Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 2013)
P R IN T : News 2 »X» Wednesday, Feb.27,2013 For Whom the Letter Tolls Clackamas Communi ty College was recently donated a rare, unpub lished letter by Ernest Hemingway Sage Niles The Clackamas Print Clackamas Community College was treated to a gift that is not often bestowed upon community colleges. It received, from a private col lector, a rare 80-year-old letter written by Ernest Hemingway. The letter written in 1933, intended for his friend Charles Thompson, details deep sea fishing in Cuba, a car that he left in Florida and about set ting a later date for a scheduled hunting trip to Africa. The let ter was written in pencil while Hemingway was staying at a Havana hotel. The donor is Larry Peterson, a Lake Oswego based lawyer. Peterson came into possession of the letter at an auction in 1993 and it has largely sat untouched since then. “I believe he paid about $5,000 and it has recently been appraised at close to $23,000,”,; said CCC Major Gifts Officer, Vicki Smith. The letter was given not only to the college but to the Alden E. Miller Law Library of Clackamas County. , “We drafted up a memo of understanding between us and the law library. Larry Peterson had to give it to one place so we could give him a receipt, so he gave it to CCC but we share ownership with the law library,” said Smith. Plans on unveiling the letter at CCC are still in the works and much is still on the table in regards to how to show the letter. Another concern is what the most responsible and aca demic way of handling the let ter will be. “We’ve been in touch with the National Hemingway Society and professors who study nothing but Hemingway,” said Smith. “And they say don’t display the original and there are ways to get really good copies and I don’t know where that will be displayed yet.” “A t this point we’re leaving up how to display the letter to . the English Depart ment. ” Greg Fitzgerald CCC Foundation Director The English department has hopes for the letter as well and expressed interest in pos sibly passing the letter around to other colleges in the area. English Chair Dave Mount had some ideas about what could be done with the letter. “I think one thing we could do is facilitate making sure that Hemingway scholars in the area do know about it,” he said. “Maybe writing a letter and sending it out to UO and OSU to let Hemingway experts in the area know it’s here. It’s kind of a responsibility actu ally.” Greg Fitzgerald, Foundation director, has overseen the letter since it first arrived at CCC. “At this point we’re leav ing up how to display the let ter to the English department. They are going to figure out what they want to do to unveil this. It’ll be spring term,” said Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald offered more con crete details on what the plans for the letter will be. “We’ve had a lot of inter est from Dr. Suzanne Clark at the University of Oregon, but also from Penn State University who has a project called the Hemingway Letters Project, and from the Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston,” said Fitzgerald. The Hemingway Letters Project at Penn State is a unique and ambitious project with their hopes to publish 6,000 of Hemingway’s letters, and the letter that was donated to CCC was previously unknown to them. The college, however, can not publish the: letter or put out a transcript: of the: letter, and will rarely show the original. “The content of the letter is copyrighted by the Hemingway family for some period of time, but it will be published in a series of books with the other Hemingway letters,” said Fitzgerald. A donation of this size and importance is a fairly rare thing for the college, and overall everyone involved with the let ter has expressed hope, joy and excitement at getting the opportunity to work with it. “Certainly it adds to our academic status that we have another piece to add to our col lection and our research collec tions. It’s a good legacy for this college all the way around,” said Fitzgerald. M M s O ft w b C 'f ' r r p TheClackam as P rint aims to report the news in an honest, unbiased and professional - manner. Content published in The P rint is not screened or subject to censorship. . ; Email comments, concerns or tips to cft/efecftgc/acfcamas.edu . or call us at 503-594-6266. ■ 19600 Molalla Ave. Oregon City, OR 97045 Journalism Adviser: M elissa Jones me//ssaj@c/ackamas.edu W E D IT O R S j Co-Editor-in-Chiefs: x Joshua Dillen & Anna Axelson p chiefed@clackamas.edu K (Editor: Brittany Bell * Associate: Christopher Taylor B i>ewsed@c/ackamas.edu v Co-Editor: Emily Rask * Co-Editor: Breanna Craine r aced@ctackamas.edu Larry Peterson and wife Trina Peterson show off the letter. After ac quiring the letter from an auction in J993, Peterson decided to hand it over to CCC this past December. HEMINGWAY Andrew Millbrooke g Associate: David Beasley B ^ ohitid@efackamas.edu * Editor; Chris Morrow 5 copyed@clackamas.edu Photo Editor: Patty Salazar g j photoed@clackamas.edu - W eb & Design: fig James Duncan Sxebeditot@clackamas.edu IB Ad Manager "Caylee Miller admgt@clackamas.edu j u ■ WRITERS A PHOTOGRAPHERS ' • . h |||8' : Anna Franz Brittany Harmon ■ BradHetneke Sage Niles Patrick Quinn Denee’ Shelton PRO »U <TIO H ASSISTANTS , \ Robert Crombie Jonah Hannett Caitlan Honer V is d r o s o n l i n e &T www.TheClackamasPrint.com k t facebook The C la ckam a sP rint bp t u u itte r @ C lackam asP rint