Collection Title: Thomas Lynch Montgomery Diary Collection
Collection Number: MS Coll 265
Dates of Collection: 1903-1929
Extent: 2.6 linear feet
Repository: Chester County History Center, West Chester, PA
Language: English
Project Archivist: MacLaren Remy
A descendent of Thomas Lynch, Jr., a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Lynch Montgomery (March 4, 1862- October 1, 1929) was born in Germantown, Philadelphia to Catherine Gertrude Lynch and Oswald Montgomery. A librarian and historian, Montgomery graduated from the University of Philadelphia in 1884. After his graduation, he remained involved with his fraternity, Phi Kappa Sigma, and many of his later professional relationships can be traced back to connections he maintained through the Alumni Association.
Montgomery’s interest in libraries began in 1879, and he became a librarian at the Wagner Free Institute of Science in 1886. Under his leadership, the Wagner later became the first branch of the Philadelphia Free Library in 1892. As a result of this work, in 1903 he was appointed to the position of Pennsylvania State Librarian by Governor Samuel Pennypacker. During this period, Montgomery began dividing his time between residences in Philadelphia, Harrisburg, and a leased farm in Green Hill, Chester County. After his retirement, he became the librarian and corresponding secretary of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and also served as a trustee of the Free Library of Philadelphia.
In addition to his professional responsibilities, Montgomery was a longstanding member of his church in Philadelphia, St. Mark’s Episcopal, and of numerous clubs and societies. These include the Philobiblon Club, the American Library Association, the Dauphin County Historical Society, the Wyoming Historical Society, the Swedish Colonial Society, the Harrisburg Club, the University Club in Philadelphia, and the Chester County Historical Society (now Chester County History Center).
Montgomery’s first marriage was to Brinca Gilpin in 1889. Their marriage lasted until Brinca’s death on October 16, 1921. Montgomery remarried in 1925 to Susan Keim Savage. On October 1, 1929, at age 67, Montgomery died of a heart attack while at the University Club in Philadelphia. He was survived by his wife, Susan, and buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.
The diary collection of Thomas Lynch Montgomery measures 2.6 linear feet and dates from 1903 to 1929. There are 23 day-to-day or weekly diaries that record Montgomery’s personal and professional activities. Many of the diaries include inserted or pasted correspondence, programs, invitations, newspaper clippings, postcards, photographs, and other miscellaneous ephemera.
The 23 diaries of Thomas Lynch Montgomery measure 2.6 linear feet and date from 1903 to 1929. With few exceptions, Thomas Lynch Montgomery was a regular diarist, and while the content of his writing focused on his professional life, references to his family, friendships, and social life are mentioned throughout. Montgomery focused on events from his tenure as State Librarian, and many subsequent entries follow a format of noting the time he spent at work, his list of daily correspondents, his social engagements, and other activities of note.
Many of the diaries include material from events in Montgomery’s personal life, which he inserted or pasted into the diaries. These inserts include personal and professional correspondence, theater programs, invitations, newspaper clippings, postcards, photographs, and other miscellaneous ephemera. Invitations were to events held by the various clubs and societies Montgomery was a member of and that he attended. He also collected postcards featuring landscapes and saved newspaper articles, most of which feature himself as the subject.
In letters from his close friends, many address him as Tom. Montgomery’s two main correspondents were Martin Brumbaugh, the twenty-sixth Governor of Pennsylvania, and Edward Nolan, a librarian at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. Topics are primarily professional and regard inquiries or the library, though he also included frequent mentions of his social engagements and club speeches in particular. More personal letters are concentrated around the death of Brinca in 1921.
In his entries, Brinca Gilpin is referred to as ‘B,’ and he also often references his cat when writing about his first wife. Susan Keim Savage is referred to as ‘S’ and occasionally Sue. A Catholic and Republican, in the later diaries, Montgomery notes the frequency of attending church and theater performances with Susan, and he also mentions eating meals with Brinca’s sister, Elizabeth Gilpin, with regularity.
Montgomery used primarily Excelsior journals in both weekly and daily formats. In both forms, the volumes have predated calendars and space in the front/back for reference charts, notes, and record keeping, which he kept blank.
The collection is arranged as 1 series:
The Chester County History Center Photo Archives holds photographs from these diaries that were transferred in 1991. The Library also holds the Acoccidologists Travel Diary Collection, a work Thomas Lynch Montgomery co-wrote under the pseudonym “The Dragon.”
Series 1: Diaries, 1903 – 1929 (Box 1 – Box 4)
Box 1
Folder
1 Diary, 1903
2 Diary Inserts, 1903
3 Diary, 1904- 1905
4 Diary Inserts, 1905
5 Diary, 1907 and 1911
6 Diary Inserts, 1911
7 Diary, 1912
8 Diary Inserts, 1912
9 Diary, 1913
10 Diary Inserts, 1913
11 Diary, 1914
12 Diary Inserts, 1914
13 Diary, 1915
14 Diary Inserts, 1915
15 Diary, 1916
16 Diary Inserts, 1916
Box 2
Folder
1 Diary, 1917
2 Diary Inserts, 1917
3 Diary, 1918
4 Diary Inserts, 1918
5 Diary, 1919
6 Diary Inserts, 1919
7 Diary, 1920
8 Diary Inserts, 1920
9 Diary, 1921
10 Diary Inserts, 1921
11 Diary, 1922
12 Diary Inserts, 1922
13 Diary, 1923
14 Diary Inserts, 1923
15 Diary, 1924
16 Diary Inserts, 1924
17 Diary, 1925
18 Diary Inserts, 1925
Box 3
Folder
1 Diary, 1926
2 Diary Inserts, 1926
3 Diary, 1927
4 Diary Inserts, 1927
5 Diary, 1928
6 Diary Inserts, 1928
Box 4
Folder
1 Diary, 1929
2 Diary inserts, 1929
225 N. High Street, West Chester, PA 19380 | 610-692-4800
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