Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/nv9352861
Thomas Mann Collection, 1881-1971: Finding Aid
C0295

Princeton University Manuscripts Division
One Washington Road
Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA
Phone: (609) 258-3184
Fax: (609) 258-2324
rbsc@princeton.edu
http://www.princeton.edu/~rbsc
Published in 2000
©2007 Princeton University Library
Summary Information
- Creator:
- Mann, Thomas, 1875-1955.
- Title and dates:
- Thomas Mann Collection, 1881-1971
- Abstract:
- Consists of letters, manuscripts, photographs, and other materials from Nobel Prize winning author Thomas Mann, given by Caroline Newton, and also of those collected by Princeton University Library with funds provided by Caroline Newton.
- Size:
- 6.10 cubic feet (12 boxes)
- Call number:
- C0295
- Location:
- Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Manuscripts Division.
Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA - Language(s) of material:
- English. German.
- Storage note:
- This collection is stored onsite at Firestone Library.
Biography of Caroline Newton and Thomas Mann
Caroline Newton was a psychoanalyst, once a student of Freud in Vienna. Newton gave generously to Princeton of her books as well as her manuscripts. She was the daughter of the well-known collector A. Edward Newton. The Thomas Mann Collection consists of letters, manuscripts, photographs, and other materials given by Caroline Newton, and also of those collected by Princeton University Library with funds provided by Caroline Newton.
Thomas Mann, brother of Heinrich Mann, was an author of novels, plays, and essays. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1929, fled Germany and came to the U.S. (to Princeton) in 1938, and became a citizen in 1944. Among his best-known works (in English translation) are Buddenbrooks (1901), Death in Venice (1912), and The Magic Mountain (1924). Other publications by Mann include The Holy Sinner (New York: Knopf, 1951), Die Betrogene (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 1953), Der Erwahlte (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 1967).
Caroline Newton first met Thomas Mann in Berlin in 1929. When he had to leave Germany in 1937, she offered him her house in Jamestown, Rhode Island, and then she helped the Manns establish their home at 65 Stockton Street, Princeton, New Jersey, in 1938. By then Mann was a major German novelist, winner of the 1929 Nobel Prize for Literature, and author of Buddenbrooks. He wrote Lotte in Weimar and began Joseph The Provider while in Princeton. He died August 12, 1955. Caroline Newton arranged for two Mann commemorations at Princeton in 1964 and 1970. Newton died January 20, 1975 at age 82.
Description
The collection contains works of Mann including lectures, addresses, radio broadcasts (1942-1943), proofs for Der Erwahlte and a chapter of Lotte in Weimar, and a facsimile of Die Betrogene, as well as correspondence between Mann and many German and American intellectuals, such as Charles Neider, Arthur Hubscher, Hans Hulsen, Erich von Kahler, and Caroline Newton. In addition, there are memorabilia, photographs of Mann and several friends (Arturo Toscanini, Bruno Walter, etc.), and printed matter relating to Mann, as well as articles and essays of which he is the subject.
Arrangement
Organized into the following series:
- Series 1: Works
- Series 2: Letters from Thomas Mann
- Series 3: Letters to Thomas Mann
- Series 4: Correspondence of Others
- Series 5: Photocopies and Photostats of Correspondence of Others
- Series 6: Thomas Mann as Subject
- Series 7: Photographs and Pictures
- Series 8: Printed Matter by Thomas Mann
- Series 9: Printed Matter about Thomas Mann
- Series 10: Recordings
Access and Use
Access
Collection is open for research use.
Restrictions on Use and Copyright Information
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. No further photoduplication of copies of material in the collection can be made when Princeton University Library does not own the original. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the Associate University Librarian for Rare Books and Special Collections. The library has no information on the status of literary rights in the collection and researchers are responsible for determining any questions of copyright.
Acquisition and Appraisal
Provenance and Acquisition
Most of the collection was given to the Library by Caroline Newton and added to with funds she provided. A student of Freud in Vienna, Newton first met Mann in 1929, and later helped the Manns establish their home in Princeton in 1938.
