| |
Introduction
The Robert J. Wickenheiser
Collection of the seventeenth-century
English poet John Milton (1608-1674)
brings the library its first major
seventeenth-century research collection,
to join the earlier acquisition of major
collections from subsequent periods. It
was acquired for Thomas Cooper Library
in 2006 with leading support from
William L. Richter and The William L.
Richter Family Foundation.
The Wickenheiser Collection, built up
over a thirty-five year period, has more
than 6,000 volumes. It includes more
than sixty first and other
seventeenth-century editions of Milton’s
own writings, and significant holdings
also of 17th century Miltoniana. Its
special focus on illustrated editions
make it perhaps the most comprehensive
collection ever of Milton illustration,
from the first illustrated edition of
Paradise Lost (1688) through all the
major illustrators that follow,
particularly John Martin (1789-1854) and
Gustave Doré (1832-1833), with original
drawings by several of the artists. The collection’s 18th,
19th, and 20th Milton editions preserve
a comprehensive record of Milton's
continuing impact, while holdings of
Milton biography, scholarship, and
criticism document knowledge of Milton’s
writings and influence.
John Milton (1608-1674), author of the
epic poem Paradise Lost (1667), is the
most important English-language poet of
the seventeenth century. He was active
in politics, as author of the first
major text on the freedom of the press,
Areopagitica (1644) and as Latin
secretary to Britain's revolutionary
government in the late 1640's and
1650's. He was also deeply involved in
the same religious debates as the
Pilgrim Fathers, and a pioneer in his
writings on education and on marriage
law. For centuries after it was written,
his poetry drew responses from poets,
learned scholars, ordinary readers,
musicians, artists and illustrators.
Milton was as influential in America as
in Europe, and the Wickenheiser
Collection includes not only the first
American editions of Milton’s poetry,
but also rare printings of political
pamphlets influential in debates on the
Constitution and Bill of Rights.
Dr. Robert J. Wickenheiser started
collecting Milton and other
seventeenth-century poets as a graduate
student at the University of Minnesota
in the late 1960's. As a young professor
at Princeton in the early seventies, he
began focusing on the history of Milton
illustration, and with his wife Pat and
the late Robert H. Taylor, past
president of the Grolier Club, he
visited and established friendships with
many of the best-known antiquarian
bookdealers on both sides of the
Atlantic. Since retiring, Dr.
Wickenheiser has completed a full-scale
illustrated catalogue of the collection,
scheduled for publication for the 400th
anniversary of Milton’s birth in 2008.
The Robert J. Wickenheiser Collection
has been purchased for the University
with the leading support of Mr. William
L. Richter and The William L. Richter
Family Foundation. In recognition and
appreciation of this generous gift, the
University’s Board of Trustees has
approved naming a room in the library’s
new Special Collections library.
Patrick Scott,
Director
of Special Collections
|