BLANCHE TRASK TO CHARLES LUMMIS:
Letter of July 31, 1904
compiled by
Robert Roy van de Hoek
December 2000
Avalon
Mr. Lummis
I return the
"Willfull" yes - but
Very Truely
July 31, '04
verse - in which the
change thta you desired
has been made.
otherwise - it could not
have been in articulate
cadences must be "reckon-
ed in to fill the empty
gaps."
Blanche Trask
Blanche Trask, poet-explorer-naturalist,
did most of her California wild nature exploration and writing on the Channel
Islands of Southern California. She was a resident of Avalon on Santa Catalina
Island in Los Angeles County, California from 1895 to 1915 (20 Years).
Her winter home was located next to the Tuna Club in Avalon, but she also
had a summer home at the Isthmus where the Institute of Environmental Studies
of USC is currently located. She corresponded with professors and scientists
at UC Berkeley, Harvard University, the Smithsonian, and at the California
Academy of Sciences in San Franciso. She also corresponded with Charles
Lummis, editor of the Land of Sunshine, a literary magazine.
Blanche Trask wrote this letter on July 31, 1904, and it is after several of her poems and prose articles had already been published by Charles Lummis. The above narrative and letter was written and compiled by Robert Roy van de Hoek for educational
purposes in recognition of the 96th year anniversary of this letter being written.
The original letter is on file at the Southwest Museum of Los Angeles in the Charles Lummis Manuscript Collection (MS.1) under the correspondence: Blanche Trask, 1899-1905, Folder Number MS.1.1.4366. I thank the Southwest Museum for their assistance in archiving the letters and for help in finding the letters.