Related Materials
Related Archival Material
Related collection: Caroline Newton Papers (C0517)
The Letters of Thomas Mann to Caroline Newton were printed by Princeton University Library in 1971, with English translation of all 57 letters (1937-1955). A selection of Mann correspondence is printed in Thomas Mann Briefe, S. Fischer Verlag, 1961-1965, 3 volumes, and references are given in this List (call number 3471.73.3185 and EX). Thomas Mann's letters to Caroline Newton are in the Thomas Mann Collection, but letters to her from other members of the Mann family are in the Caroline Newton Papers (C0517).
Processing and Other Information
Processing Information
Finding aid written in 2000.
Descriptive Rules Used
Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.
Encoding
Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks, Cristela García-Spitz, and Diann Benti on May 11, 2007. Created from MARC record via MarcEdit and XSL stylesheets in 2007.
Finding aid written in English.
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Thomas Mann Collection, Box and Folder Number; Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
Subject Headings
These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.
- German fiction -- 20th century.
- Exiles' writings -- 20th century.
- Novelists, German -- 20th century.
- Correspondence.
- Galley Proofs (Printing) -- 20th century.
- Lectures.
- Photographic prints.
- Radio scripts.
- Newton, Caroline, 1893- , collector.
Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:
Contents List
Series 1: Works
Address: To American guild for German Cultural Freedom, New York, April 20, 1937 (xerox of typescript, in English)
Box 1, Folder 1 Address: To World Congress of Writers, May 9, 1939 (xerox of typescript, in English)
Box 1, Folder 1 Address: “Dear Friends, Allow me to use this form of address. It is inspired by the words in which you characterise the meaning and purpose of your Congress...” (Translated by Barthold Fles. photocopy of typescript, n.d.)
Box 1, Folder 1 Address to Princeton University Convocation, upon receiving honorary degree of Doctor of Letters, May 18, 1939. Original manuscript in German with typescript of English translation
Box 1, Folder 2 “Die Bertrogene.” Facsimile (no. 171) of original AMs, 91 pp., 1953
Box 1, Folder 3 Der Erwählte. Boxed page-proofs, 323 pp. 1951
Box 1, Folder 4 Letter to “Svenska Dagbladet,” TMsS with holograph corrections, 13 pp., Stockholm, May 1915
Box 1, Folder 5 “Die Lager” (statement on concentration camps), TMs (carbon), 1945 Corrected typescript, 3 pp., and telegraphic version sent to Charles Neider
Box 1, Folder 6 Autobiographical lecture (in English), TMs (carbon) with holograph correction, 34 pp. n.d.
Box 1, Folder 7 “From Childhood Play to Death in Venice” (lecture), TMs (carbon) with holograph corrections, 19pp., Princeton, 1940
Box 1, Folder 8 Lecture (in German) on Der Zauberberg, TMs (carbon) with holograph corrections, 16 pp., Princeton, May 1939 and TMs (carbon) with holograph corrections, 17 pp., Princeton, May 1939
Box 1, Folder 9 Lotte in Weimar. Galley proofs of Chapter 5, April 19, 1938. (16 galleys)
Box 1, Folder 10 “My relation to psychoanalysis,” (essay), TMs (carbon) with holograph corrections, 2 pp., 1926.
Box 1, Folder 11 “Lübeck,” transcript of radio broadcast (April 12, 1942) by European Service of the BBC, TMsS (carbon) with holograph corrections, 1942 (includes transcript of English translation)
Box 1, Folder 12 “America talks to Australia,” transcript of radio broadcast, AMs, 3pp., February 2, 1943 (in German)
Box 1, Folder 13 Statement on the German occupation of Austria taken during an interview with Albert Hubbell, TMs with holograph corrections, 3 pp., New York, February 1939 (?). Includes explanatory letter from Albert Hubbell to Charles Neider, January 29, 1959 and Neider's reply, February 8, 1959
Box 1, Folder 14 Series 2: Letters from Thomas Mann
Paul Bekker (1882-1937) musicologist. 1 letter, Munich, September 1, 1925.
