Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Ellen Trueblood Papers, 1925-1994
Overview of the Collection
- Title
- Ellen Trueblood Papers
- Dates
- 1925-1994 (inclusive)19251994
- Quantity
- 10.25 linear feet, (15 boxes, 1 hanging folder)
- Collection Number
- MSS 094
- Summary
- Correspondence, biographical information, newspaper articles, mycological writings, field notebooks, research notes, subject files, clippings, photos, and other papers, documenting Trueblood's newspaper career in Idaho (1930s-1940s), her mycological studies (1950s-1980s), and the work and career of her husband, outdoor writer and conservationist Ted Trueblood.
- Repository
-
Boise State University Library, Special Collections and Archives
Special Collections and Archives
1910 University Drive
Boise ID
83725
Telephone: 2084263990
archives@boisestate.edu - Access Restrictions
-
Collection is available for research.
- Languages
- English
- Sponsor
- Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Ellen Trueblood (1911-1994) was a journalist, mycologist, environmentalist, and wife of outdoors writer Ted Trueblood. Her papers document her career as a writer and reporter, her love of the outdoors, contributions to mycology (particularly the collection and identification of Idaho mushrooms), and her environmental activism.
Ellen Rose Trueblood was born in Boise, Idaho, on August 1, 1911, to Carl Cyrus Hinkson and Rosella Blunk Hinkson. She attended Cole School, then on the outskirts of the city of Boise, and graduated from Boise High School in 1929. While at Boise High, she worked on the staff of the student newspaper, "The Pepper Box." During the summer following her graduation from high school, she married R. Lynn Michaelson, whose father was one of the owners of the Caldwell, Idaho, News Tribune. Ellen went to work as a reporter for the News Tribune, launching a career in journalism as well as starting a family. She and Lynn Michaelson became the parents of a daughter, Mary Ellen. Their marriage later ended in divorce.
After breaking in at the News Tribune, Ellen went to work for the Boise Capital News, the evening newspaper in Idaho's capital city. It was in 1936, while working on the staff of the Capital News, that she met Ted Trueblood. Trueblood was also a writer for the paper, and their mutual love of the outdoors was one of the attactions that brought them together. Ted Trueblood soon moved to Salt Lake City, however, to accept a position with a Salt Lake newspaper. By the time he returned to Idaho two years later, Ellen was a reporter and society editor for the Nampa Free Press. The two were married on July 6, 1939, at Cascade, Idaho, and embarked on a four month-long camping and fishing honeymoon in the central Idaho wilderness. Ellen chronicled their experiences in the wilds in reports sent back and published in the Free Press.
When Ted accepted a job with Field and Stream magazine in 1941, the Truebloods moved to White Plains, New York. There Ellen tried her hand at freelance writing. One of her articles, a feature story on Idaho, was published in the travel section of the Sunday New York Times. The Truebloods' stay in New York was not a long one, however, for Ted lost his job in a staff reorganization only several months after arriving. In the fall of 1941 they moved to Raleigh, North Carolina, where Ted went to work for the Raleigh News and Observer. Ellen wrote feature articles for the newspaper, too. Her hunting prowess was noted in the paper when, in November 1941, she joined her husband and some of his fellow members of the Outdoors Writers Association of America on a deer hunt. Even though it was her first deer hunt with shotgun and buckshot, she was the only member of the party to bag a buck.
The Truebloods lived in North Carolina for less than a year before they returned to Idaho; Ted to write and work on the family farm, and Ellen to work again for the Nampa Free Press. They moved once more to New York in 1944, when Ted again accepted a position with Field and Stream. They returned to Idaho for good in 1947, after Ted convinced the management of the magazine that he could write as well for them from Idaho. Back home in Idaho they became the parents of two sons: Dan, born in 1947 and Jack, in 1949. They bought a house on 8th Avenue South, in Nampa, which would be their home for more than thirty years.
