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<eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="iso639-2" encodinganalog="local choice"> 
<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="TxDaM">urn:taro:smu.00145</eadid>

  <filedesc> 
      <titlestmt> 
          <titleproper>Edmund Montgomery and Elisabet Ney papers</titleproper> 
          <subtitle>A Guide to the Collection</subtitle> 
          <author>Finding aid prepared by SMU staff. Revised by Dale Topham, 2010.</author>
      </titlestmt> 
      <publicationstmt> 
          <publisher>DeGolyer Library</publisher>
               <address>
                    <addressline>P. O. Box 750396</addressline>
                    <addressline>Southern Methodist University</addressline>
                    <addressline>Dallas, TX 75275-0396</addressline>
               </address>
      </publicationstmt> 
  </filedesc> 

  <profiledesc> 
      <creation>Finding aid encoded by Lara Corazalla,
          <date>2010</date>.</creation> 
      <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng">English.</language></langusage> 
       <descrules>Description based on <title>DACS</title>.</descrules>
  </profiledesc> 
</eadheader> 

<archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="MARC 21"> 
  <did> 
      <head>Overview</head>    
      <repository label="Repository" encodinganalog="852$a">
          <extref href="http://www.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/index.html" show="new" actuate="onrequest"><corpname encodinganalog="852$a"><subarea>DeGolyer Library,</subarea> Southern Methodist University</corpname> </extref>
     </repository> 
      <origination label="Creator:" encodinganalog="100"> 
          <persname>Montgomery, Edmund, 1835-1911</persname>
      </origination> 
      <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245">Edmund Montgomery and Elisabet Ney papers</unittitle>
      
      <unitdate type="inclusive" label="Inclusive Dates:" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1830/1949">1830-1949</unitdate> 

      <physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300">3 boxes (3.75 linear feet)</physdesc>
      
      <abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520">This collection contains the papers of Edmund Duncan Montgomery and his wife Elisabet Ney. Montgomery, who trained in Germany as a medical doctor but subsequently gravitated toward philosophy and science, and Ney, a sculptor, immigrated to the United States in 1871, settling in Texas two years later. The papers include biographical material, copies of Montgomery’s published articles and books, deeds to the Texas cotton plantation that Montgomery and Ney owned, wills of Ney family members, letters to and from Montgomery, correspondence between friends of Montgomery and his chief biographer, SMU philosophy professor Ira K. Stephens, photographs, and Stephens’s research notes.</abstract>
      
      <unitid label="Accession No:" encodinganalog="099" repositorycode="TxDaDF" countrycode="us">Mss 0050</unitid>
      <langmaterial encodinganalog="546">Material is in <language langcode="eng">English</language>, <language langcode="ger">German</language>, and <language langcode="fre">French</language></langmaterial>
       