Box 2, Folder 1 Madame Celine Bertaux, 1 letter, October 19, 1948 ( Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 2 Félix Bertaux (1881-1948), French translator and critic. 63 letters and postcards, 1923-1948 (4 published in Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 3-7 Hans Block. 1 letter, Paris, January 24, 1926
Box 2, Folder 8 Ida Boy-Ed (1852-1928) novelist. 1 letter, December 5, 1922 ( Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 9 Julian P. Boyd. 1 letter, September 26, 1942
Box 2, Folder 10 Anna Brenner. 1 letter, May 4, 1947
Box 2, Folder 11 Joseph Chapiro (José) (1893-1962). 1 letter and 11 cards, 1912-1928
Box 2, Folder 12 Paul Nikolaus Cossmann (1869-1941). 11 letters and 11 cards, 1912-1928
Box 2, Folder 13 Edward Cushing. 2 letters, 1938-1939. Regarding aid to Genia Schwarzwald (1940), an Austrian educator
Box 2, Folder 14 J. R. de la Torre Bueno. 1 letter, September 7, 1941
Box 2, Folder 15 Dr. Arthur Elösser (1870-1937). 4 cards, 1920-1937.
Box 2, Folder 16 Fritz Endress (1886-1945), journalist. 11 letters and 9 cards, 1918-1930 (5 published in Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 17 Edward Engel. 1 letter, Munich, December 2, 1920
Box 2, Folder 18 Ludwig Ewers (1870-1946). 1 letter and 1 card, Munich, 1910-1922
Box 2, Folder 19 Dr. Hans Feist (1887-1952), translator. 6 letters, 1946-1949. (1 published in Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 20 Hedwig Fischer (Mrs. Samuel Fischer) (1871-1952). 1 letter, June 8, 1935
Box 2, Folder 21 Samuel Fischer (1859-1934), publisher. 8 letters and 4 transcripts, 1903-1924
Box 2, Folder 22 Alexander M. Frey (1881-1957), author. 50 letters, 7 cards, and 1 telegram, 1929-1954 (10 published in Briefe)
Box 2, Folder 23-26 Herr Frisch. 2 letters, 1947 and 1949
Box 2, Folder 27 William D. Geer. 1 letter, n.d.
Box 2, Folder 28 Herr Gottlieb. 1 letter, January 3, 1936
Box 2, Folder 29 Dr. Hahne. 2 letters, 1951
Box 2, Folder 30 Dr. Ernst Hanhart. 3 letters, 15 cards, 1921-1936
Box 2, Folder 31 Herr Hannecher. 1 letter, Munich, January 6, 1916
Box 2, Folder 32 Rudolf Heidler. 1 letter, Munich, October 15, 1915
Box 2, Folder 33 Dr. Carl Heine, theatre director. 1 letter, March 12, 1907 (published?)
Box 2, Folder 34 Herr Himminghoffer. 1 letter, Munich, June 23, 1930
Box 2, Folder 35 Ludwig von Hofman (1861-1945). 1 card, August 16, 1931
Box 2, Folder 36 Karl Hönn (1883-). 3 letters, 1916-1925
Box 2, Folder 37 Dr. Arthur Hübscher (1899-), editor of Suddeutsche Monatshifte. 1.) 4 letters, 1926-1928; 2.) “Antwort an Arthur Hübscher” (corrected typescript and galley proof); 3.) 20 letters to Hübscher from various people about Thomas Mann's “Betrachtungen eines Unpolitischen,” 1928
Box 2, Folder 38-41 Hans von Hülsen (1890-), critic and Hauptmann biographer. 54 letters and 48 cards, 1908-1934 (with typed transcriptions)
Box 2, Folder 42-48 George B. de Huszar. 2 letters, 1945
Box 3, Folder 1 Herr Isaac. 1 letter, August 31, 1946 (with author's corrections)
Box 3, Folder 2 Arnold Eugene Jenny. 1 letter in English, September 18, 1945
Box 3, Folder 3 Charles H. Jordan. 1 letter, Tulsa, March 18, 1938 (with English translation in pencil)
