Skip to content

Autograph letter signed by MITCHELL Margaret - 1939

by MITCHELL Margaret

Similar copies are shown below.
Similar copies are shown to the right.
Autograph letter signed by MITCHELL Margaret - 1939

Autograph letter signed

by MITCHELL Margaret

  • Used
  • Signed
1939. Signed. MITCHELL, Margaret. Autograph letter signed. New Orleans, April 1, 1939. Two leaves of hotel stationery, each 7-1/2 by 10-1/2 inches, writing on rectos only. $11,000.Very rare autograph letter signed from Margaret Mitchell to Harold Latham, who had famously discovered her and her book, about traveling incognito and possibly meeting. Written seven months before the Gone With the Wind premiere.Harold S. Latham, an editor at Macmillan, famously pried the manuscript of Gone With the Wind away from Mitchell on a visit to Atlanta in 1935. On a tour of the South to find new writers, Latham received reports that Mitchell had a manuscript, a fact she repeatedly denied. Then she admitted that although there was a manuscript, it was unfinished. Finally, on the eve of Latham's departure, Mitchell showed up at his hotel with the entire manuscript—a pile of papers so large Latham needed to buy an extra suitcase to be able to carry it with him on the train. Although she regretted the action immediately and wrote to Latham asking him to return the manuscript, Latham refused, saying that he was certain that with revisions it would be not only publishable but popular. The story of Latham's ""discovery"" of Mitchell instantly passed into legend and became almost as well known as the book itself. Latham and Mitchell found themselves permanently tied together, both in the public imagination and in their own careers: she was his biggest discovery—none others even came close—and he was the person she consistently thanked for turning her into a popular writer. That mutual sense of interdependence led to a friendship that lasted for the rest of Mitchell's life. Seven months after this letter was written Latham was at Mitchell's in Atlanta for the premiere of the film version of Gone With the Wind.The letter, written on stationery from the Roosevelt Hotel in New Orleans, reads in full: ""Saturday noon, April 1, 1939. Dear Harold: Your Wire of March 30 has just arrived. Stephens forwarded it by mail. Realizing that your office is already closed, I'm writing you instead of wiring and hoping that air mail-special delivery stamped will put it on your desk Monday morning. Stephens sent a brief note with your wire saying he had notified you that we were out of town but would probably be back by April 10th. Harold, I do not think we will be home by April 10th unless summoned by some catastrophe such as Miss Susie filing suit against me in Atlanta or an illness in the family. John's vacation will extend to about April 20th and it is our present intention to arrive home on or about that date. We expect to leave New Orleans in a day or two and look over the smaller resorts on the Gulf. If we find a quiet one, we will stay there for the rest of our vacation. If not, we'll keep moving. For your information, you can communicate with us through Stephens, office address, Peters Building, Atlanta, home address 1401 Peachtree Road N.E. We keep him informed of our whereabouts. Harold, if you can time your visit conveniently for the week of April 23rd, it would be marvelous for you must know how much we want to see you and how disappointed we would be if we missed you. But if your business arrangements are such that the week of the 23rd isn't convenient-then we'll have to swallow our disappointment and realize that Medora and the others are enjoying you around April 10th. Please do not wire or write us here. I must confess that we are not registered under our own names. This distasteful practice is necessary when traveling if we want to get any peace and rest. Here's an amusing happening—we picked New Orleans as the one town in the East or South where we know no one—especially newspaper folks. Arriving here several days ago we found the convention of the American College of Physicians, 1500 strong, in session and most of them registered here. I know practically all the Fulton County (Atlanta) medical association and I believe they are all here. It's taken fancy fast work in lobbies and museums to escape them. And while at Antoine's for supper last night, we saw one of the heads of a large press association but he didn't see us. I'm afraid we wouldn't make good criminals! Forgive this scrawl. I haven't written a letter in long hand in years and I've almost forgotten how it's done. I hope you will come around the 23rd. Best to you, Peggy."" Fine condition.
  • Bookseller Bauman Rare Books US (US)
  • Book Condition Used
  • Quantity Available 1
  • Date Published 1939

We have 12 copies available starting at £408.20.

Typed Letter Signed by Margaret Mitchell's brother Stephens

Typed Letter Signed by Margaret Mitchell's brother Stephens

by (MITCHELL, Margaret)

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£408.20

Show Details

Description:
Atlanta, 1954. unbound. 2 pages on "Margaret Mitchell Marsh Estate letterhead," 10.25 x 7.25 inches, Atlanta, June 11, 1954. This important and strongly-stated letter was written by Margaret Mitchell's brother, Stephens Mitchell, to the editor of "Look Magazine" to dispel a printed rumor that Mitchell had help in researching her wildly popular novel, "Gone with the Wind," in part: "...ever since the sudden success of 'Gone With the Wind,' the rumor has arisen that this or that person wrote the book, or helped with the writing or research. These rumors included even me, and Mrs. Marsh's husband...I -- and no one else, except her husband -- ever saw "Gone With the Wind" until it was in its final typescript...and no one else has any right to claim any part of it..." Natural folds; staple holes in the upper left corners, but still in very good condition.<br/> <br/> Extraordinary literary content pertaining to Gone With the… Read More
Item Price
£408.20
No image available

