Archives For November 30, 1999
Exciting news! We now have 11 photo albums available in the Lowcountry Digital Library:
http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/content/gertrude-sanford-legendre-papers-1836-2000
Coming soon: WWII Nazi and Fascist leader photographs, approximately 10 new photo albums (including Indo-China and various African expeditions), World War II correspondence, and photo portraits of Gertrude Legendre by famed artists such as Man Ray, George Platt Lynes, Toni Frissell and Charlotte Fairchild. Enjoy!
This collection includes a large amount of scrapbooks and photo albums created with a wide variety of bindings, papers, and photo types. Some of the albums are in great shape, and others are in need of a lot of TLC.
The first scrapbook I worked with is “Around the World, 1963.” It includes ticket stubs, brochures, and 3×5 photographs chronicling Gertrude and Bokara Legendre’s mother/daughter worldwide excursion in 1963. This album has sustained significant water damage, and almost all of the materials had to be removed from the original binding and placed in chemically inert enclosures. Scroll through the photos for more details!

Original binding

Severe water damage. All pages had to be removed from original plastic page covers, and all photos and ephemera were removed and placed in archival enclosures.

Side view of album before conservation

All pages had to be kept, because each photo included a handwritten title below it! We matched each photo with its corresponding title before disassembling the album.

Original spine rusting and damage

The finished product!

This is what the album looks like now! All materials are safely cataloged and will remain preserved for future research.
This collection includes a sizable amount of full newspapers and clippings. Below are some of the most notable articles available, including a tribute to former United States President and American Civil War commander, Ulysses S. Grant.

Grant on his most famous horse, Cincinnati, 1865
Some of the oldest items in the Gertrude Sanford Legendre papers are daguerreotypes, tintypes, cabinet cards, and sketches created in the early 19th century. Daguerreotypes and tintypes represent some of the earliest known versions of photography, and were used primarily from the 1840s-1870s.

Unknown painting, September 28th, 1813

Shown with pencil for scale

Sarah Jane Cochran Sanford (Gertrude’s paternal grandmother) cabinet card

Stephen Sanford (Gertrude’s paternal grandfather), undated

Tintype image case

Leather tintype image case

Ethel Sanford (Gertrude’s mother), undated (mid 1800s)

Ethel Sanford, undated (mid 1800s)
Gertrude’s sister, Sarah Jane (“Janie”) Cochran Sanford, married Italian diplomat, Mario Pansa, in 1937. Pansa played polo with Stephen Sanford, and served as a social adviser to Benito Mussolini before and during World War II. Below are images of the couple, as well as images from Mario’s time in fascist Italy and Germany during WWII.
We are still in the process of identifying some of the men in these photographs. If you recognize someone, let us know (mchughck@cofc.edu)!

Jane (left) and Mario Pansa

The Pansa’s wedding invitation and portrait

Jane golfing in Palm Beach, Florida

Mario and his polo team

Mario with his elephant trophy, 1930

June 1943. Benito Mussolini (in white), Mihai Antonescu, Romanian Minister of Foreign Affairs, (2nd from right) Mario Pansa (6th from left), others unidentified

June 1943. Mihai Antonescu, Mussolini (center), and Pansa (second from center), others unidentified

Mihai Antonescu, June 1943

June 1943. Mihai Antonescu, others unidentified

June 1943. Benito Mussolini (right), Mihai Antonescu (left)

June 1943. Benito Mussolini (right), Mihai Antonescu (left)

Galeazzo Ciano (center), Foreign Minister of Fascist Italy from 1936 until 1943 and Benito Mussolini’s son-in-law.

June 1943. Mihai Antonescu (center), Mario Pansa (front left), others unidentified
Gertrude was an avid writer and artist, and she kept detailed journals of each place she visited over the years. She also wrote several books, including The Sands Ceased to Run, Gertie!, The Time of My Life. Below are images of these manuscripts in their different forms — from scrawled notes to final drafts!

Handwritten preliminary chapter list

Two of Gertie’s travel journals

Testing image placement and captions

A response to one of Gertie’s many solicitations for publication

Manuscript corrections for The Time of My Life

“Final” draft!
Take a look at some photos of an interesting autograph book kept by Gertrude’s relatives (circa 1866). Autograph books were traditionally kept between friends and relatives and were used to collect small sketches, poems, pieces of verse, and other mementos — kind of like a yearbook! Calligraphy is such an art!
Both Gertrude and her mother, Ethel Sanford, commissioned their finest garments from designers in Paris and New York. Take a look at these beautiful hand-drawn patterns, complete with original swatches!

New York, c. 1930

New York, c. 1930

Paris, c. 1880

Paris, c. 1880

Paris, c. 1880
Since this collection was organized and kept arranged by an archivist during its time at Medway, most of the materials were already placed in archival-quality boxes and had its own unique arrangement system. Check out a few photos from the initial survey — this collection spans over 3 generations and includes over 15 different formats!

Lots of film formats

Polo balls…Gertrude’s brother, Stephen “Laddie” Sanford was a well-known polo player and horse breeder!

Correspondence from Hon. John Sanford, Gertrude’s father, c. 1880