Box 3, Folder 4 Antoinette von Kahler. 3 letters, 1940-1947
Box 3, Folder 5 Erich von Kahler (1885-1970). 55 letters and 2 cards, 1931-1955 (these have all been published, in German and in English; translation in An Exceptional Friendship, 1975)
Box 3, Folder 6-9 Dr. Alfred Kantorowicz. 5 letters, 1943-1954
Box 3, Folder 10 Robert Klein. 1 letter, Princeton, December 4, 1940
Box 3, Folder 11 Herr Klöber. 1 letter, April 9, 1951
Box 3, Folder 12 Max Krell. 2 letters, Munich, 1915 and 1919
Box 3, Folder 13 Herr Ludwig. 1 letter, March 5, 1950
Box 3, Folder 14 Professor John H. H. Lyon. 1 letter (in English), Princeton, October 30, 1940
Box 3, Folder 15 Nellie (Mrs. Viktor) Mann (1895-1962). 2 letters, 1949 (published in Briefe)
Box 3, Folder 16 Viktor Mann (1890-1949), Mann's brother. 19 letters, 1945-1947. (8 published in Briefe)
Box 3, Folder 17-18 Hans Mühlestein (1887-), art Historian and translator. 9 letters and 1 card, 1913-1952
Box 3, Folder 19 Charles Neider (1915-), author and editor. 51 letters, 1939-1954. Includes 2 telegrams regarding Neider's book Stature of Thomas Mann
Box 3, Folder 20 Caroline Newton (1893-1975). 56 letters, 3 cards, and 4 telegrams, 1937-1955 (with notes by Caroline Newton attached to the last 2 Mann letters to her). All are privately printed in German and in English translation, Princeton, 1971 (10 published in Briefe)
Box 3, Folder 21-25 Walter H. Perl (1909-). 17 letters and 1 card (1 published in Briefe)
Box 3, Folder 26 George M. Priest, Professor at Princeton University. 7 letters, 1939-1941 (1 in English)
Box 3, Folder 27 Dr. Paul Raché, Hamburg critic. 2 letters, 1902-1931
Box 3, Folder 28 Hans Reisiger (1884-1968), author and translator. 10 letters and 3 cards, 1925-1953 (2 published in Briefe)
Box 3, Folder 29 George Martin Richter. 17 letters and 38 cards, 1901-1926
Box 4, Folder 1-5 Gigi Richter, Mann's godchild. 1 card
Box 4, Folder 6 Dr. David Riesmann (1909-). 1 letter in English, 1940
Box 4, Folder 7 Carl F. Riter. 2 letters in English, 1939
Box 4, Folder 8 Roger Senhouse. 2 letters and 1 card, 1946-1955
Box 4, Folder 9 Shaffer, March 28, 1922
Box 4, Folder 9a Roger Gregor Smith. 1 letter in English, n. d.
Box 4, Folder 10 Agnes Speyer-Ulmann. 9 letters and 10 cards (1 published in Briefe)
Box 4, Folder 11 Dr. Steiner. 1 letter, St. Moritz, August 2, 1950
Box 4, Folder 12 Dr. Hudson Strode. 1 letter in English, February 15, 1941
Box 4, Folder 13 George Sylvester Viereck, American journalist. 1 letter, Munich, March 13, 1928
Box 4, Folder 14 Bruno Walter (1876-1962), editor. 2 letters, 1933
Box 4, Folder 15 Hans von Weber (1872-1924), editor. 1 letter and 2 cards, 1913-1918
Box 4, Folder 16 Wolfgang von Weber. 1 letter, October 17, 1924
Box 4, Folder 17 Dr. Widmer. 1 letter, Kusnacht, April 22, 1935 (letter regards Erich von Kahler)
Box 4, Folder 18 Friderike Zweig (1882-). 1 letter, 1942 (letter regards the suicide of Stefan Zweig)
Box 4, Folder 19 Unidentified recipients. 19 letters and 1 card, 1902-1930
Box 4, Folder 20 Unidentified “Verehrte Frau.” 1 letter, Stockholm, May 28, 1949