Ellen Trueblood's interest in mushrooms dates from camping trips she took with her husband and sons in the early 1950s. She learned to identify and cook edible mushrooms on their visits into the back country; this experience led to more formal study at the College of Idaho and eventually to communication with Professor Alexander H. Smith at the University of Michigan, once of the foremost mycologists in the United States. He assisted her in identifying southern Idaho mushrooms; she in turn began supplying mushrooms and other fungi to the University of Michigan Herbarium.
In time Ellen Trueblood became an authority on Owyhee region mushrooms. Her fieldwork included grant-funded surveys of the Owyhee region, and she contributed articles to both amateur and professional journals. One article, "Notes on Fungi of the Owyhee Region," summarizing two decades of her work, was published in 1975 in Studies on Higher Fungi, a festschrift in honor of Alexander H. Smith. Ellen Trueblood identified more than twenty undiscovered species of fungi and assembled more than 6500 mushroom collections. Two species, Hygrophorus ellenae and Rhizopogon ellenae, were named in her honor; a third, Leccinum truebloodii, discovered by her husband Ted, was named for him. Ted and her children often accompanied her on her mushroom hunting expeditions, as did her grandchildren in later years. In the 1970s she also cultivated fungi for Smith Kline & French Laboratories in Philadelphia, who were searching for potential sources of chemotherapeutic agents.
Following Ted Trueblood's death in 1982, Ellen continued to speak out on many of the environmental issues he espoused, particularly wilderness designation. With her son Jack, she arranged the republication of a number of his articles. In 1989 she moved to Seattle, where her daughter Mary Ellen and son Dan lived. Ellen Trueblood died in Seattle, Washington, on May 17, 1994. Her remaining mushroom collections were donated to the University of Michigan Herbarium, and her books and papers were presented to Boise State University.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The papers of Ellen Trueblood consist mainly of correspondence, articles, clippings, and notes, documenting her career as a writer and reporter, her work collecting, surveying, and identifying mushrooms, and her environmental activism. They span the years 1925 to her death in 1994. Throughout the papers are frequent references to her husband Ted and to activities in the Idaho outdoors. Includes files relating to Trueblood's grant-supported survey of fungi in the Owyhee Mountains region; records of Southern Idaho Mycological Association (1976-1988); and testimony, clippings, and other papers relating to proposed wilderness designation in Idaho (1983-1984). Correspondents include Harold J. Brodie, Orson K. Miller, Kent H. McKnight, and James M. Trappe.
The collection also includes miscellaneous papers from organizations to which Ellen Trueblood belonged.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Preferred Citation
[item description], Ellen Trueblood Papers, Box [number] Folder [number], Boise State University Special Collections and Archives.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
The collection is divided into ten series: 1. Biographical and personal papers; 2. General correspondence; 3. Mycological correspondence; 4. Writings; 5. Grant project files; 6. Organizations; 7. Subject files; 8. Mycology notes; 9. Field notebooks, scrapbook, diary, etc.; and 10. Photos.
Acquisition Information
Gifts of the Trueblood family, 1991-1993.
Related Materials
See also: Ted Trueblood Papers, Jack Trueblood Papers.
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
1: Biographical and personal papersReturn to Top
Several short biographical sketches of Ellen Trueblood (including an obituary) are contained in this series, along with feature newspaper articles from the 1950s and 70s profiling her mycological activities (Folder 1). Also included are some stories about her 1941 North Carolina deer hunt with the Outdoors Writers Association of America (Folder 7) and a short biographical sketch she wrote of Ted Trueblood (Folder 11).
