TitleThomas Sturge Moore Papers
Reference codeMS978
Date1816-1989
Creator
- Moore, Thomas Sturge (1870-1944) writer, designer and wood engraverMore Info on CreatorLess Info on Creator
Thomas Sturge Moore (1870–1944), writer and artist, was born in Hastings on 4 March 1870, the eldest of four sons (one of whom was the philosopher G. E. Moore) and four daughters. The family moved to Norwood in 1871 and he attended Dulwich College from 1879 to 1884. In 1885 he enrolled in Croydon Art School where he met Charles Shannon and two years later transferred to Lambeth Art School where he met Charles Ricketts, both of whom became lifelong friends. In 1895 Moore's parents moved to Torquay, but he remained in London, living mainly off an annuity from an uncle. In 1893 he had privately published "Two Poems", and in 1899 issued "The Vinedresser and Other Poems", which impressed Laurence Binyon. Binyon introduced him to W. B. Yeats in 1899 and another lifelong friendship was established. In 1885 Moore began regular visits to his French relatives and fell in love with his cousin Marie Appia, daughter of George Appia, a Lutheran minister. Moore declared his feelings in June 1897, but was rejected; he persisted and the two finally married in 1903. Their son Daniel was born in 1905, and their daughter Henriette (Riette) in 1907. Moore's developing interest in drama led to his association with a number of societies, notably the Literary Theatre Club, which he helped found in 1901 with Florence Farr and Charles Ricketts. He joined the Stage Society in 1908, shortly after appearing in its production of The Persians, and in 1912 was appointed to its council. Moore designed and illustrated books throughout his life (notably his own works and those of Yeats), and in May 1904 he was elected a member of the Society of Twelve, a group of wood-engravers and lithographers. He published books on Altdorfer (1900), Dürer (1905), and Correggio (1906), and in 1910 formulated his aesthetic ideas in "Art and Life". His story "A Platonic Marriage" was attacked by the Vigilance Society upon its publication in the English Review in January 1911, but later that year he was elected to the Royal Society of Literature. In the following year he joined Harold Monro's Poetry Bookshop. At this time he also helped translate works by Rabindranath Tagore, then becoming popular in England. In 1919 Moore moved his family from Hampstead, London, where they had lived since 1912, to Steep in Hampshire, where his children attended the progressive Bedales School and where he gave classes in aesthetics. The family returned to Hampstead in 1927, where he began to keep open house on Friday evenings. His poems were gathered into "The Collected Poems of T. Sturge Moore", issued in four volumes from 1931 to 1933, and his "Selected Poems" appeared in 1934. He underwent a Steinach rejuvenating operation in 1936, and at the outbreak of the Second World War moved to Dorking. He suffered from chronic ill health from 1942 and died in Windsor 18 July 1944 following an operation.
- Moore, Henriette (Riette) Helene Rebecca Sturge (1907-1995) theatre designer and teacherMore Info on CreatorLess Info on Creator
Riette Sturge Moore was the daughter of Thomas Sturge Moore and his wife, Marie Appia. She trained as an interior decorator but, by the 1930s, had begun to work as a theatre designer. She designed sets for productions at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon such as Marlowe's Dr Faustus in 1946 and Twelth Night in 1947. She taught design at Dartington, Corsham and the Old Viv and combined this with continued work as a theatre designer. She was responsible, for instance, for the costumes in the celebrated production of Corialanus in 1959.
Scope and ContentThe material comprises correspondence between Thomas Sturge Moore (TSM) and various members of the Moore, Sturge and Appia families, friends, literary colleagues, including R.C Trevelyan, A.H Fisher, W.B Yeats, Robert Ross, Wyndham Lewis, George Bernard Shaw and Charles Ricketts, publishers and various others; diaries, notebooks and journals; drafts, proofs and published copies of his poems, articles, speeches and lectures; sketches and designs for costumes, book covers and bookplates for both his own work and that of others, most notably W.B Yeats; personal and family papers and photographs. Also included are copies of correspondence between the artist Charles Ricketts and friends, colleagues and various others; copies of his journals and diaries; material relating to his work and art collection; draft notes for a biography of Ricketts by Ursula Bridge and personal papers of the artist Charles Shannon.
Conditions governing accessOpen, but access to some archive collections may be restricted under the Freedom of Information Act or the Data Protection Act and some files may be closed. Please contact Special Collections for details. 24 hours notice is required for research visits.
Extent79 boxes, 2 outsize boxes and 1 roll
System of ArrangementThe collection is arranged into the following series:MS978/1 Correspondence.MS978/2 Written Work.MS978/3 Art Work.MS978/4 Notebooks, Diaries and Loose Notes.MS978/5 Personal and Business Papers.MS978/6 Literary Figures and Societies.MS978/7 Charles Ricketts and Charles Shannon.
Finding aidsCatalogued online (click on the "contains" icon below) and a handlist is held in the Special Collections reading room. A pdf version of the handlist is attached to this description.
Senate House Library holds other Sturge Moore papers and Sturge Moore family papers (MS1159, MS1223) as well as Owen Lewis's reminiscences of Sturge Moore (MS946) . The British Library holds correspondence with Sir Sydney Carlyle Cockerell, 1915-1941, (Ref: Add MS 52737); letters to Katherine Harris Bradley, under her pseudonym of Michael Field, 1901-1911, (Ref: Add MS 45856); correspondence with Macmillans, 1904-1943, (Ref: Add MS55000); correspondence with Shri Purohita Svami, 1931-1932, (Ref: Add MS 45732); correspondence with Charles Ricketts and Charles Shannon, 1899-1930, (Ref: Add MS 45732) and correspondence with the Society of Authors, 1926-1940, (Ref: Add MSS 63306). Reading University Library has correspondence, mainly with John Gawsworth, 1937-1944, (Ref: MS 165). Cambridge University Library contains letters to George Edward Moore, 1892-1940, (Ref: Add 8330) and Trinity College Library, Cambridge, holds letters to R.C Trevelyan, 1899-1939. The Royal Society of Literature holds letters from Sturge Moore to the Society, 1911-1942.
Level of descriptionfonds