Robert Haven Schauffler, author, lecturer, and musician, was born of American missionary parents in Brünn, Austria, on April 8, 1879. The family returned to the U.S. two years later, where Shauffler later attended Northwestern University (1898-1899) and Princeton University, earning his B.A. in 1902. He pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Berlin from 1902 to 1903. As a cellist, Schauffler studied under Steindel, Schroeder, and Hekking. In 1904, he married Katharine de Normandie Wilson, who died in 1916. During World War I, Schauffler was commissioned as Second Lieutenant in the Infantry of the U.S. Army, in which he was also an instructor in the Officers Training School at Camp Meade, Maryland. He participated in the Allied invasion of France, where he was severely wounded before the battle of Montfaucon in the Meuse-Argonne offensive. Having been decorated with the Order of the Purple Heart, he was discharged May 28, 1919. Schauffler then resumed his career as author and lecturer, which he continued until his death in 1964.
Schauffler held positions as editor of
The collection consists primarily of incoming correspondence, including typed and holograph manuscripts, postcards, Christmas cards, photographs, newspaper clippings, autographs, and a calendar. The materials are arranged alphabetically by correspondent. Outgoing correspondence is interfiled with the incoming correspondence.
Robert Haven Schauffler's wide circle of friends and professional associates is well documented in this collection. Correspondents include musicians, composers, authors, family members, scholars, and admirers. Subjects range from the clumsiness of Schumann's compositional notation to Charlotte Brontë and fundamental questions concerning the poetic process. Among the more significant pieces of correspondence are a series of letters from Grace Hazard Conkling, in which she discusses the character and literary theories of Amy Lowell, Germany and German music, the image of porpoises in her own verse, George Saintsbury's
In addition, there are a number of typed and holograph manuscripts of poems, including Katherine Lee Bates's “The Debt,” Robert Graves's “Burrs & Brambles,” Clement Allison's “The Matter with the Poets” and others, poems by Clark Ashton Smith and George Sterling, Louis Untermeyer's “Spratt vs. Spratt” with corrections in his own hand, Edmund Gosse's “The Fear of Death,” poems by Jessie Kemp Hawkins, Richard Hovey's “Matthew Arnold,” Robert Underwood Johnson's “October” and “Portae Musarum,” poems by Theda Kenyon, George Cabot Lodge's “Life and Death,” poems by Charles F. Lummis, James Oppenheim, Sir Charles G. D. Roberts, and Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, and Charles Hanson Towne's “Silence,” among many others. A poem by Siegfried Sassoon, “In Sicily,” is included as a printed publication from the series, “The Ariel Poems.”
In his capacity as musician and biographer of Beethoven, Brahms, and Schumann, Schauffler also received correspondence from such figures as the composer Edwin Grasse, Alfred Einstein, Pablo Casals, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Gregor Piatigorsky, the German concert pianist Elly Ney, Leopold Stokowski, Joseph Szigeti, and Arturo Toscanini. Subjects touched on in the musical correspondence include the Grasse Trio, the difficulties of the blind, musical performance, public taste in music, horseback riding as an inspiration for musical composition, the twelve-tone scale, Igor Stravinsky, Schauffler's
Other subjects touched on in the collection include the anxiety of German citizens before the outbreak of World War II and their attempts to leave the country, public taste in and reception to literature, the didactic qualities of literature, publishing, the effects of European travel on the American abroad, writers' colonies, the establishment of Israel as an independent nation, the military, college life, and marriage. The correspondence also contains material of a more personal nature, including condolences on the death of Schauffler's first wife, admiration for his poetry, thanks for various assistances and gifts provided by Schauffler, and congratulations on his remarriage.
In addition, there is a folder of autographs of famous singers from the Metropolitan Opera at the turn of the century. Among those included are Emilio Bevignani, David Bispham, Andreas Dippel, Lilli Lehmann, Eugenia Mantelli, Adolf Mühlmann, Lillian Nordica, Pol Plançon, Lempriere Pringle, Edouard de Reszke, Jean de Reszke, Anton van Rooy, Albert Saléza, and Ernestine Schumann-Heink. There are also a few photographs of some of these performers in various roles: Ernestine Schumann-Heink in an unidentified role; David Bispham as Albrecht; Pol Plançon as Méphistophélès in
The collection was received in two alphabetical sequences, a division which was apparently made for sale purposes. Therefore, these two sequences have been combined into one alphabetical sequence. The folder containing autographs of opera singers and the holograph fragment by Jeanne Chausson was not interfiled within the main sequence but was, rather, filed at the end of the sequence. The autographs of Johan Bojer and Alexander Siloti and the envelope addressed by Sidney Lanier were pulled from the main correspondence sequence because their format suggested collocation with the other autographs.
Further material relating to Schauffler may be found in the following Ransom Center collections: Robert Underwood Johnson, Christopher Darlington Morley, PEN, Grant Richards, and Idella Purnell Stone.
Purchase, 1966
Open for research
Robert Kendrick, 1995-1996