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
1 | 1 | Biographical clippings and notices |
|
1 | 2 | References to Ellen Trueblood |
|
1 | 3 | Honors and awards |
|
1 | 4 | Mushroom species discovered by Ellen Trueblood |
|
1 | 5 | Mushroom species named for the Truebloods |
|
1 | 6 | Schooling |
|
1 | 7 | Deer hunt |
1941 |
1 | 8 | Hinkson family |
|
1 | 9 | Michaelson family |
|
1 | 10 | Reminiscences |
|
1 | 11 | Ted Trueblood biographical sketch, by Ellen Trueblood |
|
1 | 12 | Diary entries/Notes/Logs |
|
1 | 13 | Licenses and cards |
2: General correspondenceReturn to Top
Most of the correspondence in Ellen Trueblood's general correspondence files dates after the death of her husband. Much of it relates to Ted Trueblood's work and writings; some correspondence relates to Ellen's own environmental lobbying. There is little family correspondence; just a few items in Folder 21. Ellen kept up correspondence with Peter Barrett, her husband's friend, even after Ted's death; letters from him are in Folder 22. The letters back and forth between Ellen and Earl Swanson of Idaho State College, Pocatello, concern Indian rock art and a rock shelter in Owyhee County, Idaho.
There are two correspondence files from the 1940s, a general file (Folder 14) and a file of correspondence with Bernard Mainwaring, publisher of the Idaho Free Press in Nampa (Folder 24). A number of letters in the general file pertain to articles Ellen wrote for the New York Times and This Week magazine. Her New York Times article is found in Series 4, Writings (Box 3, Folder 5) and the magazine article in Box 3, Folder 1.
Both files from the 1940s contain letters illustrating the opportunities that opened up for women in the newspaper field when men went to war. In February 1942, before Ted and Ellen decided to return to Idaho, she applied to be editor of a local newspaper in Windsor, North Carolina. The publisher wrote her back: "Heretofore we have always had a man in this place. Conditions brought about by war and other matters beyond our control have cause[d] this post to be open. We are willing to give a capable, hardworking, hard-headed woman a shot at it--for the duration, at least." He invited her to an interview. In the meantime, however, she decided that Windsor was too far from Raleigh, where they lived. "I am sorry I will have to pass up the opportunity of proving to you that a woman can do the job," Ellen wrote in reply. "I hope you find a good, capable, person for the work." (Box 1, Folder 14)
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
1 | 14 | General Correspondence |
1940-1944 |
1 | 15-19 | General Correspondence |
1982-1988 |
1 | 20 | Address lists |
|
1 | 21 | Her children |
|
1 | 22 | Barrett, Peter |
1982-1987 |
1 | 23 | Holland, Ray P. |
1961 |
1 | 24 | Mainwaring, Bernard / Idaho Free Press |
1941-1942 |
1 | 25 | Martuch, Leon P. and Martuch, Leon L. |
1962-1986 |
1 | 26 | Swanson, Earl |
1960-1963 |
3: Mycological correspondenceReturn to Top
Ellen Trueblood began studying mushrooms in earnest in the 1950s. Her files of mycological-related correspondence reflects her work as a surveyor, collector, cultivator, and photographer of mushrooms and fungi. She corresponded with both professional mycologists and amateurs, and she supplied specimens, slides, and photographs to researchers and publishers.
An exchange of letters in 1976 between Ellen Trueblood and James M. Trappe, principal mycologist for the U.S. Forestry Sciences Laboratory at Corvallis, Oregon, is illustrative of her work. Ellen sent him some specimens of Sarcopshaera she had found growing near artemisia and other shrubs in the desert in eastern Oregon. That species was commonly associated with conifers, so she asked if he had heard other reports of association with the shrubs. "Your collections of Sarcosphaera from desert habitats astound me," Trappe wrote back, "because I, too, had regarded it as a conifer associate. In fact, it seemed so tied to conifers, especially pines, that I presumed it to be an obligate mycorrhizal fungus." He wondered if pines might not be growing nearby, for ponderosa pine roots can extend several hundred feet away from the trunk. Ellen wrote back assuring him the nearest pines were thirty miles away. Trappe speculated that the Sarcosphaera was either not a mycorrhizal fungus after all, or a mycorrhizal that could be associated with shrubs as well as conifers (Box 2, Folder 14).
