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Lydia O. Jackson Papers
Lydia O. Jackson Papers, 1908-1985
Collection Overview
Title: Lydia O. Jackson Papers, 1908-1985
ID: OGLMC987
Primary Creator: Jackson, Lydia O. (1902-1984)
Extent: 21.0 Linear Feet
Date Acquired: 08/00/1984. More info below under Accruals.
Subjects: Literary - Poetry, Women's History
Languages: English
Abstract
Scope and Contents of the Materials
The Lydia O. Jackson Papers consist primarily of autobiographical materials, correspondence, manuscripts, and publications containing her poetry. Also included in the collection is a series which contains pedigree information on John P. Jackson's, Lydia's father-in-law, Holstein cattle herd and the sale of the herd in 1925.
A variety of information can be elicited from the collection which in turn illuminates both the strengths and weaknesses of the Jackson collection. The papers reveal the picture of an intellectually curious and industrious farm homemaker and poet from the 1930s through the early 1980s. As social history, Lydia Jackson's correspondence and poetry detail the values held dear by many women of the time period, whether rural or urban: devotion and duty to family and home.
The autobiographical material describes only briefly the particulars of her life. It instead lists her literary achievements, a task she did almost yearly since 1951 to maintain her membership in the Fargo branch of the National League of American Pen Women. The short autobiographical notes she wrote for Who's Who entries also list her achievements.
Insights into Jackson's daily life and thought come mainly from a reading of her round robin correspondence with several poet friends across the country, none of whom she ever met. This correspondence lasted twenty-eight years, from 1943 to 1971. Additionally, two notebooks contain copies of letters written to relatives during the Depression. They describe living and farming conditions on the Jackson farm besides mentioning the groups and activities Lydia participated in off the farm. The collection, however, contains little other information regarding her club activities. Several of her essays are also autobiographical in nature.
Secondly, the collection reveals the publishing and editorial world of the small poetry magazine and newspaper poetry column, both of which published Lydia Jackson's poetry. Correspondence between Jackson and poetry editors describes the difficulties of maintaining the continued publications of these small magazines.
Social historians have recently addressed the question of women's friendships in the nineteenth century. Lydia Jackson, twentieth century woman of rural North Dakota, maintained many lasting friendships via pen and paper between not only poet friends, often publishing in the same poetry magazines, but also her poetry editors. Particularly noteworthy are the letters from Helen Lange, 1958 to 1984, editor of "The Lighter Side", a Chicago newspaper poetry column. These are located in the enclosure folders following Jackson's poetry notebooks.
Thirdly, the Jackson papers only minimally delineate Lydia's intellectual process of writing poetry. Several scraps of paper is all that is available to describe the process of rough draft to finished piece of poetry, although in one essay she reflects on various forms of poetry and illustrated each form with an example of her own poetry. Her round robin correspondence also mentions her excitement of attempting new forms of poetry and her successes and failures.
An interesting exception to the above are the letters from Hilario and Rosalia Nieves, Culion Sanitarium, in the Philippines. The Nieves were sponsored by the Jacksons and their correspondence vividly describes life in a leprosarium.
Collection Historical Note
Lydia O. Jackson was born near Grafton, North Dakota, March 5, 1902, to Karl Olaf and Inga Schelstad Svarte. Her father died when she was four years old and her mother remarried a year later to Edward Thompson. Lydia was the eldest of eight children. Her family moved frequently during her childhood, living in various places in North Dakota or Minnesota and one winter in Norway. As she was about to enter high school, her family moved to the Canadian Northwest, leaving Lydia behind to complete her high school education. She confessed that this event had a profound impact on her, leaving her to yearn for home and family. After graduating from high school in Grafton, she taught in a rural school for a short time before marrying Arthur Jackson, December 20, 1920. She then settled down to become a homemaker on a 280 acre farm near Grafton.
Lydia O. Jackson began writing poetry seriously in the early 1930's, recording her poem "Home", November 9, 1934, in the first of her thirty-four notebooks of poetry. Her lonely high school years and her longing for a home life influenced the themes of much of her poetry. Her 1183 poems reflect her thoughts of her home and family, her role as homemaker and mother, and the goodness she saw both in people and nature.
She is the author of one book of poetry, Selected Poems, published in 1962 and two booklets of poems, Rhymes For Every Season, 1943, and Pardon My Gaff, 1965. In 1967, she compiled a booklet of peace poems entitled, A Peace Garden Of Verses which contains her poetry and the poems of eight other North Dakota Pen Women poets. Her poetry also appears in over two hundred periodicals, newspapers and poetry anthologies, including popular magazines such as Ideals and Guideposts.
