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Collection Number: 70032

Collection Title: Edie Parker Kerouac and Henri Cru Papers, 1887-2004

This collection has access restrictions. For details, please see the restrictions.

This collection has use restrictions. For details, please see the restrictions.


expand/collapse Expand/collapse Collection Overview

Size 6.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 1,700 items)
Abstract Frankie Edith Parker (1922-1993) was Jack Kerouac's first wife, from 1944 until their separation in 1946 and legal annulment in 1952. Henri Cru (1921-1992) was Kerouac's friend at Horace Mann Preparatory School in New York City. Parker and Cru dated until Cru introduced Parker to Kerouac in 1942. Kerouac kept in touch with both Parker and Cru until his death in 1969. This collection contains the personal papers and photos of Parker and Cru, including the originals of four letters from Kerouac to Parker and a 1947 never-produced screenplay on which Kerouac collaborated with Cru. Other correspondents and notable individuals in the collection include Allen Ginsberg, Gabrielle Kerouac, G. Caroline ("Nin") Kerouac, Joan Vollmer Adams Burroughs, William Burroughs, Herbert Huncke, Lucien Carr, Neal Cassady, Carolyn Cassady, Joan Haverty, Jan Kerouac, Stella Sampas Kerouac, Albert Cru (Henri Cru's father), Tom Waits, Vicki Russell, Ann Charters, Robert Creeley, John Fitzgerald, Céline Young, Bill Morgan, Gerald Nicosia, and Fernanda Pivano. There is also information about the 1982 Kerouac Conference at the Naropa Institute.
Creator Kerouac, Edie Parker, 1923-1993.
Curatorial Unit University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Rare Book Collection.
Language English, with an occasional item in French
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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Information For Users

Restrictions to Access
This collection is not available for immediate or same day access. Please contact Research and Instructional Service staff at wilsonlibrary@unc.edu to discuss options for consulting this collection.
Restrictions to Use
The materials in the collection may be used by readers in the research room of the Wilson Special Collections Library for purposes of reference and research. Entire collection, copying is prohibited. Materials created by Edie Parker, Henri Cru, and Jack Kerouac and images of them may not be duplicated or published without explicit permission from their estates.
Copyright Notice
Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the Beats Collection: Edie Parker Kerouac and Henri Cru Papers (#70032), Rare Book Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
[Note: Collection number changed from #Z9999.1.P37 to #70032 in April 2020.]
Acquisitions Information
The Edie Parker Kerouac and Henri Cru Papers were donated by Tim Moran, the friend and caretaker of Edie Parker and Henri Cru, and by John Moran, Tim's brother
Sensitive Materials Statement
Manuscript collections and archival records may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations, the North Carolina Public Records Act (N.C.G.S. § 132 1 et seq.), and Article 7 of the North Carolina State Personnel Act (Privacy of State Employee Personnel Records, N.C.G.S. § 126-22 et seq.). Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in this collection without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications (e.g., a cause of action under common law for invasion of privacy may arise if facts concerning an individual's private life are published that would be deemed highly offensive to a reasonable person) for which the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill assumes no responsibility.
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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Processing Information

Processed by: Kate Moriarty, December 2004

Encoded by: Roberta Engleman, June 2006

Finding aid updated by Dawne Howard Lucas in April 2020 to change the collection number from Z9999.1.P37 to 70032

Updated by: Nancy Kaiser, November 2020; Dawne Howard Lucas, February 2021

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subject Headings

The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.

Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Biographical Information

Edie Parker Kerouac, 1922-1993

Frankie Edith Parker was born 20 September 1922 in Detroit, Mich., to an upper-middle-class family. She grew up in the Detroit area, spent her summers in the family's second home in Asbury Park, N.J., and had extended stays at her grandmother's in New York City. In the early 1940s Parker attended Columbia University, where she studied art. While in New York City, she met and dated Henri Cru, a prep-school friend of Jack Kerouac. Cru introduced Parker to Kerouac in 1942, shortly before shipping out for service in World War II. Parker was living with Joan Vollmer (the future wife of William Burroughs) in one of three apartments they shared during the early- to mid-1940s and which served as a residence and gathering place for the two women and a number of their friends.

Parker introduced Kerouac to Allen Ginsberg and Lucien Carr. Soon William Burroughs; Herbert Huncke; Neal Cassady; Hal Chase; Carr's girlfriend, Céline Young; and others were incorporated into the circle. On 22 August 1944 Parker married Kerouac while he was in jail as a material witness in the Carr-Kammerer murder case, thereby freeing up her trust-fund money and enabling her to post Kerouac's bail. The couple lived in Grosse Pointe, Mich., with Parker's mother and sister for a few months before Kerouac returned to New York. Parker also left for New York and there followed two years of the couple living with Kerouac's family or with Vollmer and other friends. Kerouac was frequently absent during this period, but when he was home, Parker worked odd jobs as a stevedore, longshoreman, cigarette girl, and model to support his writing.

In 1946 the couple separated and Parker returned to Grosse Pointe. The marriage was legally annulled in 1952. Parker remarried twice, to Mike Dietz (1952-1954) and Pat Garvin (1959-1969). Kerouac contacted her periodically throughout the years, and even proposed a visit shortly before he died in 1969. Parker figured in several of Kerouac's novels under the pseudonyms Judie Smith (The Town and the City), Elly (Visions of Cody), and Edna Palmer (Vanity of Duluoz). Parker herself did not read Kerouac's books and was not aware of the extent of his fame until she attended his funeral. She subsequently spent the rest of her years speaking on Kerouac and writing her memoirs, which were never published. She authored several articles on Kerouac and appeared in the film What Happened to Kerouac?

In part prompted by writing her memoirs, Parker kept in touch with Ginsberg; Burroughs; Neal Cassady's wife, Carolyn Cassady; and several others associated with the Beats. In 1979 she contacted Cru after thirty years and they remained close friends until his death in 1992. Parker met Tim Moran in 1984 and offered him a home. Moran became her caretaker for six years, during which time he was introduced to Cru. When Moran moved to New York in 1990, he became Cru's caretaker until 1992. Moran assisted Parker with her memoirs, and shortly before she died on 29 October 1993, Parker willed her papers to Moran.

