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Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history |  | Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history: Encyclopedia II - Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history |  | On April 10, 1946, Irving Fiske, (born Irving Fishman in Brooklyn, New York, on March 5, 1908), a playwright, inventor, freelance writer, and speaker, and his wife, Barbara Hall Fiske, (born Isabelle Daniel Hall in Tucson, Arizona on September 9, 1919), an artist, bought 140 acres (0.6 km²) of mountain, meadow, and brook land in Rochester, Vermont. They had been married on January 8, 1946.
Irving, a 1928 graduate of Cornell University, had worked for the Federal Writer's Project of the WPA ( Works Progress Administration) during the ...
See also:Quarry Hill Creative Center, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Creation of Quarry Hill, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Expansion |  | | Quarry Hill Creative Center, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Creation of Quarry Hill, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Expansion, Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history |  | |
|  |  | Quarry Hill Creative Center: Encyclopedia II - Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history
Quarry Hill Creative Center - Personal history
On April 10, 1946, Irving Fiske, (born Irving Fishman in Brooklyn, New York, on March 5, 1908), a playwright, inventor, freelance writer, and speaker, and his wife, Barbara Hall Fiske, (born Isabelle Daniel Hall in Tucson, Arizona on September 9, 1919), an artist, bought 140 acres (0.6 km²) of mountain, meadow, and brook land in Rochester, Vermont. They had been married on January 8, 1946.
Irving, a 1928 graduate of Cornell University, had worked for the Federal Writer's Project of the WPA ( Works Progress Administration) during the 1930s, had written for H. L. Mencken's American Mercury [vol. 48 (December 1939), pp. 403-7], [2] had corresponded with George Bernard Shaw, had written an article praised by critic Colin Wilson, among others, "Bernard Shaw’s Debt to William Blake" [3], and had translated Shakespeare's Hamlet into modern English [4]. This was considered a controversial literary action at the time. John Ciardi, who did not approve, reprinted excerpts in the Saturday Review. Most readers wrote in in favor of the translation. Barbara was one of the few female comic book artists in the United States during the World War II era. [5] She drew "Girl Commandoes" and other strips for Harvey Comics, signing herself B. Hall because female cartoonists were not held in high esteem. [6]
Other related archives10, 1908, 1917, 1919, 1928, 1946, 1950, 1954, 1976, 1990, 2005, American Mercury, April, April 25, Arizona, Art Spiegelman, August 12, Brooklyn, Christianity, Cornell University, England, February 4, Florida, George Bernard Shaw, Goddard College, H. L. Mencken, Hamlet, Hinduism, Irving Fiske, January 8, Judaism, June 14, Kim Deitch, March 5, Maus, New York, Plainfield, R. Crumb, Rochester, Saturday Review, September 9, Seventies, Shakespeare, Sixties, Spain Rodriguez, Sufism, Summerhill School, Tantra, Trina Robbins, Tucson, United States, Vermont, Vermont culture, Vietnam War, WPA, World War II, Zen, acres, atheism, cartoonists, corporal punishment, spanking
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Personal history", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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