  </did> 

  <bioghist encodinganalog="545"> 
      <head>Biographical Note</head> 
           <p>Edmund Duncan Montgomery, physician, philosopher, and scientist, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on March 18, 1835 and died at Liendo Plantation near Hempstead, Texas on April 17, 1911. He was the son of Isabella Davidson Montgomery and Duncan MacNeill, an eminent Scottish jurist. Raised in Paris, France and Frankfurt, Germany, he entered Heidelberg University in 1852 as a student of medicine, earning his Doctor of Medicine degree from Wϋrzburg in 1858. In 1860 he moved to England, serving as the resident physician at the German Hospital, and at Bermondsey Dispensary. He also served as a demonstrator of morbid anatomy at St. Thomas’s Hospital in London.</p>
           <p>In 1863, Montgomery relinquished these positions and moved to the Portuguese archipelago of Madeira after being diagnosed with Tuberculosis. There he married Elisabet Ney. He practiced medicine from 1863 to 1869 in several locations: Madeira, Menton, Rome, and Munich. In 1869 he retired from medical practice. He and Elisabet Ney immigrated to America in 1871.</p>
           <p>At the urging of their friend Vicco von Stralendorff, Montgomery and his wife spent the first two years in America in a colony promoted as a resort for consumptives near Thomasville, Georgia. In 1873, they purchased Liendo, a cotton plantation near Hempstead, Texas, which had been established in 1853 on 1,100 acres of Justo Liendo’s Spanish land grant.</p>
           <p>Montgomery devoted his time to intensive research on the nature of protoplasm which he had begun in London. His biological studies appeared in a number of papers published in Popular Science Monthly, St. Thomas Hospital Report, the Index Jenaische Zeitschrift fur Naturwissenschaft, Archiv fur die gesammte Physiologie, and in a final monograph, The Vitality and Organization of Protoplasm. In these papers he maintained what may be called a neo-vitalistic point of view in contrast with the materialism popular in his day.</p>
           <p>Montgomery’s wife was the sculptor Elisabet Ney. Described as beautiful, talented, and self-willed, she was born in Muenster, Westphalia, Germany on January 26, 1833, the daughter of Johann Adam and Anna Elisabeth (Wernze) Ney. At age nineteen she announced she was going to Munich to study art at the Academy of Arts. Her talent and personal charm brought her many admirers, among them a young medical student from Scotland, Edmund Montgomery.</p>
           <p>After two or three years Elisabet Ney traveled to Berlin and studied under Christian Daniel Rauch. There she made busts of great men such as Arthur Schopenhauer and Alexander von Humboldt. In 1859 she moved to Hanover where she made a colossal bust of George V, King of Hanover. In 1861 she returned to Muenster, where she remained until 1863 when she followed Montgomery to Madeira and married him on November 17th. She generally lived with Dr. Montgomery, but she would not admit the marriage and continued to call herself Miss Ney. She subsequently bore two sons, Arthur (1871-1873) and Lorne Ney (1872-1913).</p>
           <p>Elisabet Ney spent several years in Italy, where she made a bust of famed Italian Giuseppe Garibaldi. Heralded on the European continent, she made busts of German chemist Justus von Liebig, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, King Wilhelm I of Prussia, and a full-length statue of Ludwig II of Bavaria, which now adorns Linderhof Palace in southwestern Bavaria.</p>
           <p>In 1873 she moved with Montgomery to Texas. Miss Ney eventually sought the stimulation and appreciation of Austin where she secured a commission from the state to execute statues of Stephen F. Austin and Sam Houston for the Texas Exhibit at the Word’s Fair in 1893. The two now stand in the Capital at Austin and copies of them represent Texas in the Capitol at Washington. Those statues were much admired and brought many other commissions, including a statue of Shakespeare’s Lady Macbeth walking in her sleep, and a recumbent statue of Civil War General Albert Sidney Johnston, considered her best work, which resides in the Texas State Cemetery.</p>
           <p>Ney died on June 29, 1907 and was buried at Liendo Plantation. Montgomery suffered an apoplectic attack two months later and was an invalid the remainder of his life, during which time he wrote his last work, <emph render="italic">The Revelation of Present Experience</emph>, published in 1911. He died at Liendo Plantation on April 17, 1911.</p>
           <p>Source:</p>
           <p><emph render="italic">Handbook of Texas Online</emph>, s.v. "Montgomery, Edmund Duncan" <extref href="Handbook of Texas Online" show="new" actuate="onrequest">http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmo10.html</extref> (accessed August 20, 2010).</p>
      </bioghist> 
  <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
      <head>Scope and Contents of the Collection</head> 
           <p>The bulk of the collection concerns the work and life of Edmund Duncan Montgomery, with only a small portion of material pertaining to his wife, Elisabet Ney. Biographer Ira Kendrick Stephens collected groups of letters and printed material from George W. and Laura B. Harris, who purchased the Montgomery-Ney estate of Liendo; various Montgomery heirs, including Lorne and several of his children; Charles A. Lane, a friend of Montgomery; and various other employees and acquaintances.</p>
           <p>The papers are divided into seven series: Biographical Materials, Works by Montgomery, Family Papers, Correspondence, 1894-1949, Photographs, Miscellaneous, and Ira K. Stephens’s Research Notes. The collection occupies three cubic feet of shelf space and the correspondence files span the years 1894 to 1949.</p> 
  </scopecontent> 
  <arrangement encodinganalog="351"> 
      <head>Arrangement of the Collection</head> 
           <p>The collection is organized into seven series:</p>
                <list type="simple">
                    <item>Series 1: Biographical Materials</item>
                    <item>Series 2: Works by Montgomery     </item>
                    <item>Series 3: Family Papers</item>
                    <item>Series 4: Correspondence, 1894-1949</item>
                    <item>Series 5: Photographs</item>
                    <item>Series 6: Miscellaneous</item>
                    <item>Series 7: Ira K. Stephens’s research notes</item>         
               </list>
  </arrangement>