Box 4, Folder 21 Unidentified publisher. 1 letter, Erlenbach, November 18, 1953 (letter regards Frau Lennartz “Die Dichter unserer Zeit”)
Box 4, Folder 22 Series 3: Letters to Thomas Mann
Paul Nikolas Cossmann (1869-1941), editor of Suddeutschen Monatshefte. 11 letters, 1911-1921
Box 4, Folder 23 Alexander M. Frey (1881-1957), author. 13 letters, 1934-1954
Box 4, Folder 24 Hans von Hülsen (1890-), author and journalist. 3 letters, 1924-1929
Box 4, Folder 25 Graf Hermann Keyserling (1880-1946), historian. 1 letter, 1919
Box 4, Folder 26 Charles Neider (1915-), author and journalist. 27 letters and 3 telegrams (copies), 1940-1953
Box 4, Folder 27 Series 4: Correspondence of Others
Heinrich Mann (1872-1950). 2 letters and 2 cards to Agnes Speyer-Ulmann, 1911-1912
Box 4, Folder 28 Katja (Pringsheim) Mann. 7 letters in English, 1946-1955 to Charles Neider. 1 printed card and one reply from Neider to Mrs. Mann
Box 4, Folder 29 Katja (Pringsheim) Mann. 1 telegram, October 23, 1964 to Princeton University
Box 4, Folder 30 Klaus Mann (1906-1949). Correspondence with Charles Neider. 17 letters in English from Klaus to Neider and 4 letters in English from Neider to Klaus, 1942-1946
Box 4, Folder 31 Monika Mann (1910-). Correspondence with Charles and Vivian Neider. 15 letters and 4 cards in English from Monika to Neider and 2 letter in English from Neider to Monika, 1947-1954
Box 4, Folder 32 Charles Neider (1915-). Correspondence with various writers an scholars soliciting contributions to his anthology The Stature of Thomas Mann, 1947. (57 letters dated 1946). Letters to Neider: Conrad Aiken, 2; W. H. Auden, 2; Joseph Warren Beach, 2; Hermann Broch, 4; Pearl S. Buck; Kenneth Burke; Willa Cather; Cyril Connolly; David Daiches; Lion Feuchtwanger; Frederic Fischer; André Gide (signed by secretary); Martin Gumpert; Henry Hatfield, 2; Aldous Huxley; Christopher Isherwood; Charles Jackson, 2; F. R. Leavis; Harry Levin, 3; Ludwig Lewisohn, 2; Robert Morse Lovell, 2; E. A. Lowe; Helen Tracy (Porter) Lowe, 2; Heinrich Mann; F. O. Mathiessen; H. L. Mencken, 2; Gabriela Mistral, 2; Lewis Mumford, 2; Alfred Neumann, 2; J. B. Priestley, 2 (signed by secretary); Eleanor Roosevelt, Arnold Schoenberg; Bernard Shaw; Lionel Trilling; Bruno Walter; Glenway Wescott; Hermann J. Weigand, Frank Lloyd Wright (signed by secretary); Sigrid Undset
Box 4, Folder 33 Charles Neider. 4 letters from Thomas Mann's secretary, 1939-1947
Box 4, Folder 34 Charles Neider. Envelopes (11) written by Mann and 3 lists
Box 4, Folder 35 Series 5: Photocopies and Photostats of Correspondence of Others
Bertaux, Félix
Box 5, Folder 1 Chapiro, Joseph (José)
Box 5, Folder 2 Fischer, Samuel
Box 5, Folder 3 Fles, Barthold
Box 5, Folder 4 Frey, Alexander
Box 5, Folder 5 Frey to Mann (originals in box 4)
Box 5, Folder 6 Hanhart, Ernst
Box 5, Folder 7 Hülsen, Hans von
Box 5, Folder 8-9 Hülsen to Mann (originals in box 4)
Box 5, Folder 10 Kahler, Erich von
Box 5, Folder 11-12 Mann, Viktor
Box 6, Folder 1 Mather, Frank Jewett
Box 6, Folder 2 Miscellaneous and unidentified
Box 6, Folder 3-5 Mühlestein, Hans
Box 6, Folder 6 Newton, Caroline
Box 6, Folder 7-8 Perl, Walter H.
Box 6, Folder 9 Priest, George M.
