University of Oregon Libraries
Special Collections & University Archives
1299 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1299
URL: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/speccoll/index.html



Guide to the Ruth Murray Underhill Papers, 1959-1965


Ax 570





Finding aid prepared by Vida Germano

Finding aid encoded by Rose M. Smith, June 2003
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.


Overview of the Collection

 
Repository Name:
 

University of Oregon Libraries
Special Collections & University Archives

1299 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1299
URL: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/speccoll/index.html

 
Collection Number:
 

Ax 570

 
Creator:
 

Underhill, Ruth Murray, 1884-1984

 
Title:
 

Ruth Murray Underhill papers

 
Dates:
 

1959-1965 (inclusive)

 
Quantity:
 

3.5 linear feet
3 containers

 
Languages:
 

Collection materials written in English. 

 
Summary:
 

Ruth Murray Underhill (1884-1984) was a social worker, anthropologist, and teacher. She studied the Papago tribe of Southern Arizona while attending Columbia University. The collection includes her manuscripts, minor correspondence, and mementos of George W. Ingalls (1838-1920), Indian agent and superintendent of religious work among Indians for the American Baptist Home Mission Society.

 

Biographical Note

Ruth Murray Underhill was born in Ossining, New York, an wealthy suburb outside of New York City, on August 22, 1884. She was the oldest of four children born to Abram Sutton Underhill and Anna Taber Murray. At age sixteen, she traveled with her family across Europe, which sparked her interest in languages and human culture. After graduating from Vassar College in 1905, with a degree in English, Underhill taught Latin at a boys military academy in Ossining.

Underhill became interested in social issues and became a social worker in Boston, working for the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Shortly after, she worked at a settlement house in Brooklyn, where she decided that social work did not change society as much as she would have liked. Taking a break for two years, she traveled Europe, returning to New York City where she continued social work. After World War I, Underhill worked for the Red Cross in Italy, helping Italian orphans.

For a brief time, Underhill was married, but quickly divorced. By 1930, Underhill began attending Columbia University, taking various classes until she found an interest in anthropology. Under the direction of Franz Boas, the head of the department, and Ruth Benedict, a professor, Underhill studied the Papago tribe of Southern Arizona. At the same time, she assisted at the anthropology department at Barnard College. In 1934, Underhill received her PhD from Columbia.

While studying the Papago, Ruth Underhill learned their language. She was adept at learning languages, as she learned French, German, Spanish and Italian before studying the Native American tribal language of the Papago. The tribe did not have a written language, so Underhill wrote each word phonetically, and also translated the writings to English. She wrote several books from the information gathered on the tribe, which were published a few years later. After three summers studying the Papago, her fellowship funding ended and she decided to work for the federal government.

Working first as a soil conservationist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Underhill soon began work at the Bureau of Indian Affairs as an anthropological consultant. From 1942 to 1948, she supervised Indian education. Her work at the department focused on a study of the Mohave tribe, but later included brief studies of almost every tribe in the United States. Underhill wrote pamphlets for the Bureau, as well as continuing her professional writing.

In the late 1940s, Underhill accepted a position as an anthropology professor at the University of Denver. She wrote many books, articles and other publications while teaching. After retirement in 1952, Underhill continued to write and lecture across the country. Ruth Murray Underhill died on August 15, 1984.

Source: Paton, Pat. "Ruth Underhill Remembered: A Backwards Glance into the Life of a Noted Anthropologist." Colorado Heritage, 1985 (1): 14-21.

Content Description

The Ruth Murray Underhill Papers consist of various versions and states of research material for three books. Also included are her manuscripts, minor correspondence, and mementos of George W. Ingalls (1838-1920), Indian agent and superintendent of religious work among Indians for the American Baptist Home Mission Society. The major Ingalls manuscript, "Customs and Legends of the Indians," told by Ingalls and written by Vernille DeWitt-Warr about 1915, is included in the collection.

Arrangement

Collection is organized into the following series: Series I, Antelope Singer; Series II, Beaverbird; Series III, Red Man's Religion; Series IV, Corespondence; Series V, Addenda: Red Man's Religion; Series VI, Publications included in the collection; Series VII, Major G. W. Ingalls.

Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Access 

Collection is open to the public.

Collection must be used in Special Collections & University Archives Reading Room.

Restrictions on Use 

Property rights reside with Special Collections & University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries. Copyright resides with the creators of the documents or their heirs. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted to the Manuscripts Librarian in Special Collections & University Archives. The reader must also obtain permission of the copyright holder.

Preferred Citation 

[Identification of item], Ruth Murray Underhill Papers, Ax 570, Special Collections & University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries, Eugene, Oregon.

Subjects

This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings.

 
Ingalls, George W., 1838-1920
Underhill, Ruth Murray, 1884-1984--Archives
Antelope singer
Beaverbird
Red man's religion
Indians of North America--West (U. S.)--Religion
Tohono O'Odham Indians
Women anthropologists--United States
Manuscripts for publication

Detailed Description of the Collection

The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.