     <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="500"> 
      <head>Related Materials</head> 
          <p>Stephens, Ira Kendrick. "The Hermit Philosopher of Liendo," (A1984.0428c)</p>
          <p>Loggins, Vernon. 1946. <emph render="italic">Two Romantics and Their Ideal Life: Elisabet Ney, Sculptor; Edmund Montgomery, Philosopher</emph>. New York: Odyssey press. (NB.588.N4.L6 1946)</p>
          <p>Montgomery, Edmund , trans. 1861. <emph render="italic">On the Use of Cold in Surgery</emph>. London: New Sydenham Society. (RM863.E86 1861)</p>
          <p>Keeton, Morris T. 1936. <emph render="italic">The Philosophy of Edmund Montgomery</emph>.  M.A. thesis, Southern Methodist University. (Fondren Library B945.M494 K4 1950)</p> 
  </relatedmaterial>   
     
  <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"> 
      <head>Access to Collection:</head> 
           <p>Collection is open for research use.</p> 
  </accessrestrict> 
  
  <userestrict encodinganalog="540"> 
      <head>Publication Rights:</head> 
           <p>Permission to publish materials must be obtained from the Director of the DeGolyer Library.</p> 
  </userestrict>
  
  <userestrict encodinganalog="540"> 
      <head>Copyright Statement:</head> 
           <p>It is the responsibility of the user to obtain copyright authorization.</p> 
  </userestrict>

<controlaccess> 
      <head>Access Terms</head> 
           <p>This collection is indexed under the following terms in the Southern Methodist University Libraries' online catalog. Researchers desiring related materials may search the catalog using these terms.</p>
            
    <controlaccess> 
           <persname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="600">Montgomery, Edmund,  1835-1911.</persname>
           <persname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="600">Ney, Elisabet, 1833-1907.</persname>
           <persname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="700">Stephens, Ira K.</persname>
           <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Women sculptors -- Texas.</subject>
           <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Philosophers -- Texas.</subject>
    </controlaccess> 
</controlaccess> 

  <prefercite encodinganalog="524"> 
      <head>Preferred Citation</head> 
           <p>Edmund Montgomery and Elisabet Ney papers, DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University.</p> 
  </prefercite> 
  
  <acqinfo encodinganalog="541"> 
      <head>Acquisition Information</head> 
           <p>Gift, Ira Kendrick Stephens and Morris T. Keaton, circa 1930.</p> 
  </acqinfo>

     <processinfo encodinganalog="583">
            <head>Finding aid revised by</head> 
                 <p>Dale Topham, 2010.</p> 
       </processinfo>  
  
     <processinfo encodinganalog="583">
            <head>Encoded by</head> 
                 <p>Lara Corazalla, 2010.</p> 
       </processinfo>  
       
    <dsc type="combined"> 
      <head>Detailed Description of the Collection</head> 
             
<c01 level="series" id="series1"> 
     <did> 
          <unitid>Series 1:</unitid> 
          <unittitle>Biographical Materials</unittitle> 
          <physdesc>
               <extent>6 folders</extent>
          </physdesc> 
     </did> 
     <scopecontent> 
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
     </scopecontent> 

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">1</container><unittitle>Journal Articles on Montgomery and his work by Ira K. Stephens, unknown dates. 5 items; typescripts</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">2</container><unittitle>Morris T. Keeton, "The Philosophy of Edmund Duncan Montgomery." M.A. Thesis, Southern Methodist University, 1936. 1 item; typescript</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">3</container><unittitle>Paul Carus. "Dr. Edmund Montgomery," <emph render="italic">The Monist</emph>, October, 1909.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">4</container><unittitle>Newspaper clippings about Edmund Montgomery</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">5</container><unittitle>Genealogy of Clan McNeill. 5 items.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">6</container><unittitle>Biography of Elisabet Ney prepared for <emph render="italic">Biographisches Jahrbuch und Deutscher Nekrolog</emph>.</unittitle></did></c02>
     
</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series2"> 
     <did> 
          <unitid>Series 2:</unitid> 
          <unittitle>Works by Montgomery</unittitle> 
          <physdesc>
               <extent>45 folders</extent>
          </physdesc> 
     </did> 
     <scopecontent> 
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
     </scopecontent> 


