Margaret Mitchell scrapbook, ms1614 Margaret Mitchell letter to Marjorie Rawlings, ms2444 Miss Ellen Elliott, ms2513 Margaret Mitchell photographs, ms3031 Mitchell-Marsh family papers, ms3060 Margaret Mitchell letters, ms3326 Margaret Mitchell letter to Mr. Related Collections in this Repositoryįor related materials regarding Margaret Mitchell located in the Hargrett Library, see also the following collections: Letters written by Margaret Mitchell may not be reproduced without permission from the Mitchell Literary Estate. Margaret Mitchell family papers, ms905, Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, The University of Georgia Libraries. Organization and ArrangementĪrranged into 8 series, some with several subseries: correspondence press and publicity condolences Gone With the Wind materials business and legal papers personal and family estate documents and scrapbooks and ephemera. The bulk of the collection (1936-1949) concerns the publication of Gone with the Wind (GWTW), the effect of its publication, and the production of the motion picture by Selznick International Pictures. The papers include correspondence, clippings, business and legal documents, research materials, desk calendars (1939-1949), photographs of Mitchell and the Mitchell family, estate documents, and scrapbooks and ephemera. The collection consists of the papers of Margaret Mitchell and the Mitchell family from 1852-1975. Taken from Margaret Mitchell (1900-1949) in the New Georgia Encyclopedia. Mitchell died on August 16, 1949, and was buried in Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta.". Special phone lines were installed at Grady Hospital, and friends manned the lines in four-hour shifts. Hartsfield all asked to be kept informed of her condition. president Harry Truman, Georgia governor Herman Talmadge, and Atlanta mayor William B. During the five days before she died, crowds waited outside for news. She was rushed to Grady Hospital but never regained consciousness. The driver applied the brakes, skidded, and hit Mitchell. Mitchell stepped back Marsh stepped forward. Just as they started to cross Peachtree Street, near 13th Street, a speeding taxi crested the hill. In 1937 Margaret Mitchell was awarded the Pulitzer Prize.On August 11, 1949, Mitchell and her husband decided to go to a movie, A Canterbury Tale, at the Peachtree Art Theatre. Selznick for $50,000, the highest amount ever paid for a manuscript up to that time. Shortly after the book's publication the movie rights were sold to David O. Approximately 250,000 copies are still sold each year. It has been translated into twenty-seven languages. More than 30 million copies of this Civil War-era masterpiece have been sold worldwide in thirty-eight countries. The novel was published in 1936 and sold more than a million copies in the first six months, a phenomenal feat considering it was the Great Depression era. "Margaret Mitchell was the author of Gone With the Wind, one of the most popular books of all time. (176 document boxes, 3 flat boxes, 6 oversized boxes, 2 oversized volumes, 29 oversized folders A)
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