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Julia G. Severance Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 30-309

Scope and Contents

The Julia G. Severance papers primarily consist of her etchings of notable sites and buildings around the Oberlin College campus. Also included are letters written to friends regarding personal matters. The letters were retained for the additional artwork found on them. The photograph series contains photos of Julia Severance, her studio, and the Severance home in Oberlin, Ohio, as well as a photo album documenting her time in California and various loose photographs. The two scrapbooks in the collection primarily consist of newspaper clippings on various subjects. Miscellaneous items include an account book, two published books, a small bronze plate, and an art exhibit event program. Although the collection documents her artistic talents, there exists only a small amount of biographical information and other materials relating to her education and family.

Dates

  • Creation: 1912-1957, undated
  • Other: Date acquired: 1999 September 21

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted.

Biographical Sketch

A gifted artist, Julia Gridley Severance designed the official Oberlin College seal and was noted for her many pieces of sculpture and works of art. Julia was born in Oberlin on January 11, 1877. Her father, James R. Severance, graduated from the College in 1868 and from the Seminary in 1871. Her mother, Rosa Gridley, studied at Oberlin from 1865 to 1871.

At a very early age Julia Severance could draw as well as write and she thought it strange that everybody could not do the same. She first studied at the Chicago Art Institute and continued her artwork in connection with her studies at Oberlin. She was a regular student in the College of Arts and Sciences from 1896-99, a special student in 1899-1900, and took special courses in fine arts and music for several additional years. She also studied in the Cleveland Art School, in Italy, and with the New York Art Students’ League. In 1941 she commented that, though she never received a degree, she had “four years’ training in lines of my own choosing.”

In the June 1922 Oberlin Alumni Magazine, Arthur S. Kimball ’15, then professor of singing, discussed her “great gifts for portraying human character and attributes in the round or in relief” and the fact that she was “always conspicuous for fine drawing from casts and from nature.”

When the architect for Wilder Hall (originally known as the "Men’s Building") wanted a college seal, now displayed above the entrance to Wilder’s main lounge, he asked Severance to develop a design. He requested Severance incorporate wording of the bylaws and the shapes in the old college seal, which was three feet in diameter. The trustees decided to have a new seal made from her design and she made several casts, about 12 inches in diameter. One was cast in bronze for the president’s office.

In 1916 Severance received an award in sculpture at the Women’s Artists’ Club in Cleveland. In 1917 she gave an exhibition of sculptures at the home of Delphine Hanna ’01 AM, then professor of physical education, in Florida. In 1921 she designed the Leffingwell bronze tablet in the Chapel of St. Mary’s School in Knoxville, Illinois. Several hundred copies of her etchings of Florida scenes decorated guest rooms at the Pennsylvania Hotel in New York City. She exhibited sculpture and etchings at the Cleveland Museum of Art in 1925.

“Neither the accuracy of the camera nor the skill of its manipulator can ever compete with those subtle gifts of the sculptor at their best,” wrote Mr. Kimball in 1922. As proof of Julia Severance’s ability, he cited the Leffingwell tablet, two low reliefs of Miss Severance’s parents, a portrait of Elizabeth Swing ’07, a portrait bust of the late Prof. G. Frederick Wright, and portraits of F. Champion Ward ’32, and his sister, the late Helen Ward ’32. The Ward portraits were mentioned “as only two of many similar ones that adorn the homes and gladden the hearts of fond parents, fixing for all time the passing beauty of childhood.”

Julia G. Severance died March 9, 1972, in Chula Vista, California.

Sources Consulted

Oberlin Alumni Magazine (May/June 1972).

Note written by Oberlin Alumni Magazine staff.

Extent

3.20 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Method of Acquisition

The papers of Julia G. Severance were received from several sources. In 1999, the College Archives received additional materials from Vincent Hart. An additional lot of materials was purchased in 2004 [2004/105]. A mounted etching and corresponding Albertype postcard were transferred from the Allen Memorial Art Museum in 2005. Seven postcards were received from David Lee in 2008. Two etchings of Oberlin College structures were received in October 2013.

Accruals and Additions

Accession Nos: 1999/095, 2004/105, 2005/030, 2008/011, 2013/066.

Related Materials

Student Alumni Records file of Julia Severance (28/1).

Oberlin College Archives Objects Collection (RG 35).

RG 40, Oversize box 27. Contains art by Julia G. Severance: a mounted etching of the Cox Administration Building and postcard of the image.

Goldberg, Marcia, “A statue, the College seal, a mural,” Oberlin Alumni Magazine 72 (January/February 1976): 8-12.

Title
Julia G. Severance Papers Finding Guide
Author
Cara McKibbin; Anne Cuyler Salsich
Date
2004 October 11
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2004 October: Processed by Archives staff.
  • 2005 January 25: Revised by Cara McKibbin.
  • 2008 May: Revised by Anne Cuyler Salsich.
  • 2013 October: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2021 July: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2022 June: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2024-2025: Prepared for migration by Louisa C. Hoffman and Emily Rebmann.

Repository Details

Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository

Contact:
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)