Box 6, Folder 10 Reisiger, Hans
Box 6, Folder 11 Richter, George Martin
Box 6, Folder 12 Weber, Hans von
Box 6, Folder 13 Fles, Barthold to Albert Einstein, 1939 and to Erich von Kahler, 1939
Box 7, Folder 1 Mann, Katharine (Katja). 25 letters to Erich and Mrs. Kahler, 1940-1969
Box 7, Folder 2 Mann, Klaus (1906-1949) to Charles Neider, 1942-1949
Box 7, Folder 3 Mann, Monika (1910-) to Charles and Vivian Neider, 1947-1954
Box 7, Folder 4 Neider, Charles (1915-) to Thomas and Katja Mann, 1939-1955
Box 7, Folder 5 Neider, Charles (1915-) to various authors and scholars, 1946 (regarding The Stature of Thomas Mann; originals in Box 4, Folder 33)
Box 7, Folder 6 Series 6: Thomas Mann as Subject
Dorpalen, Andreas. 2 essays: “Germany: 1871-1890,” 12 pp. and “Germany: 1890-1918,” 25 pp. Quotes Thomas Mann especially his “Betrachtungen eines Unpolitischen”
Box 7, Folder 7 Hallgarten, Wolfgang. “My Recollections of Thomas Mann and his Family's Life in Europe,” TMs, 29 pp. with plan of neighborhood in Munich
Box 7, Folder 8 Hülsen, Hans von (1890-). “Die Bruder Mann,” TMs (photocopy) with holograph corrections by Thomas Mann, 4 pp., February 13, 1913
Box 7, Folder 9 Jonas, Klaus W., Dr. (Professor at University of Pittsburgh). 2 articles: “Thomas Mann Collections,” 14 pp. and “Thomas Mann und Amerika,” 8 pp.
Box 7, Folder 10 Kahler, Erich V. (1885-1970), historian. 4 articles: “Sakularisiering des Teufels,” AMs (in pencil), 34 pp., 1948; “Thomas Mann's Dr. Faustus” (offprint from Commentary, April 1949); “Die Erwahlten” ( Die Neue Rundschau, 1955), TMs, 18 pp.; “Gedenkrede auf Thomas Mann” ( Die Neue Randschau, 1956), AMs, 35 pp.
Box 7, Folder 11 Lange, Viktor, Professor. Address delivered October 24, 1964 at unveiling of tablet on 65 Stockton Street, Princeton, N. J., TMs with holograph corrections, 3 pp.
Box 7, Folder 12 Lange, Viktor, Professor. “Thomas Mann as a Critic of his Age,” TMs (carbon), 21 pp.
Box 7, Folder 13 Lehnert, Herbert (Rice University). “Thomas Mann in Exile, 1933-1938,” TMs, 32 pp. and 14 pp. of footnotes
Box 7, Folder 14 Lehnert, Herbert (Rice University). “Thomas Mann in Princeton,” TMs, 31 pp. and 10 pp. of footnotes
Box 7, Folder 15 Pringsheim, Klaus H. “Thomas Mann in America: Some Political Comments,” TMs, 17 pp. (lecture given at Columbia, Missouri, February 15, 1962)
Box 7, Folder 16 Thiemer, Horst. Typescript of radio talk, Documentation of Deutschland Funk, 4/1/1971, “Thomas Mann in Princeton,” TMs, 14 pp. (in German), with remarks of V. Lange, H. Leynert, and Mrs. V. Kahler
Box 7, Folder 17 Van Doren, Mark (1894-1972). “Joseph and His Brothers,” TMs (carbon), 21 pp. with cover letter, October 31, 1956 (lecture given at Bryn Mawr on October 5, 1958)
Box 7, Folder 18 Zucker Kandl, Victor, professor and musicologist. “Thomas Mann, the Musician,” an address delivered October 24, 1964 at unveiling of tablet on 65 Stockton Street, Princeton, N. J., TMs (carbon), 12 pp.
Box 7, Folder 19 Memorabilia and Souvenirs
Box 7, Folder 20 Miscellaneous lists
Box 7, Folder 21 Agnes Speyer-Ulmann. “Heinrich Mann,” AMsS, 2 pp.