Typed Letter Signed to columnist Louis Sobol, thanking him for "the fine things you wrote about me and GONE WITH THE WIND.

by MITCHELL, Margaret

  • Used
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£1,796.08

Show Details

Description:
1939. 1p. Atlanta, Jan. 26, 1939.<br/><br/> About 100 words. "...If I can bring myself to believe that all you wrote is true, I shall become intolerably swollen with pride." Signed Margaret Mitchell Marsh.<br/><br/>
Item Price
£1,796.08
No image available

Typed Letter Signed

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Edition
First Edition
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£2,041.00

Show Details

Description:
1941 Atlanta, George: August 2, 1941. From author Margaret Mitchell to Marion County Circuit Judge Leonard H. McMahan. One page, signed "Margaret Mitchell Marsh." Very good letter, with normal tri-fold, some tiny holes and some light surface wear to top edge of letter, and a tiny bit of dampstaining to recto. Overall, a unique and inspiring letter. In this letter, Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone with the Wind (1936), thanks McMahan for sending her a book on Crater Lake and "The Brimfield Heroine Letter," which is a 66-year-old woman's account of her journey on the Oregon Trail. The latter item sparks an inspiring paragraph from Mitchell, in which she writes: "When we read such records of courage and endurance how can we doubt the future of our country and our people? I do not hold with the prevalent idea that we have become soft or frightened. Endurance and courage are still in our bones. The trouble nowadays is that most people have not been bred up to expect… Read More
Item Price
£2,041.00
Typed Letter Signed to Leonard H. McMahan.

Typed Letter Signed to Leonard H. McMahan.

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
Condition
Used - Very Good
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£2,041.00

Show Details

Description:
1941 Atlanta, GA: August 2, 1941. From author Margaret Mitchell to Marion County Circuit Judge Leonard H. McMahan. One page, signed "Margaret Mitchell Marsh." Very good letter, with usual tri-fold, some tiny holes and some light surface wear to top edge of letter, and a tiny bit of dampstaining to recto. Overall, a handsome letter, with unique and inspiring content. In this letter, Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone with the Wind (1936), thanks McMahan for sending her a book on Crater Lake and "The Brimfield Heroine Letter," which is a 66-year-old woman's account of her journey on the Oregon Trail. The latter item sparks an inspiring paragraph from Mitchell, in which she writes: "When we read such records of courage and endurance how can we doubt the future of our country and our people? I do not hold with the prevalent idea that we have become soft or frightened. Endurance and courage are still in our bones. The trouble nowadays is that most people have not been bred up to expect endurance, but if the… Read More
Item Price
£2,041.00
No image available

One Page Typed Letter, Signed “Peggy Mitchell Marsh”

by MITCHELL, MARGARET

  • Used
Condition
Used - Writing from Atlanta on December 16, 1937, to W.J. Massee, Jr., “Dear Boots: Thanks for that grand letter from Germany. Of cou
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Newton, Massachusetts, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£2,245.10

Show Details

Description:
Writing from Atlanta on December 16, 1937, to W.J. Massee, Jr., “Dear Boots: Thanks for that grand letter from Germany. Of course, I was glad to hear that people were talking about it over there. The German edition came out in early fall and the publishers sent me a copy. I must admit the dust jacket made my jaw drop, for Rhett looked like something that had been disinterred and his moustache was of the fuzzy, handlebar variety, - and Scarlett looked like butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth. What a grand trip you must have had. I have always wanted to see Albania especially, but everyone tells me the fleas are man-sized in that country...John and I have been expecting to take a trip South around Christmas...Now our plans have been blown sky high by my publishing troubles in Holland...But I hope we can sooner or later...” In excellent condition; folded and in the original envelope.
Item Price
£2,245.10
Typed Letter Signed on personal stationery

Typed Letter Signed on personal stationery

by MITCHELL, Margaret (1900 - 1949)

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£2,326.74

Show Details

Description:
Atlanta, 1937. unbound. 1 page, 11 x 7.25 inches, Atlanta, June 29, 1937. Rare letter signed "Margaret Mitchell Marsh," declining an invitation to a party because it conflicts with her wedding anniversary, in full: "Dear Miss Hall: Sue Myrick forwarded to me your invitation, and John and I appreciate it so very much. I know the party will be lots of fun and I only wish we could come, but Sunday is our wedding anniversary and we have already made plans to spend it with friends. I admit that the temptation to break this engagement is strong, because I liked Milledgeville so much when I was there at the Press meeting. And also, I would love to attend your party as Prissy. (That is the only role my size would warrant. The costume would be cheap, too --just a croker sack and ten cents' worth of shoe polish. We do appreciate your invitation so much, and I shall look forward to Sue's description of the party." Two horizontal folds and slight foxing; very good… Read More
Item Price
£2,326.74
Autographed Letter Signed about an alleged Error in Gone With The Wind; about a supposed...
More Photos

