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Anson Goodyear

Anson Conger Goodyear (June 20, 1877 – April 24, 1964) was an American manufacturer, businessman, author, and philanthropist and member of the Goodyear family. He is best known as one of the founding members and first president of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[1]

Anson Goodyear
Colonel Goodyear, executive officer of the Camp Taylor, Kentucky training school for artillery officers during World War I.
President of the Museum of Modern Art
In office
1929–1939
Preceded byInaugural holder
Succeeded byNelson Rockefeller
Personal details
BornJune 20, 1877
Buffalo, New York
DiedApril 24, 1964(1964-04-24) (aged 86)
Old Westbury, New York
Spouses
  • Mary Martha Forman
    (m. 1904, divorced)
  • Zaidee C. Bliss
    (m. 1950⁠–⁠1964)
Children4
Parent(s)Charles W. Goodyear
Ella Portia Conger
RelativesFrank H. Goodyear (uncle)
George V. Forman (father-in-law)
ResidenceA. Conger Goodyear House
EducationNichols School
Alma materYale University

Early life and education edit

Goodyear was born in Buffalo, New York, on June 20, 1877. Conger was the eldest of four children born to Charles Waterhouse Goodyear (1846-1911), a wealthy businessman who was friends with President Grover Cleveland, and Ella Portia Conger (1863-1940). His youngest brother was lawyer Bradley Goodyear. The family, who were very prominent in Western New York, resided at 888 Delaware Avenue in Buffalo.[2]

He was educated at the Nichols School in Buffalo.[3] He graduated from Yale University in 1899.[4] While at Yale, Goodyear was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and the Wolf's Head Society; there he began collecting limited and first editions of books. He expanded the collection later, obtaining most of the letters of William Makepeace Thackeray to Jane Octavia Brookfield.[1]

Career edit

Goodyear was president of the Great Southern Lumber Company, based in Buffalo and operating a sawmill and related industry in Bogalusa, Louisiana (1920–38); and served as vice president of the Marine National Bank.[5] His father and uncle Frank had built railroads to serve their lumber operations in isolated areas; this Goodyear served as the vice president of the Buffalo and Susquehanna Railroad (1907–10), which supported operations in New York and Pennsylvania, and was president of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Company (1920–30), built to support the Bogalusa pine lumber operation.[6] He served as chairman of the board of directors of Gaylord Container Corporation, a successor to the Great Southern Lumber Company; director of Paramount Pictures, director of the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad, and as an executive or director of several other corporations.[7]

Public service and military career edit

Active in the New York National Guard, Goodyear served as a colonel in World War I and was the executive officer of the Field Artillery Central Officers Training School at Camp Zachary Taylor, Kentucky.[1]

In the 1930s, Goodyear became president and later chairman of the board of the American National Theater and Academy. After World War I, Herbert Hoover, as director general of relief of the Supreme Economic Council, appointed Goodyear president of the council's coal mission, putting him in charge of coal distribution in Austria, Hungary, and Poland.[1] According to Kendrick Clements:

The gregarious, energetic, and ingenious Goodyear cheerfully accepted Hoover's orders to do anything necessary to get the coal moving. Employing his native charm and his authority to provide or withhold food shipments, he calmed strikes and opened borders. At one point, he got Hoover to send him $25,000 worth of tobacco to distribute among miners. Within a month, his unorthodox methods contributed to doubling coal production in Central Europe.[8]

During World War II, Goodyear was commander of the Second Brigade of the New York Guard, with the rank of major general.[9] Later in World War II, he was a deputy commissioner for the Pacific Ocean area, including Hawaii, of the American Red Cross. In this capacity, he toured the Pacific battlefronts, covering 50,000 miles.[10] Later, as a military observer, he was at the front in Okinawa with New York's 27th Division and reported to the Secretary of War on conditions in the field and troop morale.[11]

Art collector and Museum of Modern Art edit

 
Artists Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, and Goodyear (on the right) in 1931

A noted philanthropist and avid collector of late 19th- and early 20th-century American and European art, Goodyear had a personal collection containing several important works by Paul Cézanne and Vincent van Gogh, and Paul Gauguin's Spirit of the Dead Watching.[12] He also had works by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Georges Seurat, Honoré Daumier, and Edgar Degas.[1]

