This is a list of sketches of notable people, or of their close relatives, drawn by Marguerite Martyn (American journalist, 1878–1948) and published in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
A
edit- Jane Addams, pioneer settlement worker[1]
- Judge Glendy B. Arnold of the divorce court[2]
- Carrie Thomas Alexander-Bahrenberg, University of Illinois trustee[3]
- Helen Dinsmore Huntington Astor, Republican Party activist[4]
- Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor, British politician[5]
- Rachel Foster Avery, pioneer suffragist[6]
B
edit- Roger Nash Baldwin, a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union[7]
- Illinois Congressman-elect William N. Baltz and his daughters[8]
- Bertha Barr, delegate to 1936 Republican National Convention[9]
- Ethel Barrymore, actress[10]
- Alva Belmont, socialite and suffrage benefactor[11]
- Mrs. Perry Belmont (Jessie Ann Robbins), wife of the New York politician and diplomat[12]
- Sarah Bernhardt, actress[13]
- Elizabeth Lucy Bibesco, English writer and socialite[14]
- Amelia Bingham, actress[15]
- Alice Stone Blackwell, suffrage leader and editor[16]
- Emily Newell Blair, writer, suffragist, feminist, Democratic Party leader[14]
- Harriot Stanton Blatch, suffragist[11][17]
- Anna E. Blount, president of the National Medical Women's Association[18]
- Susan Elizabeth Blow, educator, the "Mother of the Kindergarten"[19]
- 'Round-the-world journalist Nellie Bly[20]
- Film actress Eleanor Boardman[21]
- Lawyer and suffragist Inez Milholland Boissevain[22]
- Catherine Booth-Clibborn of the Salvation Army,[23]
- Louise DeKoven Bowen,[1] financial supporter of suffrage movement
- Mary Carroll Craig Bradford, the only woman delegate at the 1908 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado[24]
- Catherine Breshkovsky, "grandmother of the Russian revolution"[25]
- Helene Hathaway Robison Britton, owner of the St. Louis Cardinals[26][27]
- Sallie Britton, daughter of James H. Britton, mayor of St. Louis, married to James Mackin, New York state treasurer[28]
- Izetta Jewel Brown, actress, women's rights activist and Democratic politician[14]
- Mary K. Browne, professional tennis player and amateur golfer[29]
- Attorney Mary Baird Bryan and her husband, William Jennings Bryan, two-time presidential candidate, and two grandchildren[30]
- Actress Billie Burke[31]
- Mrs. Adolphus Busch III (Florence McRhea Lambert), first wife of the brewery executive[32]
- Sarah Schuyler Butler, Republican activist[33]
C
edit- S. Parkes Cadman, minister and advice columnist[34]
- Steelmaker Andrew Carnegie[35]
- Anna Ella Carroll, politician, pamphleteer and lobbyist[36]
- Anna Case, opera singer[14]
- Dancer and animal-rights activist Irene Castle, wife of Chicago businessman Frederic McLaughlin[37]
- Dancer Vernon Castle[38]
- Carrie Chapman Catt, suffrage leader[11]
- Espiridiona Cenda, dancer also known as Chiquita[39]
- Cécile Chaminade, French composer[40]
- Percival Chubb, Ethical Cultural Society leader[41]
- Kate Claxton, actress[42]
- Mrs. Cornelius Cole, one of the first three women accredited to a Republican National Convention[11]
- Nancy Cook, suffragist, educator, political organizer, businesswoman[43]
- Phoebe Couzins, lawyer[44]
- Caroline Bartlett Crane, known as "America's housekeeper" for her efforts to improve sanitation[18]
- Raymond Crane, comedian and actor[45]
- Missouri Lieutenant Governor Wallace Crossley[46]
- Mrs. Shelby Cullom (Julia Fisher), wife of the Illinois senator[47]
- Pearl Lenore Curran, author and medium, wife of John H. Curran, Missouri immigration commissioner.[48]
D
edit- Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels and his wife, Addie Worth Bagley[49]
- Dwight F. Davis, businessman and founder of the Davis Cup[7]
- Rose Davis, rodeo rider[50]
- Thamara de Swirsky, dancer[51]
- Actress Marie Doro[52]
- Loren and Dora Doxey, accused of murder[53][54][55]
- Anne Dallas Dudley, suffragist[6]
E
edit- Aviator Amelia Earhart[56]
- Crystal Eastman, feminist and political activist[1]
- Catherine (Kitty) Elkins, daughter of Senator Stephen Benton Elkins, who wanted to marry Prince Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi[57]