The files of correspondence with Smith Kline & French Laboratories relate to Ellen Trueblood's cultivation of fungi for them in search of chemotherapeutic agents (Box 12, Folders 12 and 13). The files contain correspondence with others relating to that work as well as correspondence with the company itself. "We have had some exciting times and anxious moments during the last month while learning to manipulate and grow the first group of basidiomycete cultures which you sent us," wrote one of the laboratory microbiologists in May of 1973 (Box 2, Folder 13). "Currently, all are growing reasonably well and, within the next week, we hope to begin our first experiments on permanently preserving them by controlled rate freezing in liquid nitrogen."
Other correspondence relating to mushrooms and mycology is located in Series 5 (Grant project files), Series 6 (Organizations), and Series 8 (Mycology notes). There is no file of correspondence in this series with Alexander H. Smith, who encouraged Ellen Trueblood's early studies, although there is a file of letters exchanged with his wife Helen and their daughter Nancy Weber, also mycologists (Box 2, Folder 11).
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
1 | 27-36 | Mycological Correspondence |
1955-1988 |
2 | 1 | Ammirati, Joseph F. (USDA/University of Washington) |
1971-1986 |
2 | 2 | Bailey, Marie |
1978-1987 |
2 | 3 | Bailie, Arthur S. |
1972-1976 |
2 | 4 | Brodie, Harold J. (University of Victoria) |
1967-1978 |
2 | 5 | Lincoff, Gary (New York Botanical Garden) |
1980-1981 |
2 | 6 | McAllister, Ruby K. |
1980-1984 |
2 | 7 | McKnight, Kent (USDA) |
1970-1985 |
2 | 8 | Miller, Orson K. (Virginia Polytechnic Institute) |
1970-1988 |
2 | 9 | Rogerson, Clark T. (New York Botanical Garden) |
1963-1985 |
2 | 10 | San Antonio, James P. (USDA) |
1977-1980 |
2 | 11 | Smith, Helen, and Weber, Nancy |
1971-1988 |
2 | 12-13 | Smith Kline & French Laboratories |
1972-1979 |
2 | 14 | Trappe, James M. (USDA) |
1972-1981 |
4: WritingsReturn to Top
This series contains both typescripts and printed versions of articles and feature stories written by Ellen Trueblood. The series includes samples of her early newspaper work (Box 3, Folder 1), her New York Times article (Folder 5), articles from North Carolina (Folders 1, 6, and 7), and scientific articles on fungi that appeared in Mycologia, McIlvainea, Studies on Higher Fungi, and elsewhere. As a reporter for the Nampa, Idaho, Free Press, she covered the arrest and incarceration of Idaho author Vardis Fisher for speeding in Nampa in 1939. That celebrated incident (which Fisher recounted in his own newspaper column in his uniquely acerbic style) is documented in Folder 5.
Clippings of more of Ellen Trueblood's newspaper articles from the 1930s are found in a scrapbook in Series 9 (Box 10). Lengthy diary-like accounts she wrote of camping and hunting trips with her husband Ted are located in the Ted Trueblood papers, Series 6 (Field notebooks and diaries).