He was invited by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, Mary Quinn Sullivan, and Lillie P. Bliss to help establish the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. He served as its first president (1929–39), and as a member of the board of trustees of MOMA, after moving to New York City.[13]

Goodyear traveled to Europe at his own expense to collect paintings for the museum's first showing. While there, he visited England, France, the Netherlands, and Germany, and borrowed 25 paintings valued at $1.5 million (equivalent to $26,616,000 in 2023). In 1939, on the eve of the opening of the museum building on 53d Street, Nelson A. Rockefeller, later the Governor of New York, succeeded Goodyear as MOMA's chief executive.[1]

Goodyear was also the author of several nonfiction works, including:

  • A Memoir: John George Milburn, Jr. (1938), with Milburn, Jr. Milburn Jr. became a lawyer and was son of prominent New York lawyer John G. Milburn; John Jr's older brother was Devereux Milburn, an internationally known polo player.[14]
  • American Art Today: Gallery of American Art Today, New York World's Fair (1939), with Grover A. Whalen[15]
  • The Museum of Modern Art. The First Ten Years (1943)[16]

Philanthropy edit

Goodyear donated a collection of Civil War materials he had compiled to Yale University in 1953. The collection contained correspondence, diaries, proclamations, and other papers relating to the Civil War.[17]

By the time of his death, Goodyear donated nearly 300 artworks to the Albright-Knox in Buffalo, NY. He also bequeathed many important works, including Giacomo Balla’s Dinamismo di un Cane al Guinzaglio (Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash), 1912; Salvador Dalí’s The Transparent Simulacrum of the Feigned Image, 1938; and Frida Kahlo’s Self-Portrait with Monkey, 1938. Shortly before his death, the museum established the A. Conger Goodyear Fund for the acquisition of new artwork, greatly enhancing its ability to grow its collection in the years to come.[18]

He was a close friend of actress and theater producer Katharine Cornell, also from Buffalo. Upon her death in 1974, she bequeathed part of her foundation's assets to MoMA in his honor.[19] Goodyear was also a director of the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts,[20] an honorary governor of the New York Hospital,[21] and a donor to Dartmouth College.[22] He was also a member of the Saturn Club in Buffalo. A friend of Ernest N. Harmon, Conger also made donations to Norwich University, and Norwich's Goodyear Hall is named for him.[23]

Personal life edit

 
A. Conger Goodyear House in Old Westbury, NY

On June 29, 1904, Goodyear married Mary Martha Forman (1879–1973), the only daughter of George V. Forman, also of Buffalo.[3] George Forman was prominent banker and the founder of VanderGrift, Forman & Company, which later became part of the Standard Oil Company,[24] and the Fidelity Trust and Guaranty Company, which later became M&T Bank. Before they divorced, Goodyear and Forman had four children:

  • George Forman Goodyear (1906–2002),[25] who married Sarah Norton in 1932.[26] After Sarah's death, he married Marion Gurney (née Spaulding), the mother of his son-in-law.[27] George was one of the founders of WGRZ-TV in Buffalo.[28]
  • Mary Goodyear (1907–1977), who married Theodore G. Kenefick (1898–1972)
  • Anson C. Goodyear, Jr. (1911–1982)
  • Stephen Goodyear (1915–1998), who first married Aline Fox in 1942. She died in 1943 and he then married Mary Van Rensselaer Robins, the granddaughter of Thomas Robins Jr., in 1944.[29] Robins was the granddaughter of Mary Van Rensselaer Cogswell (1839-1871) and Andrew K. Cogswell (1839-1900). Goodyear and Robins divorced and in 1964, Robins married Julien D. McKee (1918-2006)[30][31]

In 1950, he married Zaidee C. Bliss (née Cobb) (1881–1966),[32] widow of Cornelius Newton Bliss Jr., a financier who was the son of Cornelius N. Bliss, the former Secretary of the Interior and director of the Metropolitan Opera Company.[1]

His home in Old Westbury, New York, the A. Conger Goodyear House (built in 1938 by Edward Durell Stone), is on the National Register of Historic Places.[33] Goodyear died in Old Westbury, New York on April 24, 1964.[34] After his death, his art collection was bequeathed to the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts.[35]