- Effie Ellsler, actress[58]
- Julian Eltinge, cross-dressing actor[59]
F
edit- Martha P. Falconer, social reformer[1]
- Diomede Falconio, apostolic delegate from the Vatican to the United States[60]
- Frank H. Farris, attorney, member of both the Missouri state Senate and its House of Representatives[61]
- Beatrice Farnham, artist and entrepreneur, the wife of John Otto (park ranger)[62]
- Martha Ellis Fischel, social service worker, mother of Edna Fischel Gellhorn, suffragist and reformer[63]
- Judith Ellen Foster, government official[64]
- James F. Fulbright, representative, Missouri Legislature[65]
G
edit- Joe Gans, boxer[66]
- Mary Garden, actress[67]
- Missouri Governor and Mrs. Fred Gardner[68]
- Dancer Adeline Genée[69]
- Edna Fischel Gellhorn (Mrs. George), suffragist and reformer[65]
- James Gibbons, Roman Catholic cardinal[70]
- Artist Charles Dana Gibson[71]
- Irene Langhorne Gibson, philanthropist and Democratic National Convention delegate, the original Gibson Girl[72]
- Catholic Archbishop John J. Glennon[60]
- Emma Goldman, activist and writer[73][74]
- Samuel Gompers, labor leader[75]
- Edith Kelly Gould, wife of a millionaire Gould[76]
- Edward Howland Robinson Green, the only son of the miser Hetty Green[77]
- Isabella Greenway (Mrs. John C.), Arizona politician[72]
- Minnie J. Grinstead, teacher, Republican politician, and temperance worker[4]
H
edit- Mrs. Herbert S. Hadley (Agnes Lee), wife of Missouri's governor[78][79][68]
- Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale, English actress, lecturer, and writer[80]
- Anna Dall, daughter of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt[43]
- Florence Mabel Harding, wife of President Warren G. Harding[81]
- Grace Carley Harriman, social leader and philanthropist[14]
- Mary Garrett Hay, New York suffragist[82]
- Grace Bryan Hargreaves, daughter of the William Jennings Bryans[12]
- Millicent Hearst, philanthropist and wife of the newspaper magnate, William Randolph Hearst[72][83][84]
- Robert Herrick (novelist)[85]
- Sallie Aley Hert, Republican activist, married to Alvin Tobias Hert[4]
- Dancer and choreographer Gertrude Hoffmann[86]
- Helen B. Houston, wife of David F. Houston, secretary of agriculture[87]
- Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, wife of the Republican activist[33]
- Writer Fannie Hurst[88]
- May Arkwright Hutton, Idaho suffragist[12]
J
edit- Charles "Buffalo" Jones, frontiersman, farmer, rancher, hunter, and conservationist[89]
- Mary Harris Jones, or "Mother" Jones, labor organizer[90][91]
K
edit- Annette Kellerman, athlete who swam the English Channel[92]
- Florence Kelley, social and political reformer[93]
- Araminta Cooper Kern, wife of John W. Kern, the Democratic candidate for Vice-President, and their son, William[94]
- Missouri State Senator Thomas Kinney[95]
L
edit- Mrs. Albert Bond Lambert, socialite. Her husband was an industrialist, aviator, and golfer.[96]
- Mrs. William Palmer Ladd, wife of the dean of the Berkeley Divinity School[97]
- Jacob M. Lashley, lawyer, debated film censorship[98]
- Judge Ben Lindsey, social reformer[99]
- Ruth Bryan Leavitt, politician and the first woman appointed as a United States ambassador[100][101]
- Fifi Widener Leidy, daughter of Pennsylvania art collector Joseph E. Widener and wife of New York politician George Eustis Paine[102]
- Lydia Lipkowska, opera singer[103]
- Jack London, writer[104]
- Alice Roosevelt Longworth, celebrity and daughter of Theodore Roosevelt[105][106][107][33]
- Daniel A. Lord, American Catholic writer[108]
- Joan Lowell, actress[109]
- Felice Lyne, singer[68]
M
edit- Mrs. Norman E. Mack, wife of the editor and publisher of the Buffalo Daily Times, with their daughter, Norma[24][110][84]
- Percy MacKaye, actor, director, playwright[111]
- Elliot Woolfolk Major, Missouri governor, and his wife[112][68]
- Richard Mansfield, actor[68][113]
- Lois Marshall, wife of Vice-President Thomas R. Marshall[114]
- Elisabeth Marbury, theatrical and literary agent and producer[43]
- Anne Henrietta Martin, president of the National Woman's Party[11]
- Frederick Townsend Martin, New York society leader and writer[115]
