User:Mpc0017/Lee Walp

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Lee Walp

Lee Walp ...

Biography[edit]

Russell Lee Walp, known to friends and family as Lee Walp, was born October 23, 1906, in Youngstown, Pennsylvania.(1) His parents, Lee Henry Walp and Mary Solomon were from families that immigrated to the United States from the country around Birmingham, England, in order to work in the steel industry in Youngstown, Pennsylvania.(2)[1]

Mr.Walp studied botany at the University of Michigan, receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in 1930, followed by a Master of Science degree in June, 1931. In 1998, he was presented with a certificate of appreciation from Michigan's School of Natural Resources and Environment for his outstanding contributions to his field. In 1935, Mr. Walp married Esther "Sparkie" (Spargo). She was born March 20, 1906, in Quincy, Massachusetts.(3) As a youth, she was involved in many athletics, excelling at basketball, track and field, and swimming and became the national javelin champion in 1924.(4) Mrs. Walp received her undergraduate degree in English from Boston College, and a graduate degree in physical education from Wellesley College.(5)[1]

The Walps had two daughters, Esther Lee and Mary. Esther Lee worked in the Children's Department of Houghton Mifflin, and later became a children's librarian, while Mary chose the teaching profession. Esther Lee was the more active of the two daughters in helping her parents, especially her father, to build the collection.[1]

Both Walps were on the faculty at Marietta College (Marietta, Ohio), Mr. Walp as a professor of botany, beginning in 1931, and Mrs. Walp as a teacher of physical education. She retired early to stay home and take care of her daughters.(6) Mr. Walp was the longest serving professor at the school, retiring in 1975 after 44 years.(7) His entire career was spent at Marietta College, the only break being when he received a Ford Foundation grant to pursue additional graduate studies at Stanford from 1950-1951.(8) As a professor, he taught advanced botany, microbiology, plants and world affairs, ecology, conservation, evening adult courses in science (BSCS: Biological Sciences Curriculum Study), and courses in children's literature.(9) He claims to have had the most students of any professor at the College, and many of them maintained contact with him throughout his life.[1]

The Walps were both involved with Sea Pines Camp for Girls, located in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Mrs. Walp began working there as a junior counselor in 1924, and continued working there every summer while she was in school. Mr. Walp became a staff naturalist there in 1935, and the couple were eventually married at the nearby Sea Pines Inn that same year. They ultimately purchased the camp and returned there every summer. The Cape Cod region is home to many of the illustrators and authors with whom they established friendships.[1]

Lee and Sparkie Walp began collecting children's books in the 1940's, in order to provide good reading material for their two girls, combatting the "menace" of comic books.(10) Mr. Walp focused on collecting first editions, had a complete set of Caldecott Medal winners,(11) and sought to collect the best in children's book illustrations. While making the collection available for research, teaching, and exhibits, Mr. Walp wrote many articles on the topic of children's literature and gave numerous talks and lectures.[1]

Esther "Sparkie" Walp passed away on February 6, 1999, after residing in a nursing home in Marietta for five years. Lee Walp continued to be active, and in 2001 he was featured in an issue of Sunrise Traditions, the quarterly newsletter of the Sunrise Assisted Living facility in Virginia where he had made his home the previous year. The article described him as active in events, taking up painting, full of stories, and still spending part of the summer at Cape Cod.(12) Mr. Walp passed away January 27, 2004.[1]

Endnotes:[1]

1. Bemelmans' article, "About the Author" Illustrators and Authors-Bemelmans, Ludwig- Walp's Bio-bibliographical Research[1]

2. "Russell Lee Walp" Personal-Family-Walp's Writings on his life[1]

3. "Russell Lee Walp" Personal-Family-Walp's Writings on his life[1]

4. "Scrapbook," Personal-family-Esther Spargo Walp[1]

5. "Russell Lee Walp" Personal-Family-Walp's Writings on his life[1]

6. "Thirty Years and Three Thousand Picture Books Later," OLA Bulletin, 1975[1]

7. Marietta College website, http://www.marietta.edu/~biol/treetour[1]

8. Bemelmans' article, "About the Author" Illustrators and Authors-Bemelmans, Ludwig- Walp's Bio-bibliographical Research[1]

9. "Biography Notes" Personal-Family-Walp's Writings on his life[1]

10. Mid-Ohio Exhibit of Children's Books Catalog, 1975[1]

11. Bemelmans' article, "About the Author" Illustrators and Authors-Bemelmans, Ludwig- Walp's Bio-bibliographical Research[1]

12. Sunrise Traditions, a quarterly newsletter of Sunrise Assisted Living, Fall 2001[1]

Works or publications[edit]

  • Young, Dave; Walp, Lee, Ecology Strip Mine Field Trip, Wooster, Ohio?: [Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center], OCLC 33266805 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |separator= ignored (help)
  • Anderson, Lonzo, 1905-; Scribner, Charles, Jr., 1921-1995; Walp, Lee (1975), Night of the Silent Drums : [a Narrative of Slave Rebellion in the Virgin Islands], New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, OCLC 862100915 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |separator= ignored (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Lee Walp (1975), "The Best American Picture Books of the Twentieth Century : an Annotated Bibliography", Ohio Library Association bulletin, Columbus, Ohio: OLA Bulletin, OCLC 10164130 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |separator= ignored (help)

See also[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Collection processed and finding aid created by Adriane Hanson. "[umich-scl-walp Finding Aid for Lee Walp Family Juvenile Book Collection, 1891-2002]". Prepared for the University of Miami Libraries, Coral Gables, FL. Retrieved November 12, 2015. This article incorporates text from this source, which has been released under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 and GNU Free Documentation license.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]