Descendants edit

Through his eldest son, George Forman Goodyear, he was the grandfather of Mary "Molly" Forman Goodyear (b. 1935), who married Albert Ramsdell Gurney, Jr. (1930–2017), a prominent playwright,[27][36] Anne Goodyear, who married U.S. Representative William H. Hudnut III (1932–2016),[25] and Sarah C. Goodyear.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "A. Conger Goodyear, 86, Dies". The New York Times. 24 Apr 1964. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  2. ^ "CHARLES W. GOODYEAR DEAD.; Active In Business Life, He Aided in Grover Cleveland's Nomination". The New York Times. 17 April 1911. Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Guide to the Anson Conger Goodyear Collection". library.yale.edu. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  4. ^ Syracuse University Library, Biography, A. Conger Goodyear, A. Conger Goodyear Papers Inventory, accessed September 1, 2012
  5. ^ "Niagara Area Journal of Commerce ...: A Review of the Month, Volumes 9-10". Buffalo Live Wire. Buffalo Chamber of Commerce. 1918. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  6. ^ "Goodyear, A. Conger (Anson Conger), 1877-1964". research.frick.org. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  7. ^ State University of New York at Buffalo, A. Conger Goodyear biography 2015-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Finding Aid for the A. Conger Goodyear Papers, accessed September 1, 2012
  8. ^ Kendrick A. Clements (2010). The Life of Herbert Hoover: Imperfect Visionary, 1918–1928. Springer. p. 18. ISBN 9780230107908.
  9. ^ George F. Goodyear, Goodyear Family History, 1976, page 137
  10. ^ New York Times, Red Cross Widens Services in Pacific, November 27, 1944
  11. ^ National Infantry Association, Infantry Journal], Volumes 60-61, 1947, page 54
  12. ^ "Goodyear, A. Conger (Anson Conger), 1877-1964". research.frick.org. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  13. ^ Museum of Modern Art, Imagining the Future of The Museum of Modern Art, 1998, page 82
  14. ^ "JOHN GEORGE MILBURN, JR.: A Memoir". abaa.org. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  15. ^ Goodyear, Anson Conger (1939). American Art Today: Gallery of American Art Today, New York World's Fair. National Art Society.
  16. ^ Goodyear, Anson Conger (1943). The Museum of Modern Art: The First Ten Years. Museum of Modern Art.
  17. ^ "Collection: Anson Conger Goodyear Collection | Archives at Yale". archives.yale.edu. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
  18. ^ "Albright-Knox". from the original on 2017-09-05.
  19. ^ "A. Conger Goodyear Scrapbooks in the Museum of Modern Art Archives". Moma.org. Retrieved 2010-04-03.
  20. ^ Arshile Gorky, Matthew Spender, Arshile Gorky: Goats on the Roof: A Life in Letters and Documents, 2009, page 148
  21. ^ New York Hospital. Society, Annual Report, 1963, page 5
  22. ^ Hood Museum of Art, T. Barton Thurber, European Art at Dartmouth: Highlights From the Hood Museum of Art, 2008, page 197
  23. ^ Ernest N. Harmon, Combat Commander: Autobiography of a Soldier, 1970, page 307
  24. ^ "Candace F. Byers Becomes a Bride". The New York Times. June 22, 1986. Retrieved 28 October 2015.
  25. ^ a b c "George F. Goodyear". The Buffalo News. June 14, 2002. Retrieved 16 April 2016.
  26. ^ "Weddings & Engagements" (PDF). Buffalo Courier-Express. May 22, 1932. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  27. ^ a b Freeman, Patricia (January 23, 1989). "Playwright A.R. Gurney Jr.'s Cocktail Hour Leaves His Genteel Family Shaken, Not Stirred". People. Vol. 31, no. 3. Retrieved 16 April 2016.
  28. ^ "Forgotten Buffalo featuring WGR TV & WGRZ TV". www.forgottenbuffalo.com. Forgotten Buffalo. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  29. ^ "MISS MARY ROBINS BECOMES A BRIDE; Wed in Church of Ascension to Dr. Stephen Goodyear by Bishop Austin Pardue". The New York Times. October 4, 1944. Retrieved 14 April 2016 – via timesmachine.nytimes.com.
  30. ^ "Obituaries and death notices, Nov. 8, 2006 Laurette Forest, Julian D. McKee, Stetson services". SentinelSource.com. The Keene Sentinel. November 8, 2006. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  31. ^ Times, Special To The New York (14 June 1964). "Mrs. Goodyear Wed To Julien D. McKee". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  32. ^ "MRS. A.C. GOODYEAR, ACTIVE IN WELFARE". The New York Times. 22 July 1966. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  33. ^ Alex Hoyt, A. Conger Goodyear House: A Look at an Edward Durell Stone House on Long Island That Narrowly Avoided Demolition, Architect magazine, November 17, 2011
  34. ^ James Trager, The New York Chronology, 2004, page 653
  35. ^ "Goodyear, A. Conger (Anson Conger), 1877-1964". research.frick.org. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  36. ^ Berkvist, Robert (June 14, 2017). "A.R. Gurney, Playwright Who Explored Upper-Crust Anxieties, Dies at 86". The New York Times.