- Ned Martin, dancer and choreographer[116]
- Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo, daughter of President Wilson and wife of William Gibbs McAdoo[72]
- Ellen Wilson McAdoo, daughter of Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo and William Gibbs McAdoo[14][72]
- Sterling H. McCarty, representative, Missouri Legislature[65]
- Edith Rockefeller McCormick (Mrs. Harold), socialite and opera patron[79]
- Katrina McCormick, Republican activist[33]
- Ruth Hanna McCormick (Mrs. Medill), Republican politician[4][82][106][9]
- Catherine Waugh McCulloch, lawyer and suffragist[117]
- Mary McDowell, social reformer[1]
- George McManus, cartoonist, and Florence Bergere[118]
- "Countess" Candido Mendes de Almeida, wife of the Brazilian politician[119]
- Elizabeth Avery Meriwether, author and suffrage advocate[120][121]
- Mrs. Lee Meriwether, wife of the author[43]
- Patsy Ruth Miller, motion picture actress[122]
- Tamaki Miura, opera singer[123]
- Anne Tracy Morgan, philanthropist[124]
- Alexander Pollock Moore, diplomat, editor and publisher[79]
- Isabel Morrison, wife of New York politician Timothy Woodruff[79]
- "Czar" Thomas E. Mulvihill Sr., St. Louis excise commissioner[125]
- Actress, dancer, film producer, and screenwriter Mae Murray[21]
N
edit- Alla Nazimova, actress[126][127]
- Oscar Nelson, boxer[66]
- Ione Page Nicoll, worked for repeal of the 18th (Prohibition) Amendment[128]
- Lillian Nordica, opera singer[129]
O
edit- Barbara Blackman O'Neil (Mrs. David), socialite and suffragist[18]
- Mrs. John E. Osborne (Selena Smith), wife of the governor of Wyoming[24]
P
edit- Theophile Papin, society leader and "squire of debutantes"[130]
- Sylvia Pankhurst, English suffragist[131][132]
- Charles Henry Parkhurst, social reformer[133]
- Cissy Patterson, journalist and publisher[79]
- Irene Pavloska, opera singer[45]
- Anna J. Hardwicke Pennybacker (Mrs.Percy), president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs[134]
- Alexandra Carlisle Pfeiffer, actress and suffragist[135]
- Gifford Pinchot, forester and politician[117]
- Florence Collins Porter, newspaper editor, clubwoman, political campaigner, a Republican[4]
- Ruth Baker Pratt, Republican politician[33]
- Florence Pretz, inventor of the Billiken doll[136][137]
R
edit- Mrs. James A. Reed (Lura M. Olmsted), wife of the former U.S. senator from Missouri[72]
- Ben Reitman, anarchist and medical doctor[74]
- Agnes Repplier, essayist[138]
- Mrs. Alexander Revell,[79] wife of the Illinois businessman
- The young Florence Wyman Richardson, daughter of the older Florence Wyman Richardson and sister-in-law to Ernest Hemingway[139]
- Lucyle Roberts, rodeo rider[50]
- Margaret Dreier Robins, labor leader[1][140]
- Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, writer and lecturer[135]
- Duchesse de la Rochefoucauld, Parisian property owner[28]
- Ginger Rogers, actress[141]
- Betsey Cushing Roosevelt[43]
- Kermit Roosevelt, writer and businessman, son of Theodore Roosevelt[79]
- President Theodore Roosevelt, his wife (Edith Roosevelt) and his daughter (Ethel Roosevelt)[106][142][143]
- Nellie Tayloe Ross, Republican politician and ex-governor of Wyoming[43]
- Charlotte Rumbold, St. Louis and Cleveland social reformer[144]
- Lillian Russell, the actress[145][146]
- Patrick John Ryan, Catholic prelate[147]
S
edit- Pauline Sabin, Republican activist opposed to Prohibition[4][128]
- Katherine Sandwina, circus strongwoman[148]
- Birth-control advocate Margaret Sanger[149]
- Nathaniel Schmidt, educator[150]
- Rose Schneiderman, labor-union executive[1]
- Mrs. Nathan B. Scott, wife of the U.S. senator from West Virginia[47]
- Cecil J. Sharp, who introduced folk dancing to the United States[151]
- Finley Johnson Shepard, businessman-husband of Helen Gould[152]
- Anna Howard Shaw, suffrage leader[65]
- Ruth Hanna Simms, politician, activist and publisher[128]
- Mrs. Al Smith (Catherine Ann Dunn), wife of the New York governor, and their daughter, Emily Smith Warner[72]
- Elizabeth Blackmon Smith, popular author of romantic fiction who wrote under the name Mrs. Harry Pugh Smith[153]
- Evangelist Gipsy Smith and his wife, Annie E. Pennock[154]