<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">7</container><unittitle>Manuscript Journals, undated.</unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Handwritten journals in German and English. Smaller journal appears to have more than one author. 2 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">8</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Stereometrie</emph> by Edmund Montgomery, 1851. </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Handwritten notebook with elaborate drawings. 1 item (German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">9</container><unittitle>"An Address to the People…" </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Manuscript with typescript and carbon. 1 item.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">10</container><unittitle>"The Corngrowers of Tomorrow." </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Manuscript. 1 item.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">11</container><unittitle>"The Epistemological Task." </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Manuscript with typescript. 1 item.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">12</container><unittitle>"Fichte." </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Manuscript. 1 item.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">13</container><unittitle>"The Groundwork of Ethics." </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Handwritten drafts (2 copies) with typescript. 3 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">14</container><unittitle>Untitled. </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Miscellaneous notes. Handwritten notebook and fragment. 2 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">15</container><unittitle>"Ethics." 3 copies, Typescript</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>"Fichte." Typescript</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>"The Epistemological Task." 3 copies; typescript and carbon</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>"Concerning Psycho-Parallelism." Typescript.</unittitle></did></c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">16</container><unittitle>Letters to Religio-Philosophical Journal, "The Open Court"; The New Ideal; The Conservator; and the Hempstead News, 1887-1911. 20 items; typescript copies.</unittitle></did></c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">17</container><unittitle>Photocopies of Journals. </unittitle></did>
<c03><did><container type="Box">1</container><unittitle>Photocopies of the New Ideal and Twentieth Century for 1889-1890</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">18</container><unittitle>"Anent Psychophysical Parallelism" <emph render="italic">American Journal of Psychology</emph> April, 1905</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">19</container><unittitle>"Are We Cell Aggregates?" <emph render="italic">Mind</emph>, 1882</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">20</container><unittitle>"Are We Conscious Automata?" <emph render="italic"> Proceedings of the Texas Academy of Science</emph>, 1897</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">21</container><unittitle>"Causation and Its Organic Condition," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, Vol. VI, 1882</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">22</container><unittitle>"The Dependence of Quality of Specific Energies," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, Vol. V, 1880</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">23</container><unittitle>"The Elementary Functions and the Primitive Organization of Protoplasm," <emph render="italic"> St. Thomas’s Hospital Reports</emph>, IX, 1879</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">24</container><unittitle>"Hunger," <emph render="italic"> The Index</emph>, December 25, 1884</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">25</container><unittitle>"The Integration of Mind," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1895</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">26</container><unittitle>"Mental Activity," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1889</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">27</container><unittitle>"Molecular Theories of Organic Reproduction," <emph render="italic"> Proceedings of Texas Academy of Science</emph>, 1897</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">28</container><unittitle>"Neovitalism," <emph render="italic"> Proceedings of Texas Academy of Science</emph>, 1904</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">29</container><unittitle>"The Object of Knowledge," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1885.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">30</container><unittitle>"Our Personality," <emph render="italic"> The Index</emph>, April 2, 1885.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">31</container><unittitle>"The Psychological Significance of Dreams," <emph render="italic"> Religio-Philosophical Journal</emph>, September 30, 1893.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">32</container><unittitle>"Space and Touch," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1885</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">33</container><unittitle>"The Substantiality of Life," <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1881</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">34</container><unittitle>"To be Alive, What is it?" <emph render="italic"> Monist</emph>, 1895</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">35</container><unittitle>"Transcendentalism and Evolution," <emph render="italic"> The Index</emph>, March 26, 1885</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">36</container><unittitle>"True Democracy," <emph render="italic"> New Occasions</emph>, June, 1893</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">37</container><unittitle>"Uber das Protoplasma Einiger Elemeentarorganismen," <emph render="italic"> Jenaishe Zeitschrift fur Naturwissenschaft</emph>, 1885</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">38</container><unittitle>"The Unity of Organic Individual,’ <emph render="italic"> Mind</emph>, 1880</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">39</container><unittitle>"ZurFrage uber die Struktur und Contraction quergestreifter Muskel fassern," <emph render="italic"> Centralblatt fur medicineische Wissenschaften</emph>, 1807</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">40</container><unittitle>"Zur Lehre von der Muskelcontraktion," <emph render="italic"> Pfluger’s Archive fur Physiologie</emph>, 1881</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">41</container><unittitle><emph render="italic"> The Revolution of Present Experience</emph>. Boston: Sherman, French &#x0026; Company, 1910.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">1</container><container type="Folder">42-43</container><unittitle><emph render="italic"> Die Kant’sche Erkenntniss Lehre Widerlegt Vom Standpunkt Der Empirie</emph>. Munchen: Verlag con C. Ackermann, 1870.</unittitle></did></c02>