She was a member of various poetry organizations including the Fargo Branch of the National League of American Pen Women, Midwest Federation of Chaparral Poets, American Poetry League, American Poets Fellowship Society, Idaho Poets and Writers Guild, World Poetry Day Association, World Poetry Society, and Centro Studi E Scambi Internazionali. These organizations published a poetry magazine to which Lydia was a regular contributor.
In recognition of her poetry, Lydia was the recipient of several awards: the National Farmers Union Writers Award, 1950; Bronze Medal, 1965, and the Silver Medal, 1967 from Centro Studi E Scambi Internazionali; the fifth Poet Laureate of American Poets Fellowship Society, 1972-1973; Co-Associate Poet Laureate of North Dakota, 1975, Co-Poet Laureate, 1979, and Poet Laureate of North Dakota, 1983. She is also included in the International Who's Who in Poetry, Who's Who of American Women, Who's Who in the Midwest, and the Dictionary of International Biography.
Lydia Jackson was a voracious reader believing it was essential to feed her mind as well as her body. To further this need, she belonged to the Sigma Rho Study Club. Additionally she was a member of the Riverside Women's Club, the Ladies Aid Society of the Federated Church of Grafton, Order of the Eastern Star, and served as treasurer of School District 22 from 1931 to 1962 and treasurer of the Walsh County School Officers Association from 1945 to 1962.
Lydia O. Jackson died April 3, 1984.
Subject/Index Terms
Administrative Information
Repository: Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections
Accruals: Additional material was donated by Elizabeth Fagerholt on March 8, 1985 (85-1356).
Access Restrictions: Open for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections.
Acquisition Source: Elizabeth Fagerholt (Lydia Jackson's daughter), Grafton, North Dakota
Acquisition Method: Donation; 84-1327
Preferred Citation: (Description of Item). Lydia O. Jackson Papers. OGLMC 987, Box #, Folder #. Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections, Chester Fritz Library, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.
Finding Aid Revision History: Finding aid added to Archon in January 2015.
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Series:
[Series 1: Biographical Material],
[Series 2: Poetry],
[Series 3: Additional Unpublished Works],
[Series 4: Poetry Publications],
[Series 5: Correspondence],
[Series 6: Awards and Recognition],
[Series 7: Epsilon Sigma Omicron, Theta Chapter],
[Series 8: Jackson Holstein Cattle Herd],
[Series 9: Photographs],
[All]
- Series 2: Poetry
- Sub-Series 1: Manuscripts
- A portion of this subseries contains Jackson's poetry notebooks. These have been arranged in chronological order. The enclosures from each notebook have been placed in separate folders which are arranged directly behind their corresponding notebook.
- Box 1
- Folder 13: Poems, Fourth Grade and Age 14
- Folder 14: Poetry Notebook 1, 1934-1942
- Folder 15: Poetry Notebook 1 Enclosures
- Folder 16: Poetry Notebook 2, 1942-1943
- Folder 17: Poetry Notebook 2 Enclosures
- Folder 18: Poetry Notebook 3, 1943
- Folder 19: Poetry Notebook 3 Enclosures
- Folder 20: Poetry Notebook 4, 1944
- Folder 21: Poetry Notebook 4 Enclosures
- Folder 22: Poetry Notebook 5, 1944-1945
- Folder 23: Poetry Notebook 5 Enclosures
- Folder 24: Poetry Notebook 6, 1945
- Folder 25: Poetry Notebook 6 Enclosures
- Folder 26: Poetry Notebook 7, 1945-1946
- Folder 27: Poetry Notebook 7 Enclosures
- Folder 28: Poetry Notebook 8, 1946-1947
- Folder 29: Poetry Notebook 8 Enclosures
- Folder 30: Poetry Notebook 9, 1947-1948
- Folder 31: Poetry Notebook 9 Enclosures
- Folder 32: Poetry Notebook 10, 1948-1949
- Folder 33: Poetry Notebook 10 Enclosures
- Folder 34: Poetry Notebook 11, 1949-1950
- Folder 35: Poetry Notebook 11 Enclosures