- Senator Reed Smoot of Utah[155]
- Ethel Annakin Snowden, British suffragist and pacifist.[156]
- Christine Bradley South of Kentucky, chairman, Woman's Division, Republican National Committee[82]
- Lena Jones Wade Springs, nominated for U.S. vice-president at 1924 Democratic national convention[84]
- Katherine Stinson, aviator[157]
- Rose Pastor Stokes, socialist activist, writer, and feminist[158]
- Winifred Sackville Stoner Jr., child prodigy[159]
- Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury (Eva Roberts Cromwell), wife of the investment banker[160]
- Representative William Sulzer of New York and his wife, Clara Rodelheim[75]
- Thamara de Swirsky, Russian dancer[161][]
T
edit- Mrs. Charles P. Taft, wife of the newspaper publisher, and Louise Taft, their daughter[162]
- Presidential candidate William Howard Taft and Helen Herron Taft, and their grandchildren[163][143]
- Lilyan Tashman, actress[164]
- Sara Teasdale, poet[165][166]
- Ellen Terry, actress[167]
- Luisa Tetrazzini, opera singer[168][169]
- M. Louise Thomas, educator.[170]
- Socialite Edwine Thornburgh, later married to Englishman Wilfrid Peek[171]
- Genevieve Clark Thomson, suffragist, reporter, Louisiana politician and daughter of Speaker of the House Champ Clark[12]
- Prince Paul Troubetzkoy, a Russian artist, and Princess Troubetzkoy, his American wife[172]
- Grace Wilbur Trout, Illinois suffragist[6][18]
U
edit- Harriet Taylor Upton, political activist and author, a Republican[4]
V
edit- Bernard Vaughan, Roman Catholic priest from the UK[173]
- Louise Vermilya, mass murderer[174]
- Bertha Von Suttner, Nobel laureate[175]
- Rube Waddell, baseball player[176]
W
edit- Charlotte Walker, actress[177]
- Eugene Walter, playwright[178]
- Fannie Ward, actress[179][180]
- Mabel Walker Willebrandt, attorney and Republican activist[33]
- Ella Wilson, first woman mayor of Hunnewell, Kansas, reputedly the first woman mayor in the nation[181]
- President Woodrow Wilson and his family, Mrs. Wilson, and their daughters, Margaret, Jessie, and Eleanor[114][143][72][14]
- Film actress Claire Windsor[21]
- Jane Frances Winn, who wrote under the name "Frank Fair"[182]
- Wu Tingfang, Chinese ambassador to the United States[183]
- Margaret (Mrs. John) Wyeth of St. Louis, delegate to 1935 Republican National Convention[9]
Y
edit- Julie Chamberlain Nichols Yates, sculptor; wife of Halsey E. Yates, Army officer[184]
- Ella Flagg Young, educator[185]
- Mrs. Lafayette Young, wife of the Iowa newspaper publisher[162]
References
editCitations are to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch microfilm records.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Women Charity Workers of National Fame Tell Marguerite Martyn Their Plans to End Injustice and Banish Evil From the World," May 22, 1910, image 1
- ^ "Judge Arnold Says Divorce Courts Are Schools for Perjury and Laws Governing Them Are Farce," December 12, 1915, image 35
- ^ "Belleville Business Woman In Hard Fight for State Office," October 26, 1912, image 3
- ^ a b c d e f g "Women Leaders Among Republicans," June 17, 1924, images 38-39
- ^ "Why People Are Captivated by Lady Astor," May 6, 1922, image 14
- ^ a b c "Sketches of Notable Women Who Are Attending Jubilee Convention of Women Suffragists," March 27, 1919, image 3
- ^ a b "City Club Needed Advice; That Is Why It Gave a Luncheon to Women," July 21, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Congressman Baltz's Daughters to Drop the Hoe to Take Their Places in Society at Washington," December 15, 1912, image 45
- ^ a b c "Women Veterans and Newcomers at Convention," June 9, 1936, images 37 and 38
- ^ "'Suffrage? I'm Too Busy With My Babies,'" September 19, 1912, image 13
- ^ a b c d e "Harmony? They're All Out of It in Chicago," June 7, 1916, image 3
- ^ a b c d "Marguerite Martyn Finds the Speaker's Daughter a Regular Political Manager," June 38, 1912, image 6
- ^ "Sarah Bernhardt Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 12, 1911, image 1
- ^ a b c d e f g "Notable Women at Convention," July 6, 1924, image 5
- ^ "Amelia Bingham Would Not Relieve Men of Duties by Accepting Ballot," June 16, 1909, image 9