Henri Cru, 1921-1992

Henri Cru was born on 2 April 1921 in Massachusetts to an English mother and French father. The family had recently moved from France and Cru's father, Albert Cru, became a French professor in Massachusetts. They moved to New York City when Albert Cru joined the faculty of Columbia Teachers College. Henri Cru was not diligent in his studies and was sent to Paris for a time during high school. He returned to the United States, where he met Jack Kerouac while attending Horace Mann School, a prep school in New York. Upon graduation, Cru joined the Coast Guard, and soon after, the merchant marine. Cru's mother and Edie Parker's grandmother lived in the same New York City building and in 1939 Cru and Parker started dating. In 1942 Cru introduced Parker to Jack Kerouac, and shortly afterward shipped off for World War II. Though Parker and Cru's commitment to each other had fluctuated, Cru was hurt and angry for a few years after Parker and Kerouac dated and married.

Around 1947, Cru moved to San Francisco and invited Kerouac to visit him, join the merchant marine, and look for work on vessels in the area. This inspired Kerouac's first cross-country trip, recounted in On the Road, in which Cru figures as Remi Boncoeur. During his stay with Cru, the two collaborated on the never-produced screenplay "Blood and Paper or Lunchtime Wake" (Folder 78). Cru is later depicted as Deni Bleu in Kerouac's Visions of Cody, Desolation Angels, Lonesome Traveler, and Vanity of Duluoz.

Cru remained in the merchant marine up until his retirement in the mid- to late 1980s. He worked primarily as an electrician, but he also served as (ship) fireman, oiler, pumpman, junior engineer, refrigerating engineer, deck engineer, lifeboatman, and bouncer. His work took him to Asia, India, Europe, and South America.

Cru's primary residence during this time was Greenwich Village, N.Y., and he frequently saw Kerouac when they were both in town. Later, in his letters to Parker and Tim Moran, Cru mentions that the visits became increasingly difficult as Kerouac's alcoholism progressed, producing a reluctance in Cru to spend large amounts of time with his friend.

In 1979 Parker contacted Cru and the two resumed a close acquaintance. Cru was diagnosed with diabetes, and around 1980 his left leg was amputated below the knee. Parker visited Cru and helped him in his hospitalizations in the 1980s. Parker also introduced Cru to Tim Moran, who became his caretaker in the early 1990s. In 1988 Cru, Parker, and Moran attended the dedication of the Jack Kerouac Commemorative in Lowell, Mass. Cru died in August 1992. As Parker would do a year later, Cru willed his papers to Tim Moran.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Scope and Content

The Edie Parker Kerouac and Henri Cru Papers were donated by Tim Moran, the friend and caretaker of Edie Parker and Henri Cru, and by John Moran, Tim's brother. The collection consists of the personal papers, photographs, scrapbooks, and publications of Edie Parker, Jack Kerouac's first wife, and the personal papers, photos, and scrapbook of Kerouac's prep-school friend, Henri Cru. The personal accounts present in Parker's unpublished memoirs and the correspondence of both Cru and Parker contribute significantly to our knowledge of Kerouac. Included in the collection are the originals of four letters and a telegram from Kerouac to Parker from 1943, 1957, and 1969 (Folder 22). Other correspondents and notable individuals in the collection include Allen Ginsberg, Gabrielle Kerouac, G. Caroline Kerouac (Nin Kerouac), Joan Vollmer Adams Burroughs, William Burroughs, Herbert Huncke, Lucien Carr, Neal Cassady, Carolyn Cassady, Joan Haverty, Jan Kerouac, Stella Sampas Kerouac, Albert Cru (Henri Cru's father), Tom Waits, Vicki Russell, Ann Charters, Robert Creeley, John Fitzgerald, Céline Young, Bill Morgan, Gerald Nicosia, and Fernanda Pivano. There is also information about the 1982 Kerouac Conference at the Naropa Institute.

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Preliminary Box list

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series Quick Links

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subcollection 1: Edie Parker Kerouac.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993.

About 475 items

Arrangement: Alphabetically by correspondent, then chronologically within each folder. Dates following correspondents' names below represent the time-span of the correspondence.

Personal correspondence of Edie Parker. Notable correspondents include Beat authors and associates, such as William Burroughs, Joan Vollmer Burroughs, Lucien Carr, Carolyn Cassady, Robert Creeley, Allen Ginsberg, Herbert Huncke, Jack Kerouac, Ed White, and Céline Young. Also included is correspondence relating to Parker's attempts to publish her memoirs.

Folder 1

Joan Vollmer Adams Burroughs, 1945-1946

Johan Burroughs was Parker's NYC Rroomate in the 1940s and married William Burroughs. Includes four letters from Joan Burroughs to Parker.

Folder 2

William Burroughs, 1945-1983

Nine letters and cards from Burroughs to Parker.

Folder 3

William Burroughs, 1983-1992

Contains letters to Parker from Irae Silverburg and James Gauerholz, often conveying the sentiments of William Burroughs.

Folder 4

Lucien Carr, 1979-1983

Contains two postcards and one letter to Parker from Lucien Carr.

Folder 5

Carolyn Cassady, 1978-1983

Letters include references to Parker's and Cassady's relationships with the Beats. Includes photocoies of Parker's letters to Carolyn Cassady, which Cassady sent to Tim Moran, he heir to Parker's papers

Folder 6

Ann Charters, 1992

Charters was one of Jack Kerouac's biographers. Includes a request for copies of letters to Parker from Jack Kerouac.

Folder 7

Robert Creeley, 1980

Contains two typed notes from Creeley to Parker.

Folder 8-15

Folder 8

Folder 9

Folder 10

Folder 11

Folder 12

Folder 13

Folder 14

Folder 15

Henry Cru, 1979-1992

Contains letters from Cru to Parker. Enclosures of the letters contain the various materials Cru included in his correspondence, such as off-track betting information, clippings, and photos. There are several instances in which Cru sent Parker photocopies of letters he wrote to someone else.