- Folder 36: Poetry Notebook 12, 1951-1952
- Folder 37: Poetry Notebook 12 Enclosures
- Folder 38: Poetry Notebook 13, 1952-1953
- Folder 39: Poetry Notebook 13 Enclosures
- Folder 40: Poetry Notebook 14, 1954-1955
- Folder 41: Poetry Notebook 14 Enclosures
- Box 2
- Folder 1: Poetry Notebook 15, 1955-1956
- Folder 2: Poetry Notebook 15 Enclosures
- Folder 3: Poetry Notebook 16, 1956-1957
- Folder 4: Poetry Notebook 16 Enclosures
- Folder 5: Poetry Notebook 17, 1957-1958
- Folder 6: Poetry Notebook 17 Enclosures
- Folder 7: Poetry Notebook 18, 1959
- Folder 8: Poetry Notebook 18 Enclosures
- Folder 9: Poetry Notebook 19, 1960
- Folder 10: Poetry Notebook 19 Enclosures
- Folder 11: Poetry Notebook 20, 1961
- Folder 12: Poetry Notebook 20 Enclosures
- Folder 13: Poetry Notebook 21, 1961-1962
- Folder 14: Poetry Notebook 21 Enclosures
- Folder 15: Poetry Notebook 22, 1962-1963
- Folder 16: Poetry Notebook 22 Enclosures
- Folder 17: Poetry Notebook 23, 1963-1964
- Folder 18: Poetry Notebook 23 Enclosures
- Folder 19: Poetry Notebook 24, 1965
- Folder 20: Poetry Notebook 24 Enclosures
- Folder 21: Poetry Notebook 25, 1965-1966
- Folder 22: Poetry Notebook 25 Enclosures
- Folder 23: Poetry Notebook 26, 1966-1968
- Folder 24: Poetry Notebook 26 Enclosures
- Box 3
- Folder 1: Poetry Notebook 27, 1968-1969
- Folder 2: Poetry Notebook 27 Enclosures
- Folder 3: Poetry Notebook 27 Enclosures
- Folder 4: Poetry Notebook 28, 1970-1971
- Folder 5: Poetry Notebook 28 Enclosures
- Folder 6: Poetry Notebook 29, 1972-1973
- Folder 7: Poetry Notebook 29 Enclosures
- Folder 8: Poetry Notebook 30, 1974-1975
- Folder 9: Poetry Notebook 30 Enclosures
- Folder 10: Poetry Notebook 31, 1976-1977
- Folder 11: Poetry Notebook 31 Enclosures
- Folder 12: Poetry Notebook 32, 1977-1979
- Folder 13: Poetry Notebook 32 Enclosures
- Folder 14: Poetry Notebook 33, 1979-1981
- Folder 15: Poetry Notebook 33 Enclosures
- Folder 16: Poetry Notebook 34, 1982-1983
- Folder 17: Poetry Notebook 34 Enclosures
- Box 4
- Folder 1: Manuscript - Selected Poems, 1962
- Folder 2: Manuscript - A Peace Garden of Verses, 1967
- Folder 3: Manuscript - More Gaff, no date
- Folder 4: Manuscript - Homespun Verse, no date
- Folder 5: Manuscript - Sense and Nonsense, no date
- Folder 6: Manuscript - Roberta, no date
- Folder 7: Manuscript - When Childhood Was In Flower, no date
- Folder 8: Manuscript - Doggerel Rhymes, no date
- Folder 9: Poetry - Rough Drafts
- Sub-Series 2: Published
- Box 4
- Folder 10: Rhymes For Every Season, 1943
- Folder 11: Rhymes For Every Season Publication
- Folder 12: Selected Poems, 1962
- Folder 13: Selected Poems, Publication and Distribution
- Folder 14: Pardon My Gaff, 1965
- Folder 15: Pardon My Gaff, Publication and Distribution
- Folder 16: A Peace Garden of Verses, 1967
- Folder 17: A Peace Garden of Verses, Publication and Distribution
- Folder 18: "Prayer of a Homemaker", (1944-1945?)
- Folder 19: "Prayer of a Homemaker", Publication and Distribution
- Folder 20: Poems Honoring Dignitaries, 1947-1965
- Folder 21: Handmade Poetry Folders of Published Poetry
- Folder 22: Scrapbook - Published Poetry, Poetry Contests, and Memberships, 1940-1945
- Folder 23: Enclosures - Scrapbook - Published Poetry, Poetry Contests and Memberships
- Folder 24: Poetry Contest, 1942-1946
- Folder 25: Scrapbook - Clippings of Published Poetry, 1941-1967
- Folder 26: Published Poetry - Clippings, 1949, 1961-1984
- Folder 27: Clippings - Poetry and Club Activities, 1950-1955
- Folder 28: Poetry Clippings Sent to Poet Pen Pals
Browse by Series:
[Series 1: Biographical Material],
[Series 2: Poetry],
[Series 3: Additional Unpublished Works],
[Series 4: Poetry Publications],
[Series 5: Correspondence],
[Series 6: Awards and Recognition],
[Series 7: Epsilon Sigma Omicron, Theta Chapter],
[Series 8: Jackson Holstein Cattle Herd],
[Series 9: Photographs],
[All]