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
3 | 1 | Newspaper articles |
1936-1942 |
3 | 2 | Newswire articles |
1939 |
3 | 3 | Newspaper articles |
1950-1965 |
3 | 4 | Vardis Fisher article |
1939 |
3 | 5 | High, Wild, Handsome Idaho (New York Times) |
1941 |
3 | 6 | From More's Creek Bridge to Pearl Harbor (NC) |
1942 |
3 | 7 | This Business of Being Fingerprinted (NC) |
1942 |
3 | 8 | Deer Mice Will Get You |
|
3 | 9 | Ruffed Grouse Neighbor |
|
3 | 10 | "1960" |
|
3 | 11 | Miscellaneous |
|
3 | 12 | Climate of Owyhee County |
|
3 | 13 | Desert Mushrooms |
1968 |
3 | 14 | Ecology of New and Interesting Species of Amanita |
1977 |
3 | 15 | Forays in the Owyhee Desert |
1975 |
3 | 16 | Fungi of Owhyee County |
1972 |
3 | 17 | Gastrocarps from Central Idaho |
|
3 | 18 | Higher Fungi of the Owyhee Mountains |
|
3 | 19 | Idaho Mushrooms Attract Amateurs and Pros |
|
3 | 20 | [Mushroom Collecting] |
|
3 | 21 | Mushroom Collecting on the Owyhee Desert, 1962 |
1962 |
3 | 22 | [Mushrooms] |
1958 |
3 | 23 | Notes on Fungi of the Owyhee Region |
1975 |
3 | 24 | Notes on Fungi of the Owyhee Region: Correspondence |
1971-1976 |
3 | 25 | Three New Species of Amanita |
1990 |
5: Grant project filesReturn to Top
In 1969, Ellen Trueblood obtained a grant from the Max C. Fleischmann Foundation of Reno, Nevada, to survey the higher fungi of the Owyhee Mountains. She assembled 1012 collections, representing ninety genera, at least three species new to science, and nine species previously unknown to North America (Box 3, Folder 29, "The Higher Fungi of the Owyhee Mountains..."). She deposited her collections with Dr. Alexander H. Smith at the University of Michigan Herbarium, where they formed the core of the university's collection of fungi from arid regions.
The grant was renewed in 1971, with additional support provided by Alexander H. Smith out of a National Science Foundation grant he received to study Western fungi. In 1972, Dr. Smith's daughter, Dr. Nancy Weber, joined Mrs. Trueblood in Idaho for a month of collecting in the Owyhees. They camped out in the mountains, making 812 collections and drying their fungi in the field with catalytic heaters (Box 3, Folder 31).
This short series contains reports, correspondence, and grant applications by Mrs. Trueblood. Two letters from Alexander H. Smith, relating chiefly to funding, are found in Folder 30.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
3 | 26-33 | Grant projects |
1968-1976 |
3 | 34 | Grant projects: Desert Biome |
1971 |
6: OrganizationsReturn to Top
These files contain correspondence, reports, newsletters, clippings, and other papers, from organizations with which Ellen Trueblood was associated, as well as letters by Mrs. Trueblood documenting her work with them.
Ellen Trueblood was one of the founders of the Southern Idaho Mycological Association. The files relating to that organization document its founding in 1976 and its first twelve years of activity. Its first major undertaking came in September of 1976, when it hosted the annual foray of the North American Mycological Association in Valley County, Idaho.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
4 | 1 | Boise Valley Natural History Society |
1966 |
4 | 2 | College of Idaho, Museum of Natural History |
|
4 | 3 | Idaho Academy of Science |
1962-1967 |
4 | 4 | Idaho Conservation League |
1985-1986 |
4 | 5 | Idaho Natural Resources Legal Foundation |
1984-1987 |
4 | 6 | Idaho Sportsmen's Coalition |
1985 |
4 | 7-10 | North American Mycological Association |
1963-1989 |
4 | 11-16 | Southern Idaho Mycological Association |
1976-1988 |
13 | Puget Sound Mycological Society |
1969-1985 |
7: Subject filesReturn to Top
Ellen Trueblood's subject files contain notes and mimeographed information sheets on a variety of nature-related topics, including several southwestern Idaho bird censuses from 1976 (Box 5, Folder 1). The last six folders in this series relate to wilderness issues in Idaho in the 1980s. Included are clippings documenting the public debate over U.S. Senator James McClure's 1984 wilderness bill for Idaho, as well as Ellen Trueblood's correspondence in opposition to it. She opposed the bill because she believed it did not designate enough lands for wilderness status. In a letter to the editor published in the Idaho Statesman on June 11, 1984, she called it an "anti-wilderness bill."