 

Antelope Singer

New York, Coward-McCann, 1961. (Original title: Nummer Boy)
 
 
Container(s)
Description
 
box
1
folder
1-2

First Draft. Original with holograph and pasted up revisions
 
 
3
Manuscript as submitted to Alice Torrey. Original and carbon. Chapters 2-12
 
 
4
Early versions. Fragments discarded after rewritten. Chapters 10-16. (Originally 6-12). Original with holograph revisions
 
 
5
Fragments. Chapters 1-3. Original without revisions. (Still titled Nummer Boy, so are early versions). 23. Loose pages. Carbon with extensive revisions. 9. Loose pages. Original pp. 166-170 without revisions
 
 
6
Research materials. 1 folder. Plus two linear inches of 3 x 5 note cards
 

 

Beaverbird

New York, Coward-McCann, 1959
 
 
Container(s)
Description
 
box
1
folder
7

Carbon typescript
 
 
8
Early version, probably first draft. Original with extensive holograph and pasted-up revisions. Fragments
 
 
9
Second version. Original with extensive holograph and pasted up revisions. Fragments
 
 
10-11
Third version. Original with extensive holograph and pasted up revisions. Fragments
 
 
12
Plot outline. Original. 4. Chapter 1. Original and carbon. 7. each. Chapter 2. carbon
 
 
13
Galley proofs. Complete
 
 
14
Research materials. 1 folder plus two linear inches of 3 x 5 note cards
 

 

Red Man's Religion

Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1965
 
 
Container(s)
Description
 
box
1
folder
15-17

Carbon typescript as submitted to University of Chicago Press. 365. plus footnotes
 
 
18
Correspondence with University of Chicago Press, notes. The following chapter headings in subsequent folders reflect at least six rewritings of the manuscript. In some cases it will be noted that the same chapter bears several titles. An attempt has been made to establish the following in rough chapter order. Materials include originals, carbons, holograph leaves, working notes, past-ups
 
 
19
Foreword. Fragments
 
 
20
The Tangles Skein
 
 
21
Angela. Fragments
 
 
22
Indians and the Supernatural
 
 
23
Not Religion but Religions
 
 
24
Religion has a Geography and a History
 
 
25
Geography of Religions. Fragments
 
 
26
Impersonal Power
 
 
27
Impersonal Power. Fragments
 
 
28
World Origins
 
 
29
Indian Theology: The Genesis Story
 
 
30
World Origins. Fragments
 
 
31
Indian Theology: The Spirits
 
 
32
The Spirits
 
 
2 1
Ceremonies of the Planting Indians. Eastern Woodland
 
 
2
Ceremonies of the Planting Indians. Fox. Potawotami, Winebago
 
 
3
Agricultural Ceremonies. East. Iroquois. Fragments
 
 
4
Agricultural Ceremonies. Pueblo. Fragments
 
 
5
Agricultural Ceremonies. Pawnee. Fragments
 
 
6
Modern Religion. Religion Post White. Fragments
 
 
7
Untitled
 
 
8
Maps and Illustrations. Captions
 
 
9
Footnotes
 
 
10
Notes. One folder on archaeology, plus eight linear inches of 3 x 5 note cards on Indian religion and ceremonies
 
 
11
Singing for Power: The Song Magic of the Papago Indians of Southern Arizona. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1938. Fragments
 
 
12
Shaman and Medicine Man
 
 
13
Shaman, Medicine Man and Priest
 
 
14
The Vision
 
 
15
Indian Ceremonialism
 
 
16
Indian Ceremonialism. Sundance. Notes
 
 
17
Hunting and Gathering Rituals
 
 
18
Hunting and Gathering Rituals. Fragments
 
 
19
Ceremonies of the Planting Indians
 
 
20
Ceremonies of the Planting Indians
 
 
21
Woman Power. Fragments
 
 
22
The Mysteries of Birth
 
 
23
Death in the Afterworld
 
 
24
Death. Fragments
 
 
25
Medicine Man, Shaman and Priest
 
 
26
Correspondence
 
 
27
Early drafts
 
 
28
Early drafts
 
 
29
Early drafts, miscellaneous pages and insertions
 
 
30
Early drafts, miscellaneous pages and insertions
 
 
31
Late drafts
 
 
32
Late drafts
 
 
33
Late drafts
 
 
34
Notes, biliography, and index
 
 
35
Galley: Planting Ceremonies, Pueblos
 

 

Publications included in the collection

 
Container(s)
Description
Dates
 
box
2
folder
36

Indian and the Law. T. H. Hass. Washington, D. C., United State Indian Service
  1949
 

Mushroom of Colorado and Adjacent Area. M. H. Wells and D. H. Mitchell. Denver, Colorado, Denver Museum of Natural History
  1966
 

Navajo Times (Window Rock, Arizona) Vol. IV (1963). Nos. 24, 32-37, 39-41, 45-48 Vol. V (1964). Nos. 3-21, 23-24, 26, 29, 33-35, 46, 48, 50-53. Vol. VI (1965). No. 1
  1963-1965
 

Pine Ridge Research Bulletin. Pine Community Mental Health Program, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Nos. 1-9
  1968-1969
 

Ten years of Tribal Government under IRA. T. H. Hass. Washington, D. C., United States Indian Service
  1947
 

Miscellaneous publications (5 items)
 

 

Major G.W. Ingalls

 
Container(s)
Description
 
box
3
folder
1-3

Miscellaneous research files of Major G. W. Ingalls, including manuscripts, publications, research files, etc. These files seem to be concerned with legends, customs, and traditions of Indians of the Southwest.