View XML QR Code

Doris Burn Artwork and Manuscripts, approximately 1950-2012

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Burn, Doris
Title
Doris Burn Artwork and Manuscripts
Dates
approximately 1950-2012 (inclusive)
1955-1974 (bulk)
Quantity
9.0 linear feet
Collection Number
XOE_CPNWS0343
Summary
This collection documents the work of children's author and illustrator Doris Burn (1923-2011), author of titles including the award-winning Andrew Henry's Meadow (1965), and a long-time resident of the San Juan Islands of Washington State. The collection contains a rich body of original artwork by Doris Burn, as well as published works and draft or unpublished manuscripts.
Repository
Western Washington University, Center for Pacific Northwest Studies
Goltz-Murray Archives Building
808 25th St.
Bellingham, WA
98225
Telephone: (360) 650-7534
cpnws@wwu.edu
Access Restrictions

The collection is open to the public for research (reproduction and publication restrictions apply).

Languages
English
Return to Top

Biographical Note

Doris (Wernstedt) Burn was a United States children's author and illustrator, and long-time resident of the San Juan islands of Washington State. She was born in Portland in 1923 to parents Lage and Adele (Dotty) Wernstedt - Lage was a noted surveyer, cartographer and photographer for the U.S. Forest Service, whose work included surveys of the Cascade ranges and Pasayten Wilderness.

Doris Wernstedt attended Grant High School in Portland, and later the Universities of Washington, Oregon State and Hawaii. Her later artist and author statements frequently reference her childhood dream to live on an island: the Wernstedts purchased land on Waldron island in 1934, where they built a summer cabin, and forged close friendships with island residents including the writer June Burn and her family. Doris Wernstedt married South (Robin) Burn - the younger son of June and Farrar - at the end of World War II. Following completion of her studies, they settled at Fishery Point on Waldron island. Doris and South Burn had four children together (Mark, Robin Skye, Cameron and Lisa). The couple separated in 1955, though would remain close friends.

Burn held a life-long dream of becoming a children's book illustrator and author. In 1956, shortly following the birth of her youngest child, she travelled to New York City with a portfolio of drawings to show to publishers. The response that Burn received encouraged her to continue writing and drawings on her return to Waldron island. Her children recall her working late into the night by kerosene lamp (Waldron island had no electricity) after they had gone to bed.

Burn's first published work, Andrew Henry's Meadow, was issued by Coward-McCann in 1965, and won the Washington Governor’s Art Award in 1966. During the 1960s and 1970s, Doris Burn authored or illustrated a total of eleven published works. She later moved to Oakland, California, before returning to reside in Washington (State) - first to care for her elderly mother on Guemes Island, and finally in Bellingham. By the time of her death in 2011, Doris Burn’s best-known work, Andrew Henry's Meadow, had been republished by San Juan Publishing Company (2005), and her books and illustrations have continued to gain recognition as children’s classics. Philomel Books (a division of Penguin’s Young Readers Group) republished Andrew Henry's Meadow in Legacy Edition in 2012. This work has now been issued in Danish, Japanese and Korean language versions, and other titles illustrated by Burn also translated for overseas publication.

Return to Top

Content Description

The collection documents the work of children's author and illustrator Doris Burn, long-time resident of the San Juan islands of Washington State. A gift of the Burn family and Doris Burn Legacy LLC, the collection contains first edition copies of works written or illustrated by Burn (as well as reissued or translated editions), draft and unpublished manuscripts and original artwork. The collection includes page illustrations for Burn's published works including Andrew Henry's Meadow, The Summerfolk, My Old Tree and We Were Tired of Living in a House, as well as jacket separations for select works. Unpublished materials include the portfolio that Burn took to publishers in New York City in 1956 (as she began in earnest to pursue her career as an illustrator), sketchbooks, a manuscript for "Scarpo", and illustrations and text for "The Horrible Haircut". This is a rich body of work created by and documenting the creative process of an artist and writer who sought specifically to engage with the needs, interests, and creativity of a younger audience.

Return to Top

Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Use

This collection is subject to use and publication restrictions: please contact the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Libraries Archives & Special Collections for more information. Copyright for this collection remains with the Donor, and all requests to duplicate, publish or publically display collection materials will be referred by the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies to the Donor or Donor's agent. Agreements regarding royalties and/or revenues resulting from commercial reprinting of the Property will be negotiated between the Donor and requesting parties.

Preferred Citation

Doris Burn Artwork and Manuscripts, Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Libraries Archives & Special Collections, Western Washington University, Bellingham WA 98225-9123.

Return to Top

Administrative Information

Arrangement

This collection is organized in accordance with the following series arrangement: Series I. Published Works; Series II. Manuscripts; Series III. Drawings/Illustrations

Separated Materials

A collection of Doris Burn family papers is also archived at the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies at Western Washington University. Please contact the repository for more information.

Related Materials

Related collections at the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies include the South Burn Papers, the June and Farrar Burn Papers, and the Lage Wernstedt Photographs.

Processing Note

About Harmful Language and Content

To learn more about problematic content in our collections, collection description and teaching tools (including how to provide feedback or request dialogue on this topic), see the following Statement About Potentially Harmful Language and Content

Custodial History

The collection was donated to the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies in 2015 as a gift of the Burn Family, via the Doris Burn Legacy, LLC.

Return to Top

Detailed Description of the Collection

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Children's literature--20th century--History--Sources
  • Women Artists--Northwest, Pacific
  • Women Artists--Washington (State)
  • Women authors, American--Washington (State)--History--Sources

Personal Names

  • Burn, Doris--Archives
Loading...
Loading...