- ^ "Fighting for Equal Suffrage 50 Years Ago Vastly Different," March 30, 1919, image 1
- ^ "Bedraggled Suffragists March in Sloshy Shoes and With Bedraggled Banners to Impress Delegates," June 8, 1916, image5
- ^ a b c d "Mere Men Beware! The Suffragists Are Plotting 'Inside Politics,'" April 6, 1913, image 1
- ^ "Mother of Kindergarten System Who Began Here Talks of the Ideal Method to Marguerite Martyn," December 5, 1909, image 32
- ^ "Nelly Bly Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 14, 1911, image 37
- ^ a b c "When the Movie Stars Came to St. Louis," August 25, 1924, image 26
- ^ "'Most Beautiful Suffragette' Still the Eternal Feminine," March 22, 1914, image 1
- ^ "Language of Soul Same in Aristocrat and Plebeian, Says 'La Marechale,'" May 11, 1916, image 3
- ^ a b c "Marguerite Martyn Is in Desperate Chase After Suffragettes Who Are in Lively Pursuit of Reporters," July 6, 1908, image 3
- ^ "Intimate Study of 'Grandmother of the Russian Revolution,'" May 25, 1919, image 15
- ^ "Mrs. Schuyler Britton New Owner of the Cardinals Tells Marguerite Martyn," April 9, 1911, Page 1, Editorial Section
- ^ "'Baseball Better Mental Exercise for Women Than Bridge,'" April 14, 1912, image 15
- ^ a b "St. Louis Princess Threatens International Complications," April 22, 1906, image 60
- ^ "A Real Champion: Mary K. Browne," October 18, image 126
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Bryan, Possible Mistress of the White House, Just the Balancing Weight Needed to Neutralize Husband's Lack of Reserve," July 12, 1908, image 1
- ^ "A Fashion Show for the Democratic women," July 9, 1924, image 30
- ^ "What-to-Wear Problem Not Solved at Horse Show," October 28, 1914, image 15
- ^ a b c d e f "Ladies of G.O.P. Have Their Day," June 16, 1932, image 29
- ^ "Answers Thousands of Questions a Week," November 13, 1931, image 46
- ^ "Andrew Carnegie Proud of the West," May 1, 1913, image 1
- ^ "How the Military Genius of a Woman Came to the Aid of Lincoln," February 14, 1918, image 13
- ^ "Styles Seen at the Derby," May 22, 1928, image 33
- ^ "The Castles," May 8, 1914, image 15
- ^ "Actress Who Is 28 Inches Tall Tells Miss Martyn She Would Keep House," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 5, 1910, image 9
- ^ "American Women Are Chic Parisians in Paris, Says Mme. Chaminade," November 29, 1908, image 26
- ^ "'When Your Child Fibs, Tell Him a Whopper!' Is One of the Precepts Prof. Chubb Gives Marguerite Martyn," March 31, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Turn Back the Clock and Hide the Calendar!" image 17
- ^ a b c d e f "With the Lively Ladies of Democracy," June 28, 1932
- ^ "Phoebe Couzins Tells Why She Has Changed All Her Former Beliefs," May 12, 1909, image 9
- ^ a b "Overheard at a Municipal Opera Rehearsal," July 11, 1920, image 71
- ^ "Inside Story of How Women Won," April 13, 1919, image 33
- ^ a b "Margaret Martyn Finds 'Convention Widows' a Factor in Chicago's Political Show," June 16, 1908, image 11
- ^ "Woman's Plan Is to Save Missouri by Talking for It, Miss Martyn Is Told," January 6, 1910
- ^ "Sketches at the Coliseum Made for the Post-Dispatch by Marguerite Martyn," June 16, 1916, image 5
- ^ a b "Ladies of the Rodeo," September 19, 1933, image 29
- ^ "Countess de Swirsky Tells Marguerite Martyn," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 23, 1911, image 1
- ^ "Women Superior to Men, Marie Doro Is Most Sure of That," January 13, 1909, image 4
- ^ "Sketch of Doxey, His Wife, Witness Who Identified Her and Erder Home," December 5, 1909, image 25
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Does Not Believe Mrs. Doxey Is Aroused to Her Plight," May 24, 1910, image 2
- ^ "Demeanor of Women in Doxey Trial Is Contrasted by Marguerite Martyn," May 29, 1910, image 18
- ^ "A Proper Flying Costume," June 4, 1928, image 41
- ^ "Catherine Elkins Worthy of Pity, Rather Than Envy, Thinks Marguerite Martyn," October 18, 1908, image 9
- ^ "If Your Name Is Hazel You Can Prove That You Are Under 30 Years of Age," April 4, 1919, image 2
- ^ "Lillian Russell Is the Model Julian Eltinge Tries to Copy When He Becomes a Dazzling Beauty," November 11, 1908, image 9
