced folk dancing to the United States
Finley Johnson Shepard, businessman-husband of Helen Gould
Anna Howard Shaw, suffrage leader
Ruth Hanna Simms, politician, activist and publisher
Mrs. Al Smith (Catherine Ann Dunn), wife of the New York governor, and their daughter, Emily Smith Warner
Elizabeth Blackmon Smith, popular author of romantic fiction who wrote under the name Mrs. Harry Pugh Smith
Evangelist Gipsy Smith and his wife, Annie E. Pennock
Senator Reed Smoot of Utah
Ethel Annakin Snowden, British suffragist and pacifist.
Christine Bradley South of Kentucky, chairman, Woman's Division, Republican National Committee
Lena Jones Wade Springs, nominated for U.S. vice-president at 1924 Democratic national convention
Katherine Stinson, aviator
Rose Pastor Stokes, socialist activist, writer, and feminist
Winifred Sackville Stoner Jr., child prodigy
Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury (Eva Roberts Cromwell), wife of the investment banker
Representative William Sulzer of New York and his wife, Clara Rodelheim
Thamara de Swirsky, Russian dancer[]
T
Mrs. Charles P. Taft, wife of the newspaper publisher, and Louise Taft, their daughter
Presidential candidate William Howard Taft and Helen Herron Taft, and their grandchildren
Lilyan Tashman, actress
Sara Teasdale, poet
Ellen Terry, actress
Luisa Tetrazzini, opera singer
M. Louise Thomas, educator.
Socialite Edwine Thornburgh, later married to Englishman Wilfrid Peek
Genevieve Clark Thomson, suffragist, reporter, Louisiana politician and daughter of Speaker of the House Champ Clark
Prince Paul Troubetzkoy, a Russian artist, and Princess Troubetzkoy, his American wife
Grace Wilbur Trout, Illinois suffragist
U
Harriet Taylor Upton, political activist and author, a Republican
V
Bernard Vaughan, Roman Catholic priest from the UK
Louise Vermilya, mass murderer
Bertha Von Suttner, Nobel laureate
Rube Waddell, baseball player
W
Charlotte Walker, actress
Eugene Walter, playwright
Fannie Ward, actress
Mabel Walker Willebrandt, attorney and Republican activist
Ella Wilson, first woman mayor of Hunnewell, Kansas, reputedly the first woman mayor in the nation
President Woodrow Wilson and his family, Mrs. Wilson, and their daughters, Margaret, Jessie, and Eleanor
Film actress Claire Windsor
Jane Frances Winn, who wrote under the name "Frank Fair"
Wu Tingfang, Chinese ambassador to the United States
Margaret (Mrs. John) Wyeth of St. Louis, delegate to 1935 Republican National Convention
Y
Julie Chamberlain Nichols Yates, sculptor; wife of Halsey E. Yates, Army officer
Ella Flagg Young, educator
Mrs. Lafayette Young, wife of the Iowa newspaper publisher
References
Citations are to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch microfilm records.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of sketches of notable people by Marguerite Martyn
- Marguerite Martyn
- Sketch (drawing)
- Berbers
- Takuma Kajiwara
- List of people with surname Smith
- Inez Milholland
- List of Huguenots
- Kabylia
- Fannie Hurst