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Summary Description
Biographical Sketch
Alfred Lambourne, (1850-1926) the son of William and Martha W. Lambourne, was born in England and came to America as a child. The family remained in St. Louis, Missouri for several years before they came west to Utah, as pioneers.
In his early childhood, Alfred Lambourne showed a love for art, and started drawing at an early age. Soon after arriving in the Salt Lake Valley, he obtained employment as a scenic artist in the Salt Lake Theatre. He remained there several years, first as an assistant, and later as chief scenic artist. For years, he was a close friend and associate of the late Charles R. Savage, a pioneer photographer. Together, they toured the West and parts of the east, with Savage taking photos, and Lambourne painting as they went. Lambourne also visited the entire Wasatch range with artist H. L. A. Culmer. Together, they explored and named the now well-known Wasatch mountain lakes in the upper Cottonwoods. Lambourne also toured Yosemite, Glacier National Park, Colorado, Arizona, and other parts of the scenic west. With Teuben Kirkham, he painted a series of large canvasses representing his journey from the eastern coast of the United States, to the Golden Gate. Some of his best-known paintings represented scenes on the islands and shores of the Great Salt Lake. In 1871, he went to Zion Canyon with Brigham Young and painted the first canvas from that area. While he is famous as a landscape artist, Alfred Lambourne was also a writer, and seemed to prefer writing over painting by the 1890s. He published fourteen books, on a myriad of topics, and illustrated some of them personally. Alfred Lambourne married Wilhelmina M. Williamson (1842-1906), in 1877, and together they had eight children. Alfred Lambourne died in 1926.
Scope and Content
The Alfred Lambourne Papers (1912-1926) contain correspondence and published works.
Administrative Information
Restrictions : Materials must be used on-site; advance notice suggested. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.
Materials must be used on-site. Two business days advance notice required. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law, fragile condition of the material, or by the donor. No use of original audio-visual materials will be allowed; access copies will be made available for viewing. Related Material : Donor Information : Acq Method: donated by Acq Name: Emily Smith Stewart Acq Date: 1969 Acq Method: donated by Acq Name: Virginia Lambourne Acq Date: 1978 Processing Information : This collection was processed by Nehmat Saab on 1985.
Index Terms
These records are indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the J.Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah. Researchers wishing to find related materials should search the catalog under these index terms.
Organizations: Subjects: Lambourne, Alfred, ca. 1850-1926 - Archives Artists - Utah Poets - Utah Genres:
Restrictions
Materials must be used on-site; advance notice suggested. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.
Materials must be used on-site. Two business days advance notice required. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law, fragile condition of the material, or by the donor. No use of original audio-visual materials will be allowed; access copies will be made available for viewing. Arrangement of the Records Detailed Description of the Records
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The articles in this folder are published, and deal mainly with art and literature. It includes "The Wasatch Story of Plet," which appeared in the Salt Lake Tribune, and the Evening Star.
These are a series of articles published in the Deseret News. They are essays about national and international writers of that time.
These articles are psycho-analytic love stories, or "studies," dealing with the different personalities of women, as seen by a man in 1925.
"Lady," "In the House or Rammer," "Hesper," "Myrtle," "First Hours at Yellowstone Park," and "Genius," "Autumn in Yosemite Valley," "Egdyth."
Contains a review of Lambourne's book The Peace: Country Cross-roads, and a poem The Cross: Holly and Easter Lilies. It also includes his obitiuary.
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