Autographed Letter Signed about an alleged Error in Gone With The Wind; about a supposed Chronological Error with Scandalous Effects

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • very good
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Jacket Condition
Envelope Good
Edition
Original (3 pieces)
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Lake Forest, Illinois, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£3,306.42

Show Details

Description:
Atlanta, Georgia: Margaret Mitchell (in reaction to The Reader's Digest & The Atlanta Journal), 1949. Original (3 pieces). Envelope. Very Good/Envelope Good. Autograph Letter Penned & Signed characteristically "M.M.M." [Margaret Mitchell Marsh] by the famed American Author on a Small Folio (8.5" x 14") page copied from "The Atlanta Journal," June 19, 1949; <br/> <br/> with a marginal ink note in the left margin of "The Atlanta Journal" from the recipient, Dr. Mayo, docketed "July 5 - 1949"; <br/> <br/> accompanied by the original envelope addressed by Mitchell to "Dr. C.E. Mayos / 612 West 13 St. / Davenport / Iowa." [stamp and partial postmark cut away leaving only "5 ATLA... Jul /10..19.../ G]; with Mitchell's return address on the envelope flap preprinted as: "1268 Piedmont Avenue, N. E. / Apartment 3 / Atlanta 5, Georgia." Dr. Mayos has written on the envelope: "Letters from /… Read More
Item Price
£3,306.42
No image available

TYPED LETTER, SIGNED

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
  • near fine
Condition
Used - Near Fine
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Westport, Connecticut, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£4,653.48

Show Details

Description:
Near Fine. 1947. Ephemera. Probably Mitchell's most interesting letter. To the editor of the San Antonio Light, San Antonio, Texas: "Dear Sir: I am Mrs. John R. Marsh (Margaret Mitchell) of Atlanta, Georgia, author of 'Gone With the Wind'. I am writing you about an item published in your newspaper on August 5, 1947, stating that 'Mrs. John R. Marsh (Margaret Mitchell) , nationally known author had just arrived in San Antonio from Mexico City. With this item you published a photograph with the caption 'Margaret Mitchell Back to Hollywood'. I have learned that this woman also autographed copies of my novel 'Gone With the Wind' and in other ways created the impression she was me. This has caused me great embarrassment and I must ask you to publish a correction. I was not in San Antonio on August 5 and I have never been in your city, much to my regret. I have never been in Mexico City, where you said I had been, and I have never been in Dallas or… Read More
Item Price
£4,653.48
No image available

Typed Letter Signed

by MITCHELL, Margaret

  • Used
  • Paperback
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Edition
F
Binding
Paperback
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Palm Springs, California, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£6,123.00

Show Details

Description:
("Margaret") in black fountain pen ink, on personal letterhead, Atlanta, May 3, 1939. 4to, 3 separate pages. To Mable and Edwin [Granberry]: " We have been in one of our hurricanes. It all started when Selznick at last announced Miss Vivien Leigh and things are just now quieting down." She then goes on to ponder an invitation to Long Beach, New York. On page two she comments on that year’s Pulitzer Prize-winner: "Of course, you know about Marjorie Rawlings getting the Pulitzer award. There never was much doubt that she would get it if there was any justice anywhere.I do not know whether the award will keep her too busy to make this trip. The members of the Atlanta Women’s Press Club have asked me to give a party for her should she come, as they are all anxious to meet her." Mitchell closes with mention of the book which made her famous: "I was interested in your remarks about finding a GWTW mention in an article written by a Chinese. I did not see the… Read More
Item Price
£6,123.00
Typed Letter, signed (Peggy Mitchell Marsh), to George Cukor, thanking him for a gift of perfume,...

Typed Letter, signed ("Peggy Mitchell Marsh"), to George Cukor, thanking him for a gift of perfume, and discussing the reception of a performance by Tallulah Bankhead

by Mitchell, Margaret

  • Used
Condition
Used - light creasing and toning, esle fine
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£6,123.00

Show Details

Description:
Atlanta, Georgia, 1937. One page, on personal letterhead. 4to. light creasing and toning, esle fine. One page, on personal letterhead. 4to. To Cukor on "old mimosa groves" - "bees demented in the blossoms" -- and Tallulah. Mitchell thanks Cukor for the gift of Mary Chess perfumes, and especially the "mimosa": "I had tried someone's brand of mimosa many years ago, but it was heavy enough to be used as an anesthetic for a major operation. This brand is so sweet and faint and the lovliest part about it is that it reminds me of old mimosa groves far in the back country on a still, hot day with the bees demented in the blossoms." She then goes on to discuss Tallulah Bankhead's recent performance in Atlanta, which she unfortunately missed: 'Of course I was eager to go, but the show opened the night after the Pulitzer Award arrived. The Vice President of The Macmillan Company was in town and he gave me a party that night. I hoped to see her the following night, but the house was so filled with friends… Read More
Item Price
£6,123.00