- ^ a b "Home Is Woman's Sphere; Divorce Too Common in This Country," October 22, 1908, image 13
- ^ "On the Firing Line With Our St. Louis Suffragettes," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 9, 1913, image 1
- ^ February 26, 1911 "'The More I See of Civilization, the More I Like — Indians,'" February 26, 1911, image 1
- ^ Marguerite Martyn, "A Defender of the Modern Woman," May 30, 1933, image 15
- ^ "Ballot Is Aristocracy of Sex, Miss Martyn Is Told by Federal Agent," image 11
- ^ a b c d "On the Firing Line With Our St. Louis Suffragettes," February 9, 1913, image 1
- ^ a b "Marguerite Martyn Enjoys Thrills While Watching the Gans-Nelson Fight," October 12, 1908, image 9
- ^ "Mary Garden Tells Marguerite Martyn," January 8, 1911, image 1
- ^ a b c d e "Little Surprises at the Governor's Inaugural Ball," January 19, 1913, image 11
- ^ "Marvelous Genee Lives For and Thinks Only of Her Fairylike Dancing," March 10, 1909, image 9
- ^ "Cardinal Gibbons Interviewed by Marguerite Martyn," September 22, 1912, image1
- ^ "Charles Dana Gibson Gives Marguerite Martyn a Kind Word for Little Girls; the "Cotton-Made Gibson Man? He Is Discovered!" November 15, 1908, image 9
- ^ a b c d e f g h "A Woman for Vice President," June 30, 1932, image 34
- ^ "Emma Goldman Says Anarchism Will Mean Absolute Equality and Freedom for Women With No Moral Code," November 1, 1908, image 9
- ^ a b "Emma Goldman's Talk as Heard by Miss Martyn," February 3, 1910, image 4
- ^ a b "Notables at Denver Snapped and Sketched, Better Known Ones Being Thoroughly Camera-Broke, Newer Ones Still Pencil-Shy," July 8, 1908, image 1
- ^ "Be Shy, Mrs. Gould's Winning Rule," March 13, 1912, image 8
- ^ "Hetty Green's Son Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 7, 1911, image 1
- ^ "Woman Delegate Worries Over Clothes, Just Like Merry Convention Widow," June 19, 1908, image 3
- ^ a b c d e f g "Mrs. Hadley Keeps to Her Room, Unmindful That Governor Is the Talk of Chicago," June 21, 1912, image 4
- ^ "'I Have Looked at Your Society Woman's Duties With a Magnifying Glass, and I Cannot Find One Worthy of the Name,'" February 25, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Mrs. Harding Wears Her Old Clothes on Campaign Trip," October 17, 1920, image 66
- ^ a b c "Sketched at Chicago," June 7, 1920, image 3
- ^ "Mrs. Hearst Loves Babies, Politics and Journalism," September 19, 1908, image 3
- ^ a b c "Femininity at the Convention," June 27, 1924, image 3
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Scores the Herrick Writers for Half Truths About Women," August 31, 1908, image 3
- ^ "Miss Hoffman's Salome Abnormal as Sin — But Art, Says Marguerite Martyn," January 7, 1909, image 13
- ^ "Mrs. Houston, With Great Executive Ability, Is Natural Aid in Her Husband's Progress," March 13, 1913, image 13
- ^ "Inside Glimpse Into the Workaday Methods of Fannie Hurst, Famous Short-Story Author," August 22, 1914, image 5
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Ropes a Mighty Lariat Thrower," November 12, 1911, image 13
- ^ "Mother Jones Not as Belligerent at Near View as Her War-Like Record Might Indicate," June 29, 1915, image 3
- ^ "'Five Years From Now Will See the End of Strikes,' Declares Mother Jones," May 13, 1918, image 3
- ^ "'The Most Beautiful Woman' Tells Marguerite Martyn," February 12, 1911
- ^ "Charity Worker Tells Miss Martyn How 'Philanthropist' Employers Ruin Women's Lives by Underpaying Them," May 29, 1910, image 1
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Fascinating Mrs. Kern a Baseball Fan; Thinks She and Her Jolly Household Would Awaken Washington," July 19, 1908, image 9
- ^ "Senator Kinney Says Tax on Bachelors Will Make Them Real Useful Citizens," February 25, 1909, image 6
- ^ "Sketches of Women Prominent in St. Louis Life," November 28, 1908, image8
- ^ "'Every Woman Should Have a Job,'" April 20, 1919, image 1
- ^ "Women's Council Both Stirred and Amused by Men's Good-Humored Debate on Film Censorship," January 8, 1916, image3
- ^ "A Noted Judge Decides for the Movies," February 26, 1936, image 37
- ^ "Pencil and Pen Pictures Show Bryan's Daughter a Beauty of Artist's Type," July 8, 1908, image 11