8: Henri Cru, 1979-1982 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 8
9: Henri Cru, January-June 1983 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 9
10: Henri Cru, July-December 1983 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 10

The letter dated 18 July talks about Jack Kerouac; Kerouac's second wife, Joan; and their daughter, Jan. Enclosures include a photo of Cru in the background of a horse race event, and a copy of Robert Pegg's "On the Road to Grosse Pointe," a piece on Edie Parker.

11: Henri Cru, 1984-1985 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 11

Includes a note to Parker requesting she return his original "Blood and Paper or Lunchtime Wake," a screenplay he co-wrote with Jack Kerouac. Original can be found in Folder 78.

12: Henri Cru, 1986 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 12

The 25 July enclosure includes a photocopy of a phone bill to Remi Bon Coeur, Henri Cru's alias in Jack Kerouac's On the Road.

13: Henri Cru, 1987 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 13

Includes the book of poems and accompanying poster, "Nobody Loves You Like My Body Loves You," by Robin Dancer.

14: Henri Cru, 1988-1992 #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 14
15: Henri Cru, Dates Unknown #70032, Series 1. Correspondence and Related Materials, 1930s-1993., Folder 15
Folder 16

John Fitzgerald, 1944, 1982-1983

Later letters include reminiscences of Parker, Jack Kerouac, and Allen Ginsberg, seemingly in answer to questions from Parker. Jack Kerouac was Fitzgerald's son's godfather.

Folder 17

Allen Ginsberg, 1960-1980

Seven postcards from Ginsberg to Parker.

Folder 18

Elizabeth Gratch, 1988

Gratch assisted Parker with her memoirs in 1988. Includes letters to Parker, and to the agent, Mitchell Hamilburg.

Folder 19

Herbert Huncke, 1948, 1983

Two letters from Herbert Huncke to Parker.

Folder 20

Gabrielle Kerouac, 1944

Includes letters from Gabrielle Kerouac, Jack Kerouac's mother, to Edie Parker and Jack Kerouac, and a clipping on the Carr-Kammerer murder case.

Folder 21

G. Caroline "Nin" Kerouac, 1943-1944

Includes one letter from Nin Kerouac, Jack Kerouac's sister, to their parents and two to Jack Kerouac

Folder 22

Jack Kerouac, 1940s, 1950s, 1969

Contains the following documents, including some of Jack Kerouac's final letters:

  • 18 September 1943 V-mail letter from Kerouac to Parker
  • 15 March 1944 letter from Edward Tully to Kerouac
  • 18 May 1944 letter from Billie Handy to Kerouac
  • 5 March 1945 bill for $65.00 from Dr. A. Z. Rogers addressed to J. Kerouac
  • 8 November 1950 handwritten copy of Kerouac's baptism certificate
  • 28 January 1957 letter from Kerouac to Parker
  • August 1969 photocopied letter from Parker to Kerouac
  • 8 September 1969 letter from Kerouac to Parker
  • 20 September 1969 telegram from Kerouac to Parker
  • 21 September 1969 letter from Kerouac to Parker

Folder 23

Stella Sampas Kerouac and Tony Sampas, 1969-1971, 1978-1980

Contains five letters from Stella Kerouac, Jack Kerouac's third wife, to Parker, and two to Parker's sister, Charlotte, including a denial of her involvement in any Kerouac biographies. Also includes two letters from Tony Sampas, Stella's brother, to Parker

Folder 24

John Kingsland, 1945, 1981

Contains three letters from Kingsland to Parker.

Folder 25

Henry Kingswell, 1974-1980

Kingswell assisted Parker with her memoirs from 1974 to 1979. Includes three separate agreements between Parker and Kingswell dated 1974.

Folder 26

Richard Lerner Productions, 1986

Contains a letter and contract concerning Parker's participation in the production of the documentary film What Happened to Kerouac?

Folder 27

Lowell Historic Preservation Commission, 1987-1988

Includes letters regarding Parker's donation of Jack Kerouac's typewriter to their museum exhibit, as well as photocopied clippings on, and an invitation to, the opening of the Jack Kerouac Commemorative

Folder 28

John Montgomery, 1982-1988

Includes letters from Montgomery, a Kerouac biographer, to Parker, and an article on a Kerouac reunion in Lowell, Mass., that features Parker.

Folder 29

Joy Walsh, 1980-1988

Contains letters to Parker from Joy Walsh, the publisher of Moody Street Irregulars: A Jack Kerouac Newsletter.

Folder 30

Dave Moore, 1980-1987

Moore was editor of The Kerouac Connection newsletter, associated with Beat Brotherhood: The Jack Kerouac Appreciation Society, and authored "Book of Dreams: A Name Index." Letters indicate that Parker was able to answer several of Moore's questions regarding the people represented in Kerouac's book. Her addendum to his article, entitled "Dave Moore's 'Book of Dreams: A Name Index' Addenda and Annotations," was published in Moody Street Irregulars, No. 10 in 1981. See Folder 50 for the publication.

Folder 31

Tim Moran, 1985-1993

Contains letters from Parker to Tim Moran, who was Parker's caretaker in her later years, her last assistant on her memoirs, the heir to her papers, and the source of this collection.

Folder 32

Bill Morgan, 1986

Contains a letter from Morgan, Allen Ginsberg's biographer, to Parker requesting letters that Ginsberg wrote her to assist in the editing of his journals. See Folder 74 for letters from Morgan to Parker regarding the 1986 festschrift, Best Minds: A Tribute to Allen Ginsberg, and Parker's contributions, "Fond Memories of Allen" and "Four Years Between Us."

Folder 33

Gerry Nicosia, 1983-1990

Contains letters to Parker from Nicosia, author of the Kerouac biography Memory Babe. Nicosia had interviewed Parker in preparation for the book. For Parker's corrections to Nicosia's manuscript, see Folder 82.

Folder 34

Charlotte Maire Parker, 1930s-1945

Charlotte Maire Parker was Edie Parker's mother. Folder contains childhood letters from Edie to her mother, and two 1944 letters written from the 118th Street apartment that speak of Jack Kerouac. See Folder 169 for another letter from the same address. Included are several letters dated 1945 from her mother encouraging Edie to leave the Beat crowd and divorce Jack Kerouac.

