Catherine Drinker Bowen

  • ...We've Never Asked a Woman Before

  • Journey Through the American States

    Mrs. Bowen’s latest book, MIRACLE AT PHILADELPHIA,is the story of the Federal Convent ion of 17S7, which wrolc the United States Constitution. From the book we have drawn two chapters, in themselves a diversion from the narrative. Mrs. Bowen takes her readers out of the convention for a journey through the States– to give a glimpse, she says, of the country for which the Fathers were with much difficulty contriving a Constitution.

  • The Search for Francis Bacon

    Of all the famous men she has written about in her biographies, Mr. Justice Holmes, Tchaikovsky, young John Adams, Sir Edward Coke, and Francis Bacon, Catherine Drinker Bowen believes that Bacon was the most companionable, the one she would most have enjoyed spending an afternoon with. Here is why she thinks so.

  • The Nature of the Artist

    CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN was a musician before she became a biographer, and her violin is as dear to her as any of her books. Among her early books are BELOVED FRIEND: THE STORY OF TCHAIKOWSKY AND NADEJDA VON MECK,and her biography of the brothers Rubinstein, FREE ARTIST,both of which have just been reprinted: then she turned her attention to three great lawyers, Justice Holmes, young John Adams, and Sir Edward Coke, Queen Elizabeth’s great advocate. Mrs. Bowen is note in England in search of source material about Francis Bacon.

  • The Lawyers Talk History

    Abiographer who has brought lucidity and insight to her biographies of three great lawyers,Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Adams,and the Queen’s Advocate, Sir Edward Coke, CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN is here concerned with the courage which is occasionally called out of young lawyers and of the permanent record which that courage may leave in the long run of history,

  • Bernard De Voto: Historian, Critic, and Fighter

    A historian of first rank, a defender of our national parks,and a spokesman from the southwest, Bernard De Voto was one of the most pungent critics this country has known, and few knew him better than CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN. De Vota’s manuscripts and correspondence have recently been acquired by Leland Stanford University, and on this occasion she was asked to make this estimate of De Voto as a historian.

  • Harold Ober, Literary Agent

    The duties and helpfulness of literary agents are often unappreciated by those outside the writing profession. CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN,versatile and eloquent biographer, tells of her warm and inspiring association with the late Harold Ober, one of the greatest literary agents.

  • My Friends, the Librarians

    In the course of doing research for her various biographies, CATHERINE DKINKER BOWEN of Philadelphia has read in libraries as far West from her home as California and as far East as Leningrad. Over the years she has kept working notes on the libraries and librarians whom she has known, and the paper which has emerged from this source we think happily appropriate for the celebration of National Library Week, March 16-22.

  • Discipline and Reward: A Writer’s Life

    CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has been writing for close to four decades. She began with essays about music and musicians, and these formed her first book, FRIENDS AND FIDDLERS. Music led her on into biography, and with the publication of YANKEE FROM OLYMPUS she achieved national recognition. She speaks from experience in this paper, which was prepared for the Bread Loaf Writers Conference.

  • The Lion and the Throne: The Law Is the Safest Shield

    Mr. Justice Holmes, John Adams, and Sir Edward Coketo the study of these three giants in lawCATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has devoted no less than fifteen years. The sequence is important, for each of the three built upon the edifice of his predecessor; and for this reason perhaps Sir Edward Coke, who suppressed the conspiracies against Queen Elizabeth and fought for the Commons against James I and Charles I—perhaps he is the mightiest of the trio in that he laid the foundations of our Bill of Rights. The following excerpt, which shows Sir Edwardnow Chief Justice Coke—in his historic role of champion of the common law against King James’s abuse of the royal prerogative, is the third drawn from Mrs. Bowen’s new book, The Lion and the Throne. These excerpts are highlights in a volume which in its entirety runs to 200,000 words.

  • The Lion and the Throne: The Trial of Sir Walter Ralegh

    Mr. Justice Holmes, John Adams, and Sir Edward Coke — to the study of these three giants in law CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has devoted no less than fifteen years. The sequence is important, for each of the three built upon the edifice of his predecessor; and for this reason perhaps Sir Edward Coke, who suppressed the conspiracies against Queen Elizabeth and fought for the Commons against James I and Charles I—perhaps he is the mightiest of the trio in that he laid the foundations of our Bill of Rights. The following excerpt is the second of three, powerful and charged with character, which the Atlantic is drawing from Mrs. Bowen’s forthcoming book, The Lion and the Throne. They are highlights in a volume which in its entirety runs to 200,000 words.