<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">44</container><unittitle><emph render="italic"> On the Formation of So-Called Cells in Animal Bodies</emph>. London: John Churchill and Sons, 1867.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">45</container><unittitle>Fr. Esmarch. <emph render="italic"> On the Use of Cold in Surgery</emph> written by Esmarch, translated by Edmund d. Montgomery, 1866</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">46</container><unittitle><emph render="italic"> The Vitality and Organization of Protoplasm.</emph> Austin, Texas: Gammie-Statesman Publishing Company, 1904. (3 copies)</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">47</container><unittitle>Bibliography of Edmund Duncan Montgomery. 3 items; typescript</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">48</container><unittitle>Reviews of Edmund Montgomery’s work by miscellaneous individuals for various publications, 1907-1912. 4 items; typescripts. (one in French)</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">49</container><unittitle>William Mackentire Salter. "A New Type of Naturalism – Montgomery," <emph render="italic"> International Journal of Ethics</emph>, October, 1908</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">50</container><unittitle>Charles A. Lane. "Montgomery Philosophy of Vital Organization," <emph render="italic"> The Monist</emph>, October, 1909.</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">51</container><unittitle>Letters to miscellaneous scientific journals, including critiques and rebuttals written either about or by Edmund Montgomery, 1868-1911. 20 items; typescript copes.</unittitle></did></c02>


     

     
</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series3"> 
     <did> 
          <unitid>Series 3:</unitid> 
          <unittitle>Family Papers</unittitle> 
          <physdesc>
               <extent>9 folders</extent>
          </physdesc> 
     </did> 
     <scopecontent> 
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
     </scopecontent> 
     
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">52</container><unittitle>Deeds (Georgia), 1870, 1872, 1875, and 1948</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>8 items; typescripts.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">53-58</container><unittitle>Deeds (Liendo), 1830 to 1949</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Records of transfer of deed for Liendo from original Spanish grant</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">59</container><unittitle>Will, Adam and Elisabeth (Wernze) Ney, February 20, 1871</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Last will and testament of Adam and Elizabeth (Wernze) Ney, typescript and accompanying letter. 2 Items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">60</container><unittitle>Wills, Ney</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Wills of Friedrich Ney (1881) and Adam and Elisabeth Ney (1872). 3 items; photocopies (in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series4"> 
     <did> 
          <unitid>Series 4:</unitid> 
          <unittitle>Correspondence, 1894-1949</unittitle> 
          <physdesc>
               <extent>27 folders</extent>
          </physdesc> 
     </did> 
     <scopecontent> 
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
     </scopecontent> 
     