Box 7, Folder 22 Papers from a Mann symposium at University of California, Irvine, March 1988
Box 7, Folder 23 Series 7: Photographs and Pictures
Thomas Mann, 3 photographs, 1881-1899
Box 8, Folder 1 Thomas Mann, 5 photographs, 1925-1930s (photograph dated 12/23/29 has autographed notes)
Box 8, Folder 2 Thomas Mann, 12 photographs, 1940s-1950s
Box 8, Folder 3 Thomas Mann, 1 photograph, award of honorary doctorate, Oxford, May 13, 1949
Box 8, Folder 4 Thomas Mann with poodle, 1 photograph, inscription to Caroline Newton, 1952
Box 8, Folder 5 Thomas Mann, 12 photographs, 1955
Box 8, Folder 6 Thomas Mann, 6 photographs, Kilchberg, Switzerland, 1955
Box 8, Folder 7 Thomas Mann, 2 photographs, delivering Schiller address, 1955
Box 8, Folder 8 Thomas and Katja Mann, 7 photographs, 1930-1955
Box 8, Folder 9 Thomas Mann Family, 9 photographs, 1909-1950
Box 8, Folder 10 Thomas and Katja Mann with group, 1 photograph, ca. 1906
Box 8, Folder 11 Thomas Mann with grandchildren, 4 photographs, 1941-1947
Box 8, Folder 12 Thomas Mann with Harold W. Dodds, 1 photographs, Princeton, May 18, 1939
Box 8, Folder 13 Thomas Mann with Dorothy Thompson, 1 photograph, New York, May 1938
Box 8, Folder 14 Thomas Mann with Arturo Toscanini and Bruno Walter, 2 photographs, Salzburg, 1935
Box 8, Folder 15 Thomas Mann at a reception for Alvin Johnson (educator), 3 photographs with booklet to A. Johnson (introduction by Mann), Philadelphia, November 27, 1943
Box 8, Folder 16 Julia Mann (née daSilva-Bruhns) (Mann's mother), 1 photograph, Lübeck
Box 8, Folder 17 Katja Mann, 9 photographs, 1960
Box 8, Folder 18 Monika Mann (Thomas Mann's daughter), 1 photograph
Box 8, Folder 19 Caroline Newton with Thomas Mann, 8 photographs (some duplicates), October 1956
Box 8, Folder 20 Caroline Newton, 21 photographs (some duplicates), Commemoration, Bryn Mawr, October 1956
Box 8, Folder 21 Buddenbrook House, 1 photograph, Lübeck
Box 8, Folder 22 Herzogpark House, 2 photographs, Munich 1914
Box 8, Folder 23 Kilchberg House, 2 photographs, Switzerland, 1930s
Box 8, Folder 24 Thomas Mann, studio, and desk, 16 photographs (some duplicates), Kilchberg, Switzerland
Box 8, Folder 25 Princeton House, 65 Stockton Street, 1 photograph
Box 8, Folder 26 Jamestown, R. I. Cottage (cottage of Caroline Newton), 1 photograph (see also Box 12)
Box 8, Folder 27 Thomas Mann Archive, 2 photographs, Zurich, Switzerland
Box 8, Folder 28 Thomas Mann grave, 10 photographs, 2 slides, Kilchberg, Switzerland
Box 8, Folder 29 Church near grave, 4 photographs, Kilchberg, Switzerland
Box 8, Folder 30 Bust and Death Mask, 3 photographs
Box 8, Folder 31 1 caricature of Thomas Mann by Jack Rosen, signed by artist and subject; 1 etching of Thomas Mann
Box 8, Folder 32 Portrait of Thomas Mann by Rudolf V. Ripper (watercolor), 1 photograph, 1940
Box 8, Folder 33 Portrait drawing by J. J. Muller, Princeton, 17.XII. 1938
Box 8, Folder 33a Negatives
Box 8, Folder 34 Thomas Mann, 6 photographs, 1906-1955
Box 12, Folder 1 Thomas Mann by Edward Steichen, 2 (original) photographs, 1934
Box 12, Folder 2 Thomas Mann by “Mopp,” original etching, 1930
Box 12, Folder 3 Katja Mann, 1 photograph
Box 12, Folder 4 Michael Mann (1919-1977) with his wife (Gret) and Caroline Newton, 3 photographs
Box 12, Folder 5 Early family photographs, 2 photographs, 1906-1915
Box 12, Folder 6 Thomas Mann with grandson Frido, 1 photograph, 1942
Box 12, Folder 7 “Buddenbrook” House, 1 photograph, Lübeck
Box 12, Folder 8 Jamestown, R. I. Cottage (cottage of Caroline Newton), 1 photograph
Box 12, Folder 9 Thomas Mann, 1 photograph (rolled), 1955 (?)