External links edit

anson, goodyear, anson, conger, goodyear, june, 1877, april, 1964, american, manufacturer, businessman, author, philanthropist, member, goodyear, family, best, known, founding, members, first, president, museum, modern, york, colonel, goodyear, executive, offi. Anson Conger Goodyear June 20 1877 April 24 1964 was an American manufacturer businessman author and philanthropist and member of the Goodyear family He is best known as one of the founding members and first president of the Museum of Modern Art in New York 1 Anson GoodyearColonel Goodyear executive officer of the Camp Taylor Kentucky training school for artillery officers during World War I President of the Museum of Modern ArtIn office 1929 1939Preceded byInaugural holderSucceeded byNelson RockefellerPersonal detailsBornJune 20 1877Buffalo New YorkDiedApril 24 1964 1964 04 24 aged 86 Old Westbury New YorkSpousesMary Martha Forman m 1904 divorced wbr Zaidee C Bliss m 1950 1964 wbr Children4Parent s Charles W GoodyearElla Portia CongerRelativesFrank H Goodyear uncle George V Forman father in law ResidenceA Conger Goodyear HouseEducationNichols SchoolAlma materYale University Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Public service and military career 2 2 Art collector and Museum of Modern Art 2 3 Philanthropy 3 Personal life 3 1 Descendants 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education editGoodyear was born in Buffalo New York on June 20 1877 Conger was the eldest of four children born to Charles Waterhouse Goodyear 1846 1911 a wealthy businessman who was friends with President Grover Cleveland and Ella Portia Conger 1863 1940 His youngest brother was lawyer Bradley Goodyear The family who were very prominent in Western New York resided at 888 Delaware Avenue in Buffalo 2 He was educated at the Nichols School in Buffalo 3 He graduated from Yale University in 1899 4 While at Yale Goodyear was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and the Wolf s Head Society there he began collecting limited and first editions of books He expanded the collection later obtaining most of the letters of William Makepeace Thackeray to Jane Octavia Brookfield 1 Career editGoodyear was president of the Great Southern Lumber Company based in Buffalo and operating a sawmill and related industry in Bogalusa Louisiana 1920 38 and served as vice president of the Marine National Bank 5 His father and uncle Frank had built railroads to serve their lumber operations in isolated areas this Goodyear served as the vice president of the Buffalo and Susquehanna Railroad 1907 10 which supported operations in New York and Pennsylvania and was president of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Company 1920 30 built to support the Bogalusa pine lumber operation 6 He served as chairman of the board of directors of Gaylord Container Corporation a successor to the Great Southern Lumber Company director of Paramount Pictures director of the Gulf Mobile and Ohio Railroad and as an executive or director of several other corporations 7 Public service and military career edit Active in the New York National Guard Goodyear served as a colonel in World War I and was the executive officer of the Field Artillery Central Officers Training School at Camp Zachary Taylor Kentucky 1 In the 1930s Goodyear became president and later chairman of the board of the American National Theater and Academy After World War I Herbert Hoover as director general of relief of the Supreme Economic Council appointed Goodyear president of the council s coal mission putting him in charge of coal distribution in Austria Hungary and Poland 1 According to Kendrick Clements The gregarious energetic and ingenious Goodyear cheerfully accepted Hoover s orders to do anything necessary to get the coal moving Employing his native charm and his authority to provide or withhold food shipments he calmed strikes and opened borders At one point he got Hoover to send him 25 000 worth of tobacco to distribute among miners Within a month his unorthodox methods contributed to doubling coal production in Central Europe 8 During World War II Goodyear was commander of the Second Brigade of the New York Guard with the rank of major general 9 Later in World War II he was a deputy commissioner for the Pacific Ocean area including Hawaii of the American Red Cross In this capacity he