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">61</container><unittitle>Montgomery to Elisabet Ney December 12, 1908.</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Original at Ney Museum, Austin. Letter from Montgomery at Liendo to Ney, discussing his health problems and Lorne. 1 item; photocopy.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">62</container><unittitle>Montgomery to Hans Driesch, 1903-1907. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters from Montgomery, written primarily in German, discussing psychological evolution experiments and energy levels, review of Driesch’s book, journal articles by both, and family matter. 11 items, with translations.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">63</container><unittitle>Montgomery to and from Charles Alva Lane, 1894-1910. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Montgomery’s translations and encouragement, evaluation and critiques of Lanes’ writings. In addition, Montgomery commented on his own work and affairs and family matters. 22 items, with some translated and paraphrased.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">64</container><unittitle>Montgomery to Miscellaneous. 1878-1910. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters from Montgomery to professional colleagues regarding journal articles, his work, views, and opinions. Included are copies of letters to University College, London with their editorial comments. Correspondents include: "Robertson," Lewis Janes, Ernst Mach, and Ernst Haeckel. 14 items; photocopies &#x0026; transcription.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">65</container><unittitle>Miscellaneous to Montgomery, 1877-1908, and undated. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters written to Montgomery regarding publication of Ney’s work, comments on Montgomery’s book, lawyer’s reports on inheritance, and a personal letter from Maria Leuder discussing family matters (includes photograph and translation).Correspondents include: Paul Carus, William M. Salter, Shadworth H. Hodgson, and C.A. Lane. 9 items (Some in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">66</container><unittitle>Crescentia "Cencie" Simath, 1890 and 1900. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Includes a typescript of a letter sent from Ney in Meunchen, Germany to her housekeeper, Cencie, discussing efforts to get a relative to the doctor’s office. Another letter, dated "early, 29 – 1909," mentions an illness of Dr. Montgomery. 2 items; typescript and photocopy of originals.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">67</container><unittitle>Ney to Hallie Bryan and Guy M. Bryan, 1899-1900. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters from Ney discussing her work, financial difficulties, and other miscellaneous matters with the Bryans of Galveston. 4 items; photocopies of originals.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">68</container><unittitle>Edmund Ney to Elisabet Ney, Feb. 21, 1871. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letter from Edmund, Boston, to his sister Elisabet who was visiting New York. Discusses business and family matters. 1 item; photocopy.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">69</container><unittitle>Letters about Elisabet Ney, Miscellaneous Letters, 1917-1948, and undated. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters from miscellaneous individuals, primarily photocopies or carbons, answering questions pertaining to Elisabet Ney. Includes a long letter from Dora Gray Muller, who lived at Liendo and taught Lorne for one year, to a Mrs. Rutland, describing the Montgomery/Ney household. Also, letters to Ira Kendrick Stephens, and copies of Texas appropriation bills contracting for work with Ney. Correspondents include: Paul Caus, Waldemar Kuhlman, and F. Skolaude. 9 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">70</container><unittitle>C. A. Lane to George W. Harris, 1911-1918</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Letters to the Harrises from Lane, who purchased Liendo and became holder of Montgomery’s papers. Letters deal with Montgomery family affairs and the philosopher’s writings. 13 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">71</container><unittitle>C.A. Lane to Ira K. Stephens, 1930-1934</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence and poetry by Lane regarding the letters and literature of Montgomery sent to Stephens for the preparation of his biography on Montgomery. Relates sources for information on Montgomery and Ney including the Harrises and some interesting anecdotes. 30 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">72</container><unittitle>A.G. Lipscomb to C.A. Lane, 1912. </unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence from a lawyer to Montgomery regarding the publication of poems. Includes copies of the originals in German and typescripts of the translations. 27 items (20 in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">73</container><unittitle>Montgomery heirs to C.A. Lane, 1913-1925</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence from the Montgomery grandchildren relating their activities and appreciation for clothes sent by Lane as well as correspondence from and concerning Mrs. Barrett, an acquaintance of Lorne Montgomery, involved in the settlement of the estate. 14 items (One in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">74</container><unittitle>George W. and Laura B. Harris to C.A. Lane, 1911</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence from Harris to Lane regarding the death of Montgomery and his friends, the funeral , the disposition of papers, and request for information on his life and family. 7 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">75</container><unittitle>G.W. and L.B. Harris to C.A. Lane 1912. Correspondence deals with the disposition of the works of Montgomery, problems with the son, and the litigation involved with Montgomery heirs. Harris is attempting to obtain information for Lane on Ney’s life and work also. 16 items.</unittitle></did></c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">76</container><unittitle>G.W. and L.B. Harris to C.A. Lane, 1913</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence, notes, newspaper clippings, and a Christmas card. News of family and friends, Lorne Montgomery’s activities and subsequent death, and the progress of court litigation; newspaper clipping on Buckner Orphanage where Montgomery grandchildren were placed, and poetry believed written by Montgomery. 27 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">77</container><unittitle>G.W. and L.B. Harris to C.A. Lane, 1914</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence deals with Montgomery –Ney affairs, comments on family and friends from Montgomery grandchildren. 16 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">78</container><unittitle>G.W. and L.B. Harris to Miscellaneous, 1911-1931</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence regarding family affairs, Lorne’s activities, Montgomery’s publications, farm news, comments on Ney, information on Montgomery collections at the University of Texas and SMU. Correspondents include: Lorne Montgomery and Mrs. J. Dibrell. 8 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">79</container><unittitle>Cencie Simath June  27, 1913 – November 25, 1916</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence with translations and typescripts regarding the retirement of the housekeeper, Cencie Simath. Includes letter from the grandchildren in the Buckner Home, Dallas. 19 items (one in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">80</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, 1930-1938</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence by Stephens to individuals with knowledge of the activities of Montgomery and Ney. Letters addressed worldwide and include Stephens’ attempt to have Liendo Plantation purchased by Texas as state museum and park. Correspondents include: Dr. Hans Driesch, C.A. Lane, and Laura B. Harris. 74 items; typescript copies.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">81</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, 1937-1951</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence regarding the joint publication of Montgomery’s work. Comments and evaluation of the work and life of the philosopher. 41 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">82</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, 1931</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence in response to Stephens’ inquiry concerning information regarding all facets of Montgomery’s life, including education, genealogy, publications, and legal and financial affairs. Correspondents include: Mrs. Bride Neill Taylor. 40 items (six in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">83</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, 1931</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence in response to Stephens’ inquiry concerning information on all facets of the lives of Montgomery and Ney. Includes individuals and institutions worldwide. Correspondents include: Bride Neill Taylor and Sidney E. Meezes. 20 items (one in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">84</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens 1932, 1937-1939</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence in response to Stephens’ inquiry concerning information on all facets of the lives of Montgomery and Ney; includes individuals, institutions, educators, and attorneys. Correspondents include: Louis S. Moore and Clarence Lewis. 34 items (three in German).</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">85</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, 1951</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence in response to Stephens’ inquiry concerning information on the work of Montgomery and Ney. 5 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">86</container><unittitle>Ira K. Stephens, undated</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Correspondence and notes on a variety of topics. Correspondents include: C.A. Lane. 7 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>Miscellaneous Correspondence</unittitle></did>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">87</container><unittitle>Miscellaneous, 1911, 1913, 1924, 1931, and undated</unittitle></did></c03>
     <c03><did><container type="Box">2</container><unittitle>A variety of topics. Correspondents include: C.A. Lane and Mrs. Laura B. Harris. 7 items.</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>