Folder 35

Mrs. Walter Mackay Parker, 1942

Contains one letter to Edie Parker from her grandmother.

Folder 36

Charlotte Parker Pattison, 1940s, 1970s

Charlotte Parker Pattison was Edie Parker's sister, who also went by "Sis" and "Charlie." Includes a 1979 card to Charlotte from Dorris Johnson speaking of Edie Parker and Jack Kerouac.

Folder 37

Jim Perrizo, 1986-1990

Perrizo was Parker's assistant in editing her memoirs from 1986 to ca. 1987. Includes copies of letters from Perrizo to publishers and a letter to Parker regarding contradictions in Parker's memoirs.

Folder 38

Fernanda Pivano, 1981-1982

Three letters to Parker from Pivano Sottsass, Kerouac's Italian translator.

Folder 39

Publishers and Agents, 1978-1988

Contains letters regarding her memoirs from Parker and her assistant, Jim Perrizo, to publishers and agents. Rejections from publishers include those from St. Martin's Press, Grove Press, Arbor House, and W. W. Norton and Co. Also included is a copy of the 22 November 1986 retraction Parker sent to The Sterling Lord Agency regarding her claims to Jack Kerouac's estate.

Folder 40

Duncan Purcell, 1944-1945

Contains four letters to Parker from Purcell, a New York friend of Parker and Joan Vollmer Adams Burroughs. Letters refer to Vollmer and Jack Kerouac, and two are addressed to Mrs. John Kerouac.

Folder 41

Sotheby's, 1983

Contains a letter of interest in response to Parker's enquiry regarding memorabilia of Jack Kerouac.

Folder 42

The Unspeakable Visions of the Individual, 1979-1981

Letters to Parker from Arthur and Kit Knight regarding her Kerouac-related stories and photographs for publication.

Folder 43

Tom Waits, [1982?]

Contains a letter from the performer to Parker mentioning Jack Kerouac as one of his influences.

Folder 44

Edward White, 1982

Includes a photocopy of a 1947 letter from Jack Kerouac to Edward White containing a message for Edie Parker, and a 1982 letter from White to Parker reminiscing about 1945-1947 days with Jack Kerouac.

Folder 45

Céline Young, 1944-1945

Contains four letters to Parker from Young, a girlfriend of Lucien Carr.

Folder 46

Judith Young, 1986

Contains an unsigned Memorandum of Agreement and letters to Parker and Jim Perrizo regarding the (unsuccessful) hiring of Young to professionally edit Parker's memoirs.

Folder 47

Miscellaneous Letters A-R

Contains letters and cards to Parker from friends, family, and associates.

Folder 48

Miscellaneous Letters S-Z

Contains letters and cards to Parker from friends, family, and associates.

Folder 49

Miscellaneous Letters: Authors unknown

Contains letters and cards to Parker from friends, family, and associates.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988.

55 items

Arrangement: Chronological.

Material relating to Edie Parker's unpublished memoirs. It is divided into five subseries: Published Writings; Memoirs; Other Writings; Writings by Jack Kerouac; and Writings by Others. The series includes published articles and poetry by Edie Parker, typescript and manuscript versions of her unpublished memoirs, and writings by others. Folders 78-80 contain writings by Jack Kerouac, including a typescript screenplay written with Henri Cru.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.1. Published writings.

5 items

Arrangement: Chronological.

Contains two published excerpts from Parker's unpublished memoirs, "You'll Be Okay." Also contains Parker's published additions to Moore's "Book of Dreams: A Name Index" and Save the Frescoes That Are Us: A Detroit Tribute to Jack Kerouac, a book of poetry co-edited by Parker and M. L. Liebler which includes seven poems by Parker and a copy of the 8 September 1969 letter from Jack Kerouac to Parker. The original letter can be found in Folder 22.

Folder 50

Published writings

"Dave Moore's 'Book of Dreams: A Name Index' Addenda and Annotations." (Fall 1981). Moody Street Irregulars, no. 10, pp. 18-21. Save the Frescoes That Are Us: A Detroit Tribute to Jack Kerouac. (1982). M. L. Liebler and F. E. Kerouac-Parker (Eds.). Detroit: Ridgeway Press. Signed by Liebler and Parker. "Seventy White Candles in the Limelight." (July 1984). The Kerouac Connection, no. 3, pp. 3-4. "The Popsicle Man." (April 1985). The Kerouac Connection, no. 6, pp. 3-5. To William S. Burroughs: Essays and Poems Celebrating the 1987 River City Reunion. (1987). Roseville, MI: Ridgeway Press. Parker's "Fond Memories of Allen" and "Four Years Between Us" can be found in: Morgan, Bill (Ed.). (1986). Best Minds: A Tribute to Allen Ginsberg. NY: Lospecchio Press.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.2. Memoirs.

15 items

Arrangement: Typescript manuscript drafts constitute the first section, followed by handwritten drafts. No attempt has been made to order the documents.

Materials related to Parker's unpublished memoirs, "You'll Be Okay." Includes notes, outlines, letters, and typescrpt and handwritten versions of the manuscript.

Folder 51

Correspondence finding aid of uncertain authorship

Contains typescript excerpts of letters to Parker. Originals of some of the letters can be found in Folders 1-29.

Folder 52

1988 letters from Parker's assistant, Elizabeth Gratch, with samples of "You'll Be Okay."

Folder 53

Typescript edited sections of "You'll Be Okay."

Folder 54-70

Folder 54

Folder 55

Folder 56

Folder 57

Folder 58

Folder 59

Folder 60

Folder 61

Folder 62

Folder 63

Folder 64

Folder 65

Folder 66

Folder 67

Folder 68

Folder 69

Folder 70

Folders 54-64 contain typed versions, Folders 65-70 written versions.

Folders 55 and 60 contain an outline listing the three New York City apartments in which Parker, several Beat authors, and Beat associates lived between 1941 and 1947.