toured the Pacific battlefronts covering 50 000 miles 10 Later as a military observer he was at the front in Okinawa with New York s 27th Division and reported to the Secretary of War on conditions in the field and troop morale 11 Art collector and Museum of Modern Art edit nbsp Artists Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo and Goodyear on the right in 1931A noted philanthropist and avid collector of late 19th and early 20th century American and European art Goodyear had a personal collection containing several important works by Paul Cezanne and Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin s Spirit of the Dead Watching 12 He also had works by Henri de Toulouse Lautrec Pierre Auguste Renoir Georges Seurat Honore Daumier and Edgar Degas 1 He was invited by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Mary Quinn Sullivan and Lillie P Bliss to help establish the Museum of Modern Art in New York City He served as its first president 1929 39 and as a member of the board of trustees of MOMA after moving to New York City 13 Goodyear traveled to Europe at his own expense to collect paintings for the museum s first showing While there he visited England France the Netherlands and Germany and borrowed 25 paintings valued at 1 5 million equivalent to 26 616 000 in 2023 In 1939 on the eve of the opening of the museum building on 53d Street Nelson A Rockefeller later the Governor of New York succeeded Goodyear as MOMA s chief executive 1 Goodyear was also the author of several nonfiction works including A Memoir John George Milburn Jr 1938 with Milburn Jr Milburn Jr became a lawyer and was son of prominent New York lawyer John G Milburn John Jr s older brother was Devereux Milburn an internationally known polo player 14 American Art Today Gallery of American Art Today New York World s Fair 1939 with Grover A Whalen 15 The Museum of Modern Art The First Ten Years 1943 16 Philanthropy edit Goodyear donated a collection of Civil War materials he had compiled to Yale University in 1953 The collection contained correspondence diaries proclamations and other papers relating to the Civil War 17 By the time of his death Goodyear donated nearly 300 artworks to the Albright Knox in Buffalo NY He also bequeathed many important works including Giacomo Balla s Dinamismo di un Cane al Guinzaglio Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash 1912 Salvador Dali s The Transparent Simulacrum of the Feigned Image 1938 and Frida Kahlo s Self Portrait with Monkey 1938 Shortly before his death the museum established the A Conger Goodyear Fund for the acquisition of new artwork greatly enhancing its ability to grow its collection in the years to come 18 He was a close friend of actress and theater producer Katharine Cornell also from Buffalo Upon her death in 1974 she bequeathed part of her foundation s assets to MoMA in his honor 19 Goodyear was also a director of the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts 20 an honorary governor of the New York Hospital 21 and a donor to Dartmouth College 22 He was also a member of the Saturn Club in Buffalo A friend of Ernest N Harmon Conger also made donations to Norwich University and Norwich s Goodyear Hall is named for him 23 Personal life edit nbsp A Conger Goodyear House in Old Westbury NYOn June 29 1904 Goodyear married Mary Martha Forman 1879 1973 the only daughter of George V Forman also of Buffalo 3 George Forman was prominent banker and the founder of VanderGrift Forman amp Company which later became part of the Standard Oil Company 24 and the Fidelity Trust and Guaranty Company which later became M amp T Bank Before they divorced Goodyear and Forman had four children George Forman Goodyear 1906 2002 25 who married Sarah Norton in 1932 26 After Sarah s death he married Marion Gurney nee Spaulding the mother of his son in law 27 George was one of the founders of WGRZ TV in Buffalo 28 Mary Goodyear 1907 1977 who married Theodore G Kenefick 1898 1972 Anson C Goodyear Jr 1911 1982 Stephen Goodyear 1915 1998 who first married Aline Fox in 1942 She died in 1943 and he then married Mary Van Rensselaer Robins the granddaughter of Thomas Robins Jr in 1944 29 Robins was the granddaughter of Mary Van Rensselaer Cogswell 1839 1871 and Andrew K Cogswell 1839 1900 Goodyear and Robins divorced and in 1964 Robins married Julien D McKee 1918 2006 30 31 In 1950 he