- ^ "Marriage and Diplomatic Service," September 4, 1936, image 41
- ^ by Frederick H. Brennan, "Fifi Widener Comes Home," November 22, 1925, image 123
- ^ "Two Sketches and a Photograph of the Russian Singer Who Believes in Suffrage," January 28, 1910, image 11
- ^ "The Guillotine for Jack London, Say Western Women," February 4, 1906, image 50
- ^ "Mrs. Longworth, Lobster Salad, Chauncey M. Depew and Gossip Exhilirate Marguerite Martyn," June 18, 1908, image 13
- ^ a b c "Miss Martyn Finds Grand Opera Brilliance at Roosevelt Meeting," June 18, 1912, image 4
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Tells of Women's Fears and Joys at Convention Session," June 19, 1912, image 4
- ^ "A Priest's Story of His Mother," January 4, 1935, image 41
- ^ "Joan Lowell Talks of Future," October 27, 1930, image 33
- ^ "Women, Not Men, First, Is the Rule in Baltimore, Marguerite Martyn Finds," June 26, 1912, image 4
- ^ "'Libraries and Art Museums Are Failures,' Says Percy MacKaye, February 16, 1913, image 1
- ^ "Mrs. Eliot W. Major Gives a 'Woman to Woman Interview," January 5, 1913, image 1
- ^ "Mansfield and Some of His Auditors When He Described Actors on Stage and in Real Life," May 3, 1906, image 7
- ^ a b "Marguerite Martyn at the Inauguration of President Wilson," March 9, 1913, image 1
- ^ "Great Stage Manager Lost to World," December 3, 1909, image 13
- ^ "How to Be Symmetrical, Agile and Graceful," September 26, 1927, image 29
- ^ a b "Miss Martyn Sees Suffrage Meeting Turned Into a Bully Roosevelt Rally," June 17, 1912, image 2
- ^ "George McManus and Wife Convince Marguerite Martyn They Are Newlyweds in Real Life," January 26, 1910, image 9
- ^ "Brazil Almost a Paradise for Women, Whose Chief Pleasure Is to Please the Men," October 27, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Meriwether's Latest Book Belies Her 87 Years," August 18, 1910, image 11
- ^ "Mrs. Elizabeth A. Meriwether, St. Louis Woman Author in the Who's-Who Book," July 18, 1914, image 5
- ^ "Patsy Ruth Comes Back in Triumph," October 18, 1924, image 14
- ^ "Japanese Prima Donna Would Wear American Evening Gowns If She Were Not So Little," October 13, 1915, image 3
- ^ "Miss Anne Morgan and Others Outline Part Women Can Play in the Preparedness Movement in Addresses Before the Town Club," March 5, 1916, image 31
- ^ "'Czar' Mulvihill Has Wee Lenten 'Lid' of His Own; Dry 'Mid Enticing Bottles," April 17, 1908, image 7
- ^ "Mme. Nazimova Raps the Butterfly Women Fluttering About Men," November 27, 1908, image 18
- ^ "Nazimova: An Off-Stage Glimpse of the Famous Actress, February 4, 1936, image 27
- ^ a b c "Mrs. Gann Rocks G.O.P. Social Boat by Snubbing Hostess," June 15, 1932, image 38
- ^ "'My Voice Is My Child,' Declares Madame Nordica, January 22, 1912, image 14
- ^ "What Is Society? Toto Papin Explains," December 18, 1910, image 1
- ^ "Sylvia Pankhurst Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 19, 1911, image 13
- ^ "The Wiles of a Successful Suffragette," January 28, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Women Likened to a Blizzard Freeze by Rev. Dr. Pankhurst," March 12, 1909, image 11
- ^ "Mrs. Pennybacker, Dainty and Vivacious," February 20, 1913, image 13
- ^ a b "Woman Reporter's Description of the Several Types of Women Whose Speeches Won Convention Crowd," June 13, 1920, image 60
- ^ "Maker of Billiken Tells Marguerite Martyn How She Created the Little God of Optimism," November 7, 1909, image 14
- ^ "Billikens Girl With Billikens' Smile, Marries," February 15, 1912, image 11
- ^ "She Wants to Be So Very Genteel!" April 2, 1911, image 15
- ^ "Youthful Suffragette, a Debutante, Will Lead St. Louis Women in a Militant Franchise Campaign," March 13, 1910, image 1
- ^ "Woman Sociologist Tells Miss Martyn Taft is the Louis XVI of America," May 19, 1910, image 13
- ^ "St. Louis Gave Her a Start on Broadway," September 29, 1931, image 28
- ^ "A Woman In Command," October 18, 1912, image 15
- ^ a b c "Women May Elect President," October 20, 1912, image59
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Tells of an Evening at the Open Forum When Miss Rumbold Held Her Own Among the Radicals There," December 8, 1915, image3