54: "I," "My childhood, youth, teen," "2" #70032, Subseries 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988. 2.2. Memoirs. , Folder 54
58: beginning," "(1)," "You'll Be O'Kay" #70032, Subseries 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988. 2.2. Memoirs. , Folder 58
59: "II" #70032, Subseries 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988. 2.2. Memoirs. , Folder 59
63: "Grosse Pointe" #70032, Subseries 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988. 2.2. Memoirs. , Folder 63
64: "Asbury '41-'42 #62" (421 W. 119th Street, Apt. #62, where Parker lived from 1942-1944 with several other Beats and Beat associates) #70032, Subseries 2. Writings, 1940s-circa 1988. 2.2. Memoirs. , Folder 64
Folder 67

"Henry Start Ideas"

Folder 68

"Impressions," "Henry #2"

Folder 70

"You'll Be Okay Notes"

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.3. Other writings

24 items

Arrangement: Chronological

Manuscripts include typescripts of Parker's publications as well as poems in manuscript and typescript.

Folder 71

Seventy White Candles in the Limelight"

Folder 72

Typescript of "Dave Moore's 'Book of Dreams: A Name Index' Addenda and Annotations." Folder 30 contains correspondence relating to the article.

Folder 73

"Remembering Mrs. William Seward Burroughs: Joan Vollmer Adams"

Excerpt from Parker's unpublished memoirs: "You'll Be Okay" published in To William S. Burroughs's "Essays and Poems Celebrating the 1987 River City Reunion."

Folder 74

"Fond Memories of Allen" and "Four Years Between Us" (1986)

Typescripts of Parker's prose and poetry contributions to the 1986 festschrift Best Minds: A Tribute to Allen Ginsberg, edited by Bill Morgan. Includes related letters from Morgan to Parker.

Folder 75

Original folder title: "Already Published, In Process."

Typescript and handwritten poems and articles by Parker.

Folder 76

Unpublished, untitled manuscript poem by Parker.

Folder 77

Notebook of poems, notes, and fragments of Parker's memoirs.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 2.4 Writings by Jack Kerouac

7 items

Arrangement: Alphabetical by title.

Manuscripts of unpublished poems and a book report by Jack Kerouac. Also includes a screenplay co-written with Henri Cru. The documents are not dated, but are estimated to have been written in the 1940s.

Folder 78

"Blood and Paper or Lunchtime Wake"

Typescript of a five-page screenplay written by Jack Kerouac. The title page states that the original story was by Henri Cru, who also served as the technical advisor. A related letter from Cru to Parker is included.

Folder 79

Five handwritten poems by Kerouac:

"Oil on Moral Waters" (penciled title erased, no other title provided). "The Root of the Light." "L'Église." "New Vision." Written on the bottom of the sheet: "Tuesday morning 6 AM. Edie's in right, J. in wrong." "Life."

Folder 80

A typescript of a book report entitled "'My Days of Anger' by James T. Farrell." The back of the sheet identifies the document as a college assignment written by Kerouac for Parker's sister, Charlotte, ca. 1944-1946.

Contains a photocopied typescript of travel impressions and poems by Allen Ginsberg; sections of the Jack Kerouac biography, Memory Babe; and an article on Herbert Huncke.

Folder 81

Photocopy of Allen Ginsberg's "China in Transition, through a Poet's Eyes." Written for United Press International in 1985, it recounts Ginsberg's impressions of his trip to China as a guest of the Peking Writers Association. Three poems written for the occasion are included.

Folder 82

Typescript sections of Gerald Nicosia's 1983 Memory Babe: A Critical Biography of Jack Kerouac. Contains a set of handwritten remarks by Parker with page references. Includes a typed version of the same.

Folder 83

Typescript of Jerry Poynton's "Herbert E. Huncke: 81 Years of the 20th Century."

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 3. Financial and Legal Materials

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 4. Scrapbooks and Biographical Materials, 1930s-1993.

about 625 items

Arrangement: Arrangement: Folder 88 contains biographical materials relating to Parker. Folders 89-108 contain the contents of 13 scrapbooks made by Parker. The scrapbooks are dismantled. Printouts of the photographed layout of pages can be found at the beginning of each scrapbook's materials.

Materials include clippings, photos, and printed ephemera. The themes of the scrapbooks are for the most part either Parker and her family or Jack Kerouac and other Beat writers. Photos of Henri Cru are also present. Original scrapbook titles have been retained.

Folder 88

Biographical Materials, 1922-1988.

Contains Parker's 1922 Certificate of Birth Registration, a 1944 Columbia University course schedule, and Medicare, Social Security, and AARP cards.

Folder 89-91

Folder 89

Folder 90

Folder 91

Scrapbook 1, 1939-1982.

Jack Kerouac is the primary theme of this scrapbook. Many items are copies of originals found elsewhere in the collection, such as letters (originals in Folder 22) and records pertaining to Kerouac's marriage to Parker (originals in Folder 84). Also included are photos of Kerouac, Henri Cru, and Parker's family, as well as a rare photo of Vicki Russell, a significant figure in Allen Ginsberg's life.

Folder 92

Scrapbook 2: "Kerouac, Lowell, Movie, Events I," 1976-1987.

Contains clippings and printed materials regarding Kerouac. Included are photos of Parker and of Kerouac's grave.

Folder 93

Scrapbook 3: "Movies, Kerouac Lowell Movie Events II," 1986-1987.

Contains clippings and printed materials on Kerouac, several of which refer to the film What Happened to Kerouac? Includes a letter to Parker from Nicosia regarding the role his Memory Babe (1986) played as background material for the film.

Folder 94

Scrapbook 4: "Burroughs I Naropa," 1975-1988.

William Burroughs is the primary theme of this scrapbook. Contains clippings and printed materials on Burroughs, postcards of him, exhibit announcements of art by him, and a greeting card featuring one of his paintings sent by him to Parker. Also includes clippings and printed materials on the Naropa Institute's 1982 On the Road: The Jack Kerouac Conference, letters to Parker regarding her participation in the conference, and business cards collected by Parker at the event. Additional materials on the conference are in Folder 131.

Folder 95

Scrapbook 5: "Naropa III," 1975-1989.

