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<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="deu" identifier="mss0595.xml">mss0595.xml</eadid> <filedesc> <titlestmt>
<titleproper encodinganalog="Title">Finding aid for Alfred and Annie Waller
letters<date normal="1899/1902">1899–1902</date></titleproper> <author encodinganalog="Creator">University
of Delaware Library, Special Collections</author> </titlestmt> 
<publicationstmt> <publisher encodinganalog="Publisher">University of Delaware
Library</publisher> <address> <addressline>Newark, Delaware
19717-5267</addressline> <addressline>Phone: 302-831-2229</addressline> 
<addressline>Fax: 302-831-6003</addressline> <addressline>URL:
http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/</addressline></address> 
<date encodinganalog="Date" normal="2009-05-12">Date encoded (2009 May 12)</date> </publicationstmt> </filedesc> <profiledesc> <creation>Finding aid
encoded <date normal="2009-05-12">2009 May 12</date></creation> <langusage><language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="Language" scriptcode="latn">English</language></langusage> </profiledesc> </eadheader> 
<frontmatter> <titlepage> <titleproper>Alfred and Annie Waller
letters<date normal="1899/1902">1899–1902</date> 
</titleproper> <publisher>Special
Collections Department, University of Delaware Library</publisher> <address> 
<addressline>Newark, Delaware 19717-5267</addressline> <addressline>Phone:
302-831-2229</addressline> <addressline>Fax: 302-831-6003</addressline> 
<addressline>URL: http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/</addressline></address>
</titlepage> </frontmatter> 
<archdesc level="collection" relatedencoding="MARC21"> <did> <origination> 
<persname source="local" encodinganalog="100">Waller, Alfred R.</persname></origination>   <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Alfred and Annie Waller
letters<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1899/1902" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899–1902</unitdate>
</unittitle> 
<unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="deu">MSS 595</unitid> 
<physdesc encodinganalog="300"><extent>0.1 linear feet</extent> <extent>(50 items)</extent></physdesc> <abstract>The Alfred and Annie Waller letters consists of approximately fifty letters spanning the period between 1899 and 1902.  The letters housed in this  small collection discuss  the separation and divorce of Alfred and Annie ("Nancy") Waller of Watertown, New York.</abstract> <langmaterial encodinganalog="546">Materials entirely in
<language langcode="eng">English</language>.</langmaterial> 
<repository encodinganalog="852">University of Delaware Library -
<subarea>Special Collections</subarea></repository> </did> 
<acqinfo encodinganalog="541"> <head>Source</head> <p>Gift of the Moyerman family, ca. 1970–1972.</p> </acqinfo> 
<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"> <head>Access Restrictions</head> 
<p>The collection is open for research.</p> </accessrestrict> 
<userestrict encodinganalog="540"> <head>Terms Governing Use and
Reproduction</head> <p>Use of materials from this collection beyond the
exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S.
Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is
required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections
Department, University of Delaware Library, 
<extref href="http://www.lib.udel.edu/cgi-bin/askspec.cgi">http://www.lib.udel.edu/cgi-bin/askspec.cgi</extref></p>
</userestrict> <prefercite encodinganalog="524"> <head>Citation</head> <p>MSS
595, Alfred and Annie Waller
letters, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library,
Newark, Delaware.</p> </prefercite> <odd encodinganalog="590" type="shelving">
   <head>Shelving Summary</head>
   <list>
    <item>Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes (1 inch)</item>
   </list>
  </odd> <processinfo>
      <head>Processing</head>
      
      
    <p>Processed by Emily Holloway, March 2006.  Revised and encoded by Lora J. Davis, May 2009.</p></processinfo> <bioghist encodinganalog="545"> <head>Biographical Note</head> <p><note><p>Alfred R. Waller was born in September 1865, to Alfred and Laura Waller.  Waller grew up in Watertown, New York, with his future wife Annie, whom he married in about 1888.   After approximately eleven years of marriage, in November 1899, Annie Waller pursued separation and, later, divorce from her husband.  Alfred and Annie Waller had two daughters, Nadine and Louise, who remained in their mother’s custody.</p></note></p><p>Alfred Waller was employed by the International Paper Company, which was incorporated in Albany in 1898 as a merger of seventeen pulp and paper mills located throughout New York.  With offices in Philadelphia  and Baltimore, Alfred Waller was required to travel frequently throughout the mid-Atlantic states for his sales job with International Paper.  Alfred Waller often wrote letters to his wife and legal counselors from paper mills and offices in Piercefield, White Plains, and Manhattan, New York; Baltimore, Maryland; and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Alfred Waller’s brother, Tom T. Waller, headed the sales department of the New York division of the International Paper Company.</p><p>	Letters in this collection indicate that Mr. and Mrs. Waller lived together in Piercefield, New York, for a time, but that their primary residence was in Watertown, New York.  In addition, the Waller's had a seasonal residence in Sackets Harbor, New York.</p><p><bibref>Information derived from the collection.</bibref> 
</p> </bioghist> <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
<head>Scope and Content Note</head> <p><note><p>The Alfred and Annie Waller letters consists of approximately fifty letters spanning the period between 1899 and 1902.  The letters housed in this  small collection discuss  the separation and divorce of Alfred and Annie ("Nancy") Waller of Watertown, New York.</p></note></p><p>The letters are arranged by recipient and housed in three folders, including the following: F1 Letters to Annie ("Nancy") Waller, F2 Letters to Alfred Waller, and F3 Letters to ("Governor") Allen Beach from Alfred Waller.
The letters illustrate several different perspectives on this turn-of-the-century marriage crisis and provide insight into the emotional, social, legal, and financial aspects of the Waller's separation.</p> <p>Alfred Waller’s letters to his wife are typically full of heartbreak, atonement, and pleas for reconciliation, as well as frequent discussions  of his financial difficulties in providing an allowance to his estranged wife.   Illustratively, Alfred Waller’s letters to his wife were addressed to the familiar "Nancy" prior to  November 9, 1899, when he accepted her terms for separation; thereafter, he refers to her by the name "Annie."</p><p>Additional letters from the Waller's family and friends reflect the social difficulties of divorce at the turn-of-the-century.  Many letters, including one from Annie Waller's mother,  advise the couple to reconsider their separation in order to avoid publicity and harm to the reputations of all involved.</p><p>  Letters written to Allen Beach, the couple's legal intermediary and a resident of Watertown and Sackets Harbor, New York, document the couple's path to separation.  The separation appears to have begun following the "Piercefield scandals," in which Alfred Waller's jealousy toward his wife purportedly resulted in "personal violence" toward her.   In addition to Annie Waller's complaints of personal violence, Alfred Waller submitted a letter to Beach on April 1, 1900, in which he claims to have committed an act of adultery with a woman in Philadelphia.  However, in his personal correspondence with Beach, Alfred Waller maintains that he has had no adulterous relationships with women, and that he only wrote the  letter suggesting the contrary  in order to  provide the necessary "evidence" for the divorce as per his wife's wishes and Beach's recommendations.   In later letters to Beach, Alfred Waller condemns his letter admitting adultery and flatly denies its truth.  Alfred Waller also scorns Beach for advising him to falsely admit to such acts.</p><p>From the fragmentary and often one-sided evidence presented in the collection it is difficult to discern the facts leading up to the Waller's separation and the eventual outcome of their estrangement.  Nevertheless, this small collection offers the researcher a glimpse into the difficult process of separation and divorce at the turn of the twentieth century.  These letters may be useful to researchers interested in women’s history, social history, family studies, as well as the legal and financial aspects of divorce during this time.</p></scopecontent> 
 <controlaccess> <head>Selected Search Terms</head> 
 