- ^ "Contentment Is Secret of Beauty, Says Lillian Russell, Fair and Fat, But Not Too Fat, at Forty," April 27, 1908, image 9
- ^ "Lillian Russell Tell Marguerite Martyn How Simple Use of Common Sense Preserves Youth," December 12, 1915, image 44
- ^ "Archbishop Ryan Believes Women Taxpayers Should Vote, He Tells Miss Martyn," December 19, 1909, image 25
- ^ "'The Lady Hercules' Tells Marguerite Martyn," June 4, 1911, image 11
- ^ "Mrs. Sanger, Who Defies Federal Law, Outlines Her Work for Birth Control Among the Poor," May 21, 1916, image 37
- ^ "Husbands to Pay Wives and No More Old Maids, Ideals Prof. Schmidt Outlines to Marguerite Martyn," January 30, 1912, image 11
- ^ "English Folk Dance Leader Defines Ideal of Dancing and Demonstrates It for St. Louisans," March 30, 1916, image 3
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Interviews Finley J. Shepard," December 18, 1912, image13
- ^ "A St. Louis Author at Work," October 18, 1934, image 36
- ^ "Wife of Gipsy Smith Is Not a Gipsy, But She Is a Real Nomad," image 8
- ^ "Smoot Expects Women to Vote, But Not to Rule," October 26, 1909, image 11
- ^ "Mrs. Philip Snowden, Noted Suffragist From Over the Seas, Tells Marguerite Martyn," November 6, 1910, image 13
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Aviatrice," October 12, 1912, image 3
- ^ "War to Bring Greater Socialization of World, Rose Pastor Stokes Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 19, 1916, image 27
- ^ "Child, Who at 13 Is an Educational Wonder, Has Ambition to Be a Cowboy and an Editor," November 12, 1915, image 13
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn at Palm Beach," March 12, 1925, image 42
- ^ "Countess de Swirsky Tells Marguerite Martyn," April 23, 1911, image 13
- ^ a b "Talk About Fuss and Feathers at Chicago Convention," June 14, 1908, image 1
- ^ "Let Women Vote, But Never, Never Hold Office, Says Mrs. William H. Taft to Marguerite Martyn," June 25, 1908, image 11
- ^ "The Well-Dressed Actress," April 5, 1932, image 86
- ^ "St. Louis Poetess, Whose Verses Pulsate, Tells Marguerite Martyn the Secret of Her Many Triumphs," June 1, 1910, image 11
- ^ "Next in the 'Who's Who' Series is Sara Teasdale, Famous Poetess," July 23, 1914, image 14
- ^ "A New Ally for Suffragists and Who Do You Think It Is? Shakspeare," November 27, 1910, image 1
- ^ "Tetrazinni Seems to Be a Bit of a Tyrant, Says Marguerite Martyn," February 1, 1911, image 11
- ^ "Tetrazzini Cook Spaghetti? No? But Caruso Said So?" February 20. 1911, image 3
- ^ "Mrs. M. Louise Thomas, Another 'Who's Who' and the 'Why'of It," July 2, 1914, image15
- ^ "Miss Thornburgh's Fiancé Not Converted YET," November 10, 1912, image 39
- ^ "'American Women Independent? Bah! They Don't Dare Do Anything Unconventional,' Princess Troubetzkoy Tells Marguerite Martyn," March 17, 1912, image 1
- ^ "Father Vaughan, Scourger of Social Wickedness, Finds St. Louis Society So Good, He Becomes Its Devotee, Says Marguerite Martyn," May 5, 1912, image 13
- ^ "Marguerite Martyn Finds Mrs. Vermilya, Feminine (More Than) Forty, Fat and Not Her Conception of a Wholesome Poisoner," November 26, 1911, image 45
- ^ "Baroness Von Suttner Tells How to End War," October 20, 1912, image 1
- ^ "It's a Shame the Way They Abuse Waddell, Says Marguerite Martyn After Hearing Rube's Sad Story," June 3, 1908, image 9
- ^ "Marry Anyway, Advice of Summer Garden Actress for Marguerite Martyn," June 17, 1910, image 11
- ^ "Eugene Walter, Playwright, Gives Marguerite Martyn New Ideas on Suffrage," June 27, 1910, image 7
- ^ "Fannie Ward, Who Left St. Louis Poor, Returns Rich to Buy Her Girlhood Home in Dayton Street," March 28, 1909, image 22
- ^ "Fannie Ward Tells Marguerite Martyn," May 21, 1911, image 13
- ^ "'I Am Not Quitting,' Says Hunnewell's New Mayor," September 3, 1911, image 43
- ^ "Jane Frances Winn in Who's-Who Book," August 13, 1914, image 15
- ^ "Wu Ting Fang Tells Marguerite Martyn Why the American Woman Should Vote," October 24, 1909, image 11
- ^ "Gay Dinner Parties at 60 Below," August 12, 1913, image 6
- ^ "Living With an Alarm Clock 25 Years 'Made' Mrs. Young," August 22, 1909, image 1