Contains clippings and printed materials on Jack Kerouac, Gary Snyder, and Amiri Baraka. Also includes 1982 travel information on the USSR and a photo of Parker.

Folder 96

Scrapbook 6: "Ginsberg," 1979-1988.

Contains clippings and printed materials on Allen Ginsberg, postcards from Ginsberg to Parker, and photos of Ginsberg and Parker at a book signing.

Folder 97

Scrapbook 7: "Lowell, Asbury Park II," 1944-1988.

Contains an invitation to the 1988 opening of the Jack Kerouac Commemorative, photos of Parker's family, and clippings on Asbury Park, N.J., where the Parkers had a summer home.

Folder 98

Scrapbook 8, 1974-1988.

Contains clippings and photocopies of articles on Parker, Jack Kerouac, and Kerouac-related productions. Also includes photos of Parker with Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs.

Folder 99-100

Folder 99

Folder 100

Scrapbook 9: "Autobiographies, Writers," 1969-1986.

Contains clippings and printed materials on Jack Kerouac, including several clippings on his death, on Kerouac-related events and productions, and on the 1982 Naropa Institute On the Road: The Jack Kerouac Conference, in which Parker participated. Also contains reviews of Beat biographies and autobiographies and coverage of the 1986 ouster of Barney Rosset from Grove Press.

Folder 101

Scrapbook 10: "Memory Babe, Beats Writers, Poets, Books," 1973-1986.

Contains clippings and printed material related to Jack Kerouac and photocopies of letters regarding Parker's attempts to secure royalties from Kerouac's books (originals in Folder 84). Also included are a photo of Parker from the 1940s, one of Carolyn Cassady and Jan Kerouac (Jack Kerouac's daughter) in 1978, one of Robert Creeley, and two proofs of Kerouac in 1964 with Saul Bellow and an unidentified individual.

Folder 102

Scrapbook 11: "Celebritys [sic], Kerouac, Influence, Products," 1986-1991.

Contains clippings and printed material on Beat authors, publications, and Beat-related events and productions.

Folder 103-105

Folder 103

Folder 104

Folder 105

Scrapbook 12: "Or Products I Have Known," 1942-1992.

Contains photos of Herbert Huncke, Parker and her family, and Henri Cru and his family sent to Parker by Cru. Also includes letters to Parker from Ginsberg, Nicosia, Cru, and William Burroughs Communications. Other materials include clippings and printed material on Jack Kerouac and Beat-related events, including coverage of talks on Kerouac by Parker.

Folder 106-108

Folder 106

Folder 107

Folder 108

Scrapbook 13, 1983-1992

Contains clippings and printed material on Jack Kerouac, other Beat writers, and Beat associates. Includes flyers on and coverage of talks on Kerouac by Parker, and a note to Parker from Henri Cru.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 5. Printed Materials, 1959-1992.

About 85 items.

Arrangement: Folders 109-111 contain newsletters and magazines. Each title is arranged chronologically. Folder 112 contains printed ephemera arranged chronologically, and Folders 113-119 contain newspapers and clippings, also arranged chronologically.

Most of the material pertains to Jack Kerouac and the Beats.

Folder 109

The Kerouac Connection, Ed. Dave Moore, Nos. 3-7, 9-14, 18-19 (July 1984-Spring 1990).

Numbers 3 and 6 are in Folder 50 and contain Parker's articles "Seventy White Candles in the Limelight" and "The Popsicle Man," respectively.

Folder 110

Moody Street Irregulars: A Jack Kerouac Newsletter, Nos. 11, 13, and 16/17 (1982-1986).

Number 10 can be found in Folder 50 and contains Parker's article "Dave Moore's 'Book of Dreams: A Name Index' Addenda and Annotations." Numbers 14, 16/17, 20/21, 22/23, and 24/25/26 can be found in Folder 155.

Folder 111

Soup, (1980). Soup, (1990). Beatniks from Space, No. 6 (1986). North Shore Life, Vol. 7, no. 2 (April/May 1987).

Pages 94-96 of Soup, 1980, contain five poems by Jack Kerouac the originals of which are in Folder 79. Pages 22-27 of North Shore Life contain articles on Jack Kerouac and the Kerouac Commemorative.

Folder 112

Time, Vol. 130, no. 12 (September 21, 1987). Beat Scene, No. 15 (ca. 1993).

Page 79 of Time contains a picture and brief coverage of the participants in the 1987 River City Reunion event in honor of William Burroughs. Pictured are Robert Creeley, Anne Waldman, Andrei Codrescu, Edie Parker, William Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg.

Folder 113

Contains photocopied articles and printed materials from 1974-1992. Many of the articles cover talks given by Parker on Jack Kerouac.

Folder 114

Contains clippings on Jack Kerouac from 1959-1973 from an unlabeled envelope.

Folder 115

Contains clippings from 1968-1971 from an unlabeled envelope on a loan shark case in Parker's hometown.

Folder 116-119

Folder 116

Folder 117

Folder 118

Folder 119

Newspapers and clippings 1980-1990.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 6. Photographic Materials, 1930s-ca. 1988.

35 items.

Arrangement: Eight folders of photographic prints precede a folder of photographic negatives.

The subjects of the materials are primarily Parker, Jack Kerouac, Beat associates, and Henri Cru.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 6.1. Photographic Prints.

5 items

Arrangement: Photos are organized into four subjects: Edie Parker, Jack Kerouac and Beats, Henri Cru, and Unidentified. Within each subject photos are arranged chronologically. Chronological.

Folder 120

Edie Parker Photographs, 1943-1988

12 items. Includes early 1940s photos of Parker in Asbury Park, N.J., and N.Y.; a photo of her at a diner; in a Michigan State sweatshirt outdoors holding pruning shears; with filmmaker Lewis MacAdams; with Tim Moran at Kerouac's grave in 1988; in a restaurant with Henri Cru and Tim Moran, 1988; and a later black and white of Parker fixing her hair in front of a mirror, alongside a 1940s photo of her in a similar stance.

Folder 121

Photo Album, ca. 1987

1 item. Snapshots of book signings at the 1987 River City Reunion event (see Folder 132), including photos of Parker, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Anne Waldman, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Michael McClure, and Andrei Codrescu. Other photos of Parker and unidentified individuals are included.

