Scope and arrangement
The Percy Hammond papers date from 1879 to 1943 and contain correspondence, scrapbooks, writings, theater programs, photographs, and drawings.
Correspondence is almost entirely incoming communications, and consists primarily of letters to Hammond dating from the 1910s to 1935. Correspondence is from professional associates, friends, and readers of Hammond's columns and reviews, including playwrights, actors, and other theater professionals responding to his assessment of their work. Correspondents include Hammond's editors at the Chicago Tribune and New York Herald Tribune, nightclub owner Barney Gallant, John Golden, Ring Lardner, Florenz Ziegfeld, and Algonquin Hotel owner Frank Case. There are a particularly large number of letters from Roscoe Peacock and William Lyon Phelps. A small number of typescripts and manuscript drafts are present with the correspondence, such as script outlines and draft articles. Among these typescripts are reminiscences of George C. Tyler, written in 1929.
The collection also contains letters to Florence Hammond, including letters from David Belasco, Wallace Irwin, Channing Pollock, Sophie Treadwell, and Carl Van Vechten. There are a large number of letters from Samuel Hopkins Adams. A scrapbook of letters to Florence from Percy, dating from 1913 to 1922, is held here. The letters were written when Hammond was traveling and include letters from his time in Europe in 1918 and 1919.
Scrapbooks date from 1905 to 1943, and contain newspaper and magazine articles by or related to Hammond. Scrapbooks contain clippings of Hammond's articles on theater, his "Oddments and Remainders" column for the Herald Tribune, and his book reviews from the 1920s, as well as other writings. A scrapbook of his theater-related articles from 1905 to 1916 includes some original manuscripts as well as clippings. Scrapbooks from after Hammond's death contain tributes to Hammond, articles containing brief references to him, and reviews of This Atom in the Audience. Loose clippings of Hammond's articles for the Chicago Evening Post are also present; the articles do not have a byline and date from about 1898 to 1901.
Manuscripts and drafts contain typewritten and handwritten drafts of several of Hammond's articles, reviews, and chapters for his book But—Is It Art?, mostly from the 1920s. Also held here are a play scenario by J. M. Patterson and a handwritten draft of a speech by Laurette Taylor on the occasion of Hammond's departure to Belgium in 1918.
Photographs and drawings date from the 1900s to the 1930s and depict Hammond's friends and family as well as actors, producers, and other theater professionals. The images are mostly portraits, many of which are inscribed to Hammond. Photographs of Kyrle Bellew, Morris Gest, Gilda Gray, and Gabrielle Réjane are present. A group photograph from a benefit given by Nikita Balieff's Chauve-Souris in 1922 is signed by Balieff, Dorothy and Lillian Gish, Al Jolson, Laurette Taylor, and others.
Drawn portraits depict Hammond, William T. Hodge, and Ethel Barrymore; there are also reproductions of portraits of Balieff and Fania Marinoff. Other drawings include an original sketch of a soldier, attributed to John Barrymore, and artwork by Eduardo Benito. Also held here is a book, Guignol: A Collection of Caricatures, by Conrado Walter Massaguer, inscribed to Hammond and with his caricature drawn inside.
Programs primarily date from around 1896 to the 1930s. Some have Hammond's handwritten notes. Souvenir programs from the 1920s are present for the Grand Guignol Players, Balieff's Chauve-Souris, Pickwick, Anna Pavlova, and the Folies Bergère. The earliest item in the collection is a silk souvenir program for the hundredth performance of The Banker's Daughter at the Union Square Theatre, dating to 1879. Some programs and invitations for dinners and other events, mostly from Hammond's time in Chicago, are also held here, as are a few concert programs from after Hammond's death, probably belonging to his son.
The collection also holds a large, folded New York Tribune poster that reads, "Follow the new shows with Percy Hammond."
Arrangement
The collection is arranged in six categories: Correspondence, Manuscripts and Drafts, New York Tribune Poster, Photographs and Drawings, Programs, and Scrapbooks and Clippings. Scrapbooks are further arranged by subject.