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
5 | 1 | Birds in Idaho |
|
5 | 2 | Flora |
|
5 | 3 | Flora: Reynolds Creek, Idaho |
1954 |
5 | 4 | Winter Flora: Snake River, Idaho (by Patricia L. Packard) |
|
5 | 5 | Juniper invasion |
|
5 | 6 | Lichens |
|
5 | 7 | Medicinal herbs |
|
5 | 8 | Owyhee region |
|
5 | 9 | Trees |
|
5 | 10 | Jacks Creek/Jarbridge wilderness |
1984-1986 |
5 | 11-12 | McClure Senate wilderness hearings |
1983 |
5 | 13-14 | McClure wilderness bill |
1984 |
5 | 15 | Wilderness and forests |
8: Mycology notesReturn to Top
This series consists largely of notes, articles, and trial field keys for and about various species and genera of fungi, mostly in the Pacific Northwest . Occasionally Ellen Trueblood placed correspondence in these files as well. At the end of the series (in Box 8) are notes, handouts, and source materials Ellen Trubelood used in teaching her class on "Idaho Mushrooms" at Boise State University in 1975; lists of slides and photos she sent to Alexander H. Smith at the University of Michigan; and other notes about mushrooms and fungi. Most of the materials in this series date from the 1970s and 1980s.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
6 | 1 | Agaricaceae |
|
6 | 2 | Agaricales |
|
6 | 3 | Agarics |
|
6 | 4 | Agaricus |
|
6 | 5 | Agrocybe |
|
6 | 6 | Amanita |
|
6 | 7 | Armillaria and Catathalasma |
|
6 | 8 | Ascomycetes |
|
6 | 9 | Boletaceae |
|
6 | 10 | Boletus and Tylopilus |
|
6 | 11 | Calvatia |
|
6 | 12 | Cantharellaceae |
|
6 | 13 | Chroogomphus |
|
6 | 14 | Clavaria |
|
6 | 15 | Calvariadelphus |
|
6 | 16 | Collybia |
|
6 | 17 | Coprinus |
|
6 | 18 | Cortinarius |
|
6 | 19 | Cystoderma |
|
6 | 20 | Discina |
|
6 | 21 | Discomycetes |
|
6 | 22 | Fischerula |
|
6 | 23 | Fomes Idahoensis (Fossil) |
|
6 | 24 | Gastroboletus |
|
6 | 25 | Gomphidiaceae |
|
6 | 26 | Comphidius |
|
7 | 1 | Gyromitra |
|
7 | 2 | Hevellaceae |
|
7 | 3 | Hydnaceae |
|
7 | 4 | Hydnum |
|
7 | 5 | Hygrophorus |
|
7 | 6 | Hymenomycetes |
|
7 | 7 | Inocybe |
|
7 | 8 | Lactarius |
|
7 | 9 | Lecinum |
|
7 | 10 | Lentinus and Lentinellus |
|
7 | 11 | Lepiotaceae |
|
7 | 12 | Lepista |
|
7 | 13 | Leucopaxillus |
|
7 | 14 | Limacella |
|
7 | 15 | Lycoperdales |
|
7 | 16 | Lyophyllum |
|
7 | 17 | Mycena |
|
7 | 18 | Naemalotoma |
|
7 | 19 | Neournula (Discomycete) |
|
7 | 20 | Nidulariales |
|
7 | 21 | Nidularaceae |
|
7 | 22 | Omphalotus |
|
7 | 23 | Panaeolus |
|
7 | 24 | Peziales |
|
7 | 25 | Phaeocollybia |
|
7 | 26 | Pholiota |
|
7 | 27 | Pleurotus |
|
7 | 28 | Pluteus |
|
7 | 29 | Polypores |
|
7 | 30 | Ramaria |
|
7 | 31 | Russula |
|
7 | 32 | Sarcosomataceae |
|
7 | 33 | Secotiaceae |
|
7 | 34 | Siullus and Fuscobotetinus |
|
7 | 35 | Thelephoraceae |
|
7 | 36 | Tremellalles |
|
7 | 37 | Tricholoma |
|
7 | 38 | Tricholomopsis |
|
7 | 39 | Tulostoma |
|
7 | 40 | Xeromphalina |
|
7 | 41 | Development of Classification of the Macrobasidomycetes |
|
8 | 1 | Boise State University course: Idaho Mushrooms |
1975 |
8 | 2 | Fungi cultures: Notes and correspondence |
1972-1979 |
8 | 3 | Fungi slides and photographs: Lists |
1963-1978 |
8 | 4 | Fungi slides and photographs: Index cards |
|