Folder 122

Jack Kerouac and Beats Photographs, ca. 1940-1950s

5 items. Ca. early 1940s tintype souvenir photo of Kerouac holding a cigarette, wearing a plaid jacket. On the back is written "Zagg," the nickname Kerouac was given based on the zigzag way in which he ran on the football field. 1940s head shot of Kerouac turned to camera. 1947 photograph of Joan Adams Burroughs's baby daughter, Julie, at Burroughs's farm. Two other photos are of unidentified individuals at the farm.

Folder 123-126

Folder 123

Folder 124

Folder 125

Folder 126

Photographs mounted in plastic of Kerouac and Vicki Russell, 1940s. 5 items.

123: Kerouac wearing a double-breasted suit in front of Parker's summer home in Asbury Park. #70032, Subseries 6. Photographic Materials, 1930s-ca. 1988. 6.1. Photographic Prints., Folder 123
124: Two photobooth pictures. First photo of Kerouac in a Coast Guard cap ca. 1943-1944 (enlargement in Folder 91); second photo of Kerouac with scarf and cigarette. #70032, Subseries 6. Photographic Materials, 1930s-ca. 1988. 6.1. Photographic Prints., Folder 124
125: Kerouac wearing a navy cap at Columbia University, 1944. On the back of the photo is written "Apparition de l'enfer… John Kerouac 1944 C.U., NYC (Photo by R. Christie)." #70032, Subseries 6. Photographic Materials, 1930s-ca. 1988. 6.1. Photographic Prints., Folder 125
126: : Two photobooth pictures. First photo is of Vicki Russell; second is a profile of Kerouac (enlargements in Folder 91). #70032, Subseries 6. Photographic Materials, 1930s-ca. 1988. 6.1. Photographic Prints., Folder 126
Folder 127

Henri Cru, 1930s-50s

3 items. Childhood photograph of Cru with another boy, identified on the back as Bill. 1940s photograph of Cru with girlfriend, Helen. Photograph, possibly of Cru, ca. 1950s, with an unidentified woman.

Folder 128

Unidentified.

1 item.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 6.2. Photographic Negatives.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 7. Other Papers and Related Materials, 1945-1987.

About 100 items.

Arrangement: Materials include information and letters regarding talks given by Parker and conferences she attended. Additional items include pawnbroker receipts from the 1940s and Parker's press packet. Original folder titles have been retained and are in quotes.

Folder 130

12 items. Miscellaneous small items from the 1940s

Includes a 1945 Grosse Pointe Public Library overdue notice addressed to Mrs. John de Kerovac for Dostoevskii's The Idiot, a popular book among Beat members at the time. Also includes several NYC pawnbroker receipts from ca. 1948, including one for a typewriter made out to Frankie E. Dietz in an envelope labeled "Jack's wallet." Parker's married name was Dietz between 1950 and 1954.

Folder 131

Materials relating to the Naropa Institute's 1982 On the Road: The Jack Kerouac Conference in Boulder, Colorado, in which Parker participated.

Folder 132

"River City Reunion," 1987

Materials relating to the week-long 1987 artist event in Lawrence, Kan., in which Parker participated. Several Beat artists were present in addition to writers, scholars, and artists from around the country. Photos of many attendees are in Folder 121.

Folder 133

"Beats, Canada, Pegg," 1981-1984

Letters arranging a reading in Ontario that Parker gave on Kerouac.

Folder 134

"Beats, Kerouac," 1983-1985

Contains 1944 high school reunion information, a two-page autobiographical piece by Kerouac, and information from Warren Peace, a recording artist.

Folder 135

Miscellaneous items, including an address book, health information, the certificate of cremation for Henri Cru, a dried flower in an envelope labeled "jack casket," and a booklet of articles on Parker entitled "Beat the Heat: A Press Packet for Francis Edith Kerouac Parker." Also contains a brass name plate of Dr. W. R. Martin of Brooklyn, the doctor from which Parker stated she stole blank prescription pads for Burroughs and others to write prescriptions. Burroughs was later caught and charged for this. Other material includes an invitation to a 1986 rededication of Lewis E. Maire Elementary School. Maire Elementary was named for Parker's grandfather.

Folder 136

Sketches.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subcollection 2: Henri Cru.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983.

About 115 items.

Arrangement: Alphabetically by correspondent, then chronologically within each folder. Dates following correspondents' names below represent the time-span of the correspondence.

Personal correspondence of Henri Cru. Notable correspondents include author and filmmaker Regina Weinreich; Joan Haverty, Jack Kerouac's second wife; and Jan Kerouac, Kerouac's daughter by Haverty.

Folder 137

Doctors, 1983

Folder 138

Joan Haverty, 1968

Haverty was Jack Kerouac's second wife and mother of his daughter, Jan Kerouac. This letter refers to child support back payments for Jan that Kerouac owed Haverty.

Folder 139

Jan Kerouac, 1968, 1982

Jan Kerouac was Jack Kerouac's daughter. Contains two letters from her to Cru.

Folder 140

Stephen Kurman, 1992

Includes photos of Cru hospitalized during his last few days and letters regarding the settling of his estate.

Folder 141

Dave Moore, 1984

Moore was editor of The Kerouac Connection newsletter. This letter to Cru regards additional questions Moore had for an interview he conducted with Cru. The interview was published in the Spring 1987 issue of The Kerouac Connection, number 13 (see Folder 109).

Folder 142-147

Folder 142

Folder 143

Folder 144

Folder 145

Folder 146

Folder 147

Tim Moran, 1988-1992

Tim Moran was Cru's friend and caretaker. He inherited Cru's papers and is the donor of the Edie Parker and Henri Cru Papers collection. Folders contain correspondence between Cru and Moran. Enclosures of the letters contain the various materials Cru included in his correspondence, such as off-track betting information, clippings, and photos. There are several instances in which Cru sent Moran photocopies of letters he wrote to someone else.