<controlaccess> <head>Personal Names</head> 
<persname encodinganalog="600" source="local">Waller, Alfred R.</persname>
<persname encodinganalog="600" source="local">Waller, Annie.</persname></controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Corporate Names</head> 
<corpname encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">International Paper Company.</corpname>
</controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Topical Terms</head> 
<subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Divorce--America--19th century--Sources.</subject> <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Divorce--America--20th century--Sources.</subject><subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Marriage--America--19th century--Sources.</subject><subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Marriage--America--20th century--Sources.</subject></controlaccess> 
<controlaccess> <head>Geographic Names</head> 
<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Watertown (N.Y.)--History--19th century--Sources.</geogname>
<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Watertown (N.Y.)--History--20th century--Sources.</geogname><geogname encodinganalog="651" source="local">Piercefield (N.Y.)--History--19th century--Sources.</geogname>
<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="local">Piercefield (N.Y.)--History--20th century--Sources.</geogname><geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Sackets Harbor (N.Y.)--History--19th century--Sources.</geogname>
<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Sackets Harbor (N.Y.)--History--20th century--Sources.</geogname></controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Form/Genre Terms</head> 
<genreform source="aat" encodinganalog="655">	Letters (correspondence)</genreform>
</controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Occupation</head> 
<occupation source="aat" encodinganalog="656">	Businessmen.</occupation>
<occupation source="aat" encodinganalog="656">Housewives (people)</occupation></controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Personal Contributors</head> 
<persname encodinganalog="700" source="local">Waller, Annie.</persname><persname encodinganalog="700" source="local">Fisher, Cleveland D.</persname><persname encodinganalog="700" source="local">Beach, Allen.</persname><persname encodinganalog="700" source="local">Waller, Tom T.</persname></controlaccess> </controlaccess> 
  
  
 <dsc type="in-depth"> <head>Detailed Contents List</head> 
<c01 level="item"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F1</container> <unittitle>Letters to Annie (“Nancy”) Waller 
<unitdate normal="yyyy-mm-dd/yyyy-mm-dd" type="inclusive">1899–1902</unitdate></unittitle> <physdesc>22 items</physdesc></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Includes letters from Alfred Waller to his wife Annie; one letter from Cleveland D. Fisher, A. H. Rathbone &amp; Co., New York, who was an acquaintance of both parties; and one letter from "Mother" advising Annie Waller not to pursue divorce.  All letters discuss the separation of Alfred and Annie Waller.  Two letters from Alfred Waller to Annie include her written responses on the reverse side.</p></scopecontent></c01> <c01 level="item"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F2</container> <unittitle>Letters to Alfred Waller<unitdate normal="yyyy-mm-dd/yyyy-mm-dd" type="inclusive">1899–1900</unitdate></unittitle> <physdesc>6 items</physdesc></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Includes letters pertaining to Alfred Waller's separation and pending divorce from Annie Waller.  Correspondents include Counsel Allen Beach of Watertown and Sackets Harbor, New York, Alfred’s brother Tom T. Waller, and his wife Annie Waller.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="item"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F3</container> <unittitle>Letters to (“Governor”) Allen Beach from Alfred Waller 
<unitdate normal="yyyy-mm-dd/yyyy-mm-dd" type="inclusive">1899 August–1900 May</unitdate></unittitle> <physdesc>22 items</physdesc></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Includes letters discussing the separation and pending divorce of Alfred and Annie Waller.  Allen Beach was the Waller's friend and legal counsel in this matter.  Several letters include a discussion of Alfred Waller's attempts to orchestrate suspicions of his infidelity while in Philadelphia in order to provide circumstantial evidence as grounds for his wife’s divorce suit.</p></scopecontent></c01></dsc> </archdesc> </ead> 