  • The Lion and the Throne: The Queen's Attorney

    Mr. Justice Holmes, John Adams, and Sir Edward Coke — to the study of these three giants in law CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has devoted no less than fifteen years. The sequence is important, for each of the three built upon the edifice of his predecessor; and for this reason perhaps Sir Edward Coke, who suppressed the conspiracies against Queen Elizabeth and fought for the Commons against James I and Charles I — perhaps he is the mightiest of the trio in that he laid the foundations of our Bill of Rights. The following excerpt is the first of three, powerful and charged with character, which the Atlantic will draw from Mrs. Bowen’s forthcoming book, The Lion and the Throne. They are highlights in a volume which in its entirety runs to 200,000 words.

  • By Slow Degrees

    Biographer, musician, and a writing member of the famous Drinker clan of Philadelphia, CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has scored a Progressive success with her interpretive biographies, three of which have been chosen by the Book-of-the-Month Club. She has been increasingly attracted by law and lawyers as part of history, as was evident in her study of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. Yankee from Olympus, and again in its successor, John Adams and the American Revolution. She interrupted her work on her new book, the biography of Sir Edward Coke, the eminent Elizabethan jurist, to deliver this talk before the American Law Institute in Washington.

  • The Business of a Biographer

    Biographer, musician, and a member of the famous Drinker clan of Philadelphia, CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN has scored a progressive success with what Ferris Greenslet calls her “interpretive biographies” — three of which have been chosen by the Book-of-the-Month Club. Beloved Friend (1937) was the well-documented life of Tchaikovsky as disclosed in his letters to his wealthy patroness, Madame von Meck. In Yankee from Olympus (1944), Mrs. Bowen showed us the decisiveness of that great Justice, Oliver Wendell Holmes. The paper that follows is based on a talk she gave on Justice Holmes’s birthday, in which she told of the detail, the detective work, and the discernment which were called for in the preparation of her latest book, John Adams and the American Revolution.

  • Young John Adams: Thirteen Clocks Strike for Independence

    In Yankee from Olympus CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN showed us the decisiveness of that Great Dissenter. Justice Oliver Wendell Ho1mes. For the past five years she has been working on a comparable portrait of Young John Adams, who was brought up to believe in British rights and British freedom and who in his thirties, from 1765 to 1775’ Worked to effect a new freedom on this side of the Atlantic. Those ten years were the most important, the most dynamic, of John Adams’s life. From the final section of Miss Bowen’s book. the Atlantic has made a five-part abridgment, depicting the action and deliberation which led to independence.

  • Young John Adams: The Second Continental Congress

    In Yankee from Olympus, CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN showed us the decisiveness of that Great Dissenter, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. For the past three years she has been working on a comparable portrait of young John Adams, who was brought up to believe in British rights and British freedom and who in his thirties, from 1765 to 1775, worked to effect a new freedom on this side of the Atlantic. Those ten years were the most im portant, the most dynamic, of John Adams’s life. From the final section of Miss Bowen’s book, the Atlantic has made a five-part abridgment, depicting the action and deliberation which led to independence.

  • Young John Adams: A State of Rebellion

    In Yankee from Olympus, CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN showed us the decisiveness of that Great Dissenter, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. For the past three years she has been working on a comparable portrait of Young John Adams, who was brought up to believe in British rights and British freedom and who in his thirties, from 1765 to 1775, worked to effect a new freedom on this side of the Atlantic. Those ten years were the most important, the most dynamic, of John Adams’s life. From the final section of Miss Bowen’s book, the Atlantic has selected five installments. The first showed us the Massachusetts delegation to the Continental Congress on the road to Philadelphia in August, 1774; the second, “John Yankee” in Carpenters’ Hall.

  • Young John Adams: Strike for Freedom

    In Yankee from Olympus CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN showed us the decisiveness of that Great Dissenter, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. For the past three years she has been working on a comparable portrait of young John Adams, who was brought up to believe in British rights and British freedom and who in his thirties, from 1765 to 1775, worked to effect a new freedom on this side of the Atlantic. Those ten years were the most important, the most dynamic, of John Adams’s life. From the final section of Miss Bowen’s book, the Atlantic has selected five installments. The first showed us the Massachusetts delegation to the Continental Congress on the road to Philadelphia in August, 1774. This shows us “John Yankee’' in Carpenters’ Hall.

  • Young John Adams: On the Road to Philadelphia

    In Yankee from Olympus CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN showed us the decisiveness of that Great Dissenter, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. For the past three years she has been working on a comparable portrait of young John Adams, who was brought up to believe in British rights and British freedom and who in his maturity, from 1760 to 1775, worked to effect a new freedom on this side of the Atlantic. Those fifteen years were the most important, the most dynamic, of John Adams’s life. From the final section of Miss Bowen's book we gain a fresh. firm understanding of American liberty under the law. This is the first of five installments.

  • John Adams His Bowl