     
</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series5"> 
     <did> 
          <unitid>Series 5:</unitid> 
          <unittitle>Photographs</unittitle> 
          <physdesc>
               <extent>11 folders</extent>
          </physdesc> 
     </did> 
     <scopecontent> 
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p> 
     </scopecontent> 
     
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">88</container><unittitle>"Cencie," 2 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">89</container><unittitle>"Liendo." 16 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">90</container><unittitle>Duncan McNeill (father of Edmund Montgomery). 2 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">91</container><unittitle>Edmund Duncan Montgomery. 18 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">92</container><unittitle>Edmund Duncan Montgomery. 21 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">93</container><unittitle>Montgomery’s grave and bronze tablet. 4 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">94</container><unittitle>Lorne Ney Montgomery. 4 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">95</container><unittitle>Vicco and Margaret von Stralendorff. 5 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">96</container><unittitle>Elisabet Ney 14 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">97</container><unittitle>Work of Elisabet Ney 5 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">98</container><unittitle>Miscellaneous. 6 items</unittitle></did></c02>
     
</c01>

<c01 level="series" id="series6">
     <did>
          <unitid>Series 6:</unitid>
          <unittitle>Miscellaneous</unittitle>
          <physdesc>
               <extent>4 folders</extent>
          </physdesc>
     </did>
     <scopecontent>
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p>
     </scopecontent>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">99</container><unittitle>Items on Liendo. 10 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">100</container><unittitle>Newspaper clippings. 8 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">101</container><unittitle>Maps of Thomas County, Georgia. 2 items</unittitle></did></c02>
<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">102</container><unittitle>Shipping receipt for one of Ney’s sculptures</unittitle></did></c02>

</c01>


<c01 level="series" id="series7">
     <did>
          <unitid>Series 7:</unitid>
          <unittitle>Ira K. Stephens’s research notes</unittitle>
          <physdesc>
               <extent>1 folder and 2 items</extent>
          </physdesc>
     </did>
     <scopecontent>
          <p><?SERIES DESCRIPTION?></p>
     </scopecontent>

<c02><did><container type="Box">2</container><container type="Folder">103</container><unittitle>Research materials gathered by Ira K. Stephens</unittitle></did>
      <c03><did><unittitle>Includes notes, scraps of paper, a published essay on    Liendo, fragments of typescripts, and "A Statement by    the Editors of The Open Court . . ." (Chicago, 1887)</unittitle></did></c03>
</c02>


<c02><did><container type="Box">3</container><unittitle>Two Index Card files created by Ira K. Stephens containing notes and references to his research on Montgomery and Ney</unittitle></did></c02>

</c01>







</dsc> 
</archdesc>
</ead> 