Box 12, Folder 10 Plaque, 65 Stockton Street, Princeton, N. J., 1 photograph (rolled)
Box 12, Folder 11 Series 8: Printed Matter by Thomas Mann
3 addresses by Thomas Mann, 1939-1943 (negatives)
Box 12, Folder 35 “Ansprache in Geothejahr,” 21 pp., 1949
Box 12, Folder 36 “Bruder Hitler,” essay in Das neue Tagebuch, March 25, 1939
Box 12, Folder 37 “Ein Appell an die Vernunft,” Deutsche Ansprache, Berlin, October 17, 1930 (2 copies, boxed)
Box 12, Folder 38 “Jaacobs Hochzeit” (boxed) in “Corona,” Oldenburg Verlag, 1931-1932, with inscription to Hedwig Fischer, 12/16/31
Box 9, Folder 1 “Lob der Verganglichkeit,” 4 pp, 1952, with inscription to Caroline Newton
Box 9, Folder 2 “Versuch uber Schiller,” 104 pp., 1955, with inscription to Caroline Newton
Box 9, Folder 3 “Versuch uber Tschechow,” in Die Neue Rundschau, 22 pp., 1956
Box 9, Folder 4 “Walsungenblut,” 2 pp. Original ending of story
Box 9, Folder 5 Published correspondence between Thomas Mann and Erich V. Kahler (1938-1955), 67 pp., 1970
Box 9, Folder 6 Published correspondence between Thomas Mann and the Philosophy faculty of Bonn (1936-1937)
Box 9, Folder 7 Published correspondence between Thomas Mann and Hans Reisiger (1933-1955), 43 pp., 1938
Box 9, Folder 8 Series 9: Printed Matter about Thomas Mann
Announcement of new editions, films, dealers lists
Box 9, Folder 9 Thomas Mann Archive, Zurich. 2 announcements, 1958; 1 guide, 1963; and 3 news clippings
Box 9, Folder 10 Thomas Mann Issue of Du, June 1955, for Mann's 80th birthday
Box 9, Folder 11 Miscellaneous writings (clippings) regarding Thomas Mann
Box 9, Folder 12 Miscellaneous writings (articles and photocopies) regarding Thomas Mann
Box 9, Folder 13 Photographs-printed material, announcements, clippings
Box 9, Folder 14 Lowe-Porter, H. T. (1877-1963), Thomas Mann translator. Obituary, N. Y. Times, April 27, 1963 (clipping)
Box 9, Folder 15 Mann, Klaus (1906-1949). Articles by and about K. Mann (clippings and periodicals)
Box 9, Folder 16 Reviews ( Kritiken), 1928, German scrapbook
Box 9, Folder 17 Miscellaneous clippings (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 1 Miscellaneous clippings (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 2 Miscellaneous clippings, mounted (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 3 Miscellaneous clippings, mounted (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 4 Miscellaneous clippings, mounted (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 5 Miscellaneous clippings (in German and in English)
Box 10, Folder 6 Articles, essays, interviews by Thomas Mann, clippings (in German and in English)
Box 11, Folder 1 Articles about Thomas Mann, newspaper clippings (in German and in English)
Box 11, Folder 2 Book reviews of Thomas Mann works, newspaper clippings (in German and in English)
Box 11, Folder 3 Thomas Mann, 80th birthday, 1955, newspaper clippings
Box 11, Folder 4 Thomas Mann, death, 1955, newspaper clippings (in German and in English)
Box 11, Folder 5 Series 10: Recordings
Joseph and His Brothers, Thomas Mann reads selections from his work, in German and in English, recorded at Columbia University, 1942
Box 11, Folder 13 5 phonograph recordings
Box 11, Folder 13
Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/nv9352861