8 | 5-6 | Fungi note cards: Samples |
|
8 | 7 | Master list of Pacific Northwest fungi |
|
8 | 8 | Mushroom identification |
|
8 | 9 | Mushroom notes |
|
8 | 10 | Mushroom poisoning |
|
8 | 11 | Mushroom recipes |
|
oversize_drawers | drawer | ||
9034 | 1 | Simplified Picture Key to 50 Genera of Gilled Mushrooms |
1972 |
9: Field notebooks, scrapbook, diary, etc.Return to Top
The ten notebooks in this series (Box 9) contain notes from trips and mushroom-hunting expeditions, as well as other notes. There are diary-like entries in Notebook 1 chronicling a camping and fishing trip Ellen and Ted Trueblood took in June 1959. Among the notations was one recording the discovery of a "little scorpion in [the] paper bag lunch had been in and another about 7" long under bag of potatoes" (June 5). The next day she recorded "We had blue grouse cooked in [the] Dutch oven, mashed potatoes & gravy, tossed salad & stewed tomatoes for dinner!" Their sons did not accompany them on this trip, so "Ted and I went swimming in our bay tonight" (June 11). Other writings by Ellen about their camping trips (including an account of their unusual honeymoon) are found in the Ted Trueblood papers, Series 6 (Field Notebooks and Diaries).
The scrapbook in Box 10 contains clippings of articles Ellen wrote for the Caldwell News Tribune, the Nampa Free Press, and Boise Capital News in the 1930s.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | |||
9 | Field notebooks |
||
10 | Diary |
1968 | |
10 | Scrapbook of newspaper articles |
1930s | |
11 | Financial account book |
1976-1988 | |
15 | Plant Press |
||
Folder | |||
8 | 12 | Pamphlet: "The Truth About Mushrooms" |
1913 |
8 | 13 | Pamphlet: "Money in Mushrooms" |
1910 |
10: PhotographsReturn to Top
The photos in this series are primarily color snapshots taken between 1975 and 1990. Included is a small album of snapshots taken at Ted Trueblood Night in Nampa, Idaho, in 1978, along with four 5"x7" photos taken at the same event (Envelope 16). Also included in this series is a photo of the mushroom Hygrophorous ellenae, a species named after Ellen Trueblood (Envelope 6).
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
12 | 1 | Ted Trueblood camping |
1975 |
12 | 2 | Idaho Wildlife Federation awards banquet |
1983 |
12 | 3 | SIMA Spring foray |
1983 |
12 | 4-5 | SIMA Fall foray |
1983 |
12 | 6 | SIMA June foray |
1984 |
12 | 7 | SIMA Fall foray |
1984 |
12 | 8 | SIMA award |
1984 |
12 | 9 | Mushrooms at Cascade, Idaho |
1986 |
12 | 10 | Dan Trueblood, James Hobbs |
|
12 | 11 | Mary Ellen (daughter) and family |
|
12 | 12 | Amy and Becky Johnson |
|
12 | 13 | Alexander and Helen Smith (mycologists) |
1984 |
12 | 14 | At the Trueblood home, Nampa, Idaho |
|
12 | 15 | Mushroom |
|
12 | 16 | Ted Trueblood night, Nampa, Idaho |
1978 |
12 | 17 | Take Pride in Idaho awards ceremony (4 slides) |
1990 |
12 | Ted Trueblood Night, Nampa, Idaho |
1978 | |
14 | View-Master and reels of "Mushrooms in their Natural Habitats" |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
Personal Names
- Brodie, Harold J. (Harold Johnston), 1907-
- McKnight, Kent H.
- Miller, Orson K.
- Trappe, James M.
- Trueblood, Ted, 1913-1982