142: Tim Moran, 1988 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 142
143: Tim Moran, 1989 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 143

Contains a photocopy of a handwritten note and a 1960 telegram from Jack Kerouac to Cru. Also includes a letter addressed to Jim Perrizo, Parker's assistant for her memoirs, in which Cru recounts a story of Jack Kerouac asking Cru in the 1950s to help him get on the train to visit his mother in Florida. Kerouac's previous attempts were unsuccessful because he got drunk on his way to the station.

144: Tim Moran, Jan-May 1990 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 144
145: Tim Moran, Jun-Dec 1990 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 145
146: Tim Moran, 1991 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 146

Includes an account by Brian Hassett of Cru's 70th birthday party.

147: Tim Moran, 1992 #70032, Series 8. Correspondence, 1982-1983., Folder 147
Folder 148

Edie Parker, 1978-1990

Includes a 7 April 1978 card in which Parker initiates contact with Cru after 30 or more years.

Folder 149

Fernanda Pivano, 1963

Folder 150

Regina Weinreich, 1983-1984

Includes reference to a radio interview Weinreich conducted with Cru, Parker, and Gerry Nicosia.

Folder 151

Miscellaneous Letters, 1968-1991

Includes a 1992 postcard from Cru's sister, Yvonne, and photos sent to Cru by an unidentified individual.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 9. Financial materials, 1968, 1986.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 10. Scrapbook and Biographical Materials, ca. 1883-1984..

48 items.

Arrangement: Folder 153 contains biographical materials relating to Cru. Folder 154 contains the contents of a scrapbook. The scrapbook is dismantled. Printouts of the photographed layout of pages can be found at the beginning of the materials.

Folder 153

Biographical Materials, 1942-1984

Contains several forms of identification for Cru, including a 1942 Coast Guard ID, a 1969 passport, a 1984 U.S. Merchant Mariner's Document, his Social Security card, and a New York-area transportation Card for Handicapped Persons. Also included is a fragment of the narrative from the scrapbook (see Folder 154), and an obituary mounted in plastic of his father, Albert Cru.

Folder 154

Scrapbook 14, ca. 1883-1972

The scrapbook is a history of the Cru family and was a Christmas gift to Cru from his sister, Yvonne, in 1972. Materials include an eight-page narrative of the Cru family history, a family tree, and photos of family members and homes. Includes a 1911 postcard from Cru's father, Albert Cru, to Cru's mother, Anna Marie "Nita" Cru.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 11. Printed Materials, ca. 1883-1984..

10 items.

Arrangement: Newsletters precede an inner folder of clippings. Items are in chronological order within their format.

Consists of newsletters and clippings pertaining to Jack Kerouac and the Beats.

Folder 155

Moody Street Irregulars: A Jack Kerouac Newsletter, Nos. 14, 16/17, 20/21, 22/23, 24/25/26 (1984-1991). Also includes contemporary reviews of Jack Kerouac's Desolation Angels, Visions of Cody, and the film What Happened to Kerouac?

Number 10 of the Moody Street Irregulars can be found in Folder 50 and contains Parker's article "Dave Moore's 'Book of Dreams: A Name Index' Addenda and Annotations." Numbers 11, 13, and 16/17 can be found in Folder 110.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 12. Photographic Materials, 1939-ca. 1980s.

54 items.

Arrangement: A folder of photographic prints is followed by one of negatives and one of slides.

Subject matter includes Cru, his friends and family, cities from his travels, and scenes of him at work as an electrician for the merchant marine.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 12.1. Photographic Prints.

36 items.

Arrangement: Chronological, loosely based on dates in the captions on the back of the photos.

Folder 156

Chronological, loosely based on dates in the captions on the back of the photos.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 12.2 Negatives.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 12.3. Slides.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 13. Other Papers and Related Materials, 1934-1990.

15 items.

Arrangement: Materials include address books, notebooks, printed ephemera, and a book.

Folder 159

Book: Malot, Hector. (1934). Sans Famille. Philadelphia: John C. Winston Co.

The book was "Edited with notes and vocabulary" by Cru's father, Albert L. Cru, and is dedicated to Henri Cru. It also contains an autographed inscription from Albert Cru to Henri Cru.

Folder 160

Address book (ca. 1958-1959).

Names listed include Allen Ginsberg, Lucien Carr, and several entries for Jack Kerouac.

Folder 161

Address book (1980s).

Folder 162-163

Folder 162

Folder 163

Two spiral-bound notebooks belonging to Cru.

Folder 164

Materials relating to the Naropa Institute's 1982 On the Road: The Jack Kerouac Conference in Boulder, Colorado.

Folder 165

Notes and printed ephemera.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Series 14. Other Donated Materials, 1944-2004.

36 items.

Arrangement: Materials include items donated by John Moran, brother of Tim Moran, and forwarded to the library by the latter in no discernible order.

expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 14.1. Tim Moran.

10 items.

Arrangement: Items are separated by format into three folders of printed ephemera, magazines, and newspaper. Within each folder items are in chronological order.

Materials include Beat-related newsletters, clippings, printed ephemera, and a typescript speech by Herbert Huncke.

Folder 166

Contains a typescript of Herbert Huncke's penultimate speech given in 1995 in Lowell, Massachusetts, at the "Lowell Celebrates Kerouac" event. Also contains a Jan Kerouac press kit distributed by Gerald Nicosia during the 1994 NYU Beat Conference in support of Jan's attempt to gain control of the Kerouac estate.

Folder 167

Dharma Beat, Issues 2-3 (Spring and Fall 1994).

Page 38 of the New York Times Magazine for 1995 contains an article on children of Beat writers. Page 39 of the New York Times Magazine for 1996 contains an article by Allen Ginsberg on Herbert Huncke.

  • The New York Times Magazine, (Nov. 5, 1995).
  • The New York Times Magazine, (Dec. 29, 1996).

Folder 168

Clippings on a lawsuit between Parker's sister, Charlotte Pattison, and Tim Moran regarding the rightful ownership of Parker's papers. Also includes obituaries and articles on Herbert Huncke and Allen Ginsberg.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Subseries 14.2. John Moran.

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expand/collapse Expand/collapse Items Separated

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