married Zaidee C Bliss nee Cobb 1881 1966 32 widow of Cornelius Newton Bliss Jr a financier who was the son of Cornelius N Bliss the former Secretary of the Interior and director of the Metropolitan Opera Company 1 His home in Old Westbury New York the A Conger Goodyear House built in 1938 by Edward Durell Stone is on the National Register of Historic Places 33 Goodyear died in Old Westbury New York on April 24 1964 34 After his death his art collection was bequeathed to the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts 35 Descendants edit Through his eldest son George Forman Goodyear he was the grandfather of Mary Molly Forman Goodyear b 1935 who married Albert Ramsdell Gurney Jr 1930 2017 a prominent playwright 27 36 Anne Goodyear who married U S Representative William H Hudnut III 1932 2016 25 and Sarah C Goodyear 25 See also editA Conger Goodyear House Charles W Goodyear Charles W Goodyear House Museum of Modern Art Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts Great Southern Lumber Company Buffalo and Susquehanna RailroadReferences edit a b c d e f g A Conger Goodyear 86 Dies The New York Times 24 Apr 1964 Retrieved 14 September 2015 CHARLES W GOODYEAR DEAD Active In Business Life He Aided in Grover Cleveland s Nomination The New York Times 17 April 1911 Retrieved 19 January 2018 a b Guide to the Anson Conger Goodyear Collection library yale edu Retrieved 10 September 2015 Syracuse University Library Biography A Conger Goodyear A Conger Goodyear Papers Inventory accessed September 1 2012 Niagara Area Journal of Commerce A Review of the Month Volumes 9 10 Buffalo Live Wire Buffalo Chamber of Commerce 1918 Retrieved 4 September 2015 Goodyear A Conger Anson Conger 1877 1964 research frick org Retrieved 4 September 2015 State University of New York at Buffalo A Conger Goodyear biography Archived 2015 09 10 at the Wayback Machine Finding Aid for the A Conger Goodyear Papers accessed September 1 2012 Kendrick A Clements 2010 The Life of Herbert Hoover Imperfect Visionary 1918 1928 Springer p 18 ISBN 9780230107908 George F Goodyear Goodyear Family History 1976 page 137 New York Times Red Cross Widens Services in Pacific November 27 1944 National Infantry Association Infantry Journal Volumes 60 61 1947 page 54 Goodyear A Conger Anson Conger 1877 1964 research frick org Retrieved 4 September 2015 Museum of Modern Art Imagining the Future of The Museum of Modern Art 1998 page 82 JOHN GEORGE MILBURN JR A Memoir abaa org Retrieved 15 September 2015 Goodyear Anson Conger 1939 American Art Today Gallery of American Art Today New York World s Fair National Art Society Goodyear Anson Conger 1943 The Museum of Modern Art The First Ten Years Museum of Modern Art Collection Anson Conger Goodyear Collection Archives at Yale archives yale edu Retrieved 2019 06 14 Albright Knox Archived from the original on 2017 09 05 A Conger Goodyear Scrapbooks in the Museum of Modern Art Archives Moma org Retrieved 2010 04 03 Arshile Gorky Matthew Spender Arshile Gorky Goats on the Roof A Life in Letters and Documents 2009 page 148 New York Hospital Society Annual Report 1963 page 5 Hood Museum of Art T Barton Thurber European Art at Dartmouth Highlights From the Hood Museum of Art 2008 page 197 Ernest N Harmon Combat Commander Autobiography of a Soldier 1970 page 307 Candace F Byers Becomes a Bride The New York Times June 22 1986 Retrieved 28 October 2015 a b c George F Goodyear The Buffalo News June 14 2002 Retrieved 16 April 2016 Weddings amp Engagements PDF Buffalo Courier Express May 22 1932 Retrieved 10 September 2015 a b Freeman Patricia January 23 1989 Playwright A R Gurney Jr s Cocktail Hour Leaves His Genteel Family Shaken Not Stirred People Vol 31 no 3 Retrieved 16 April 2016 Forgotten Buffalo featuring WGR TV amp WGRZ TV www forgottenbuffalo com Forgotten Buffalo Retrieved 28 November 2016 MISS MARY ROBINS BECOMES A BRIDE Wed in Church of Ascension to Dr Stephen Goodyear by Bishop Austin Pardue The New York Times October 4 1944 Retrieved 14 April 2016 via timesmachine nytimes com Obituaries and death notices Nov 8 2006 Laurette Forest Julian D McKee Stetson services SentinelSource com The Keene Sentinel November 8 2006 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Times Special To The New York 14 June 1964 Mrs Goodyear Wed To Julien D McKee The New York Times Retrieved 14 April 2016 MRS A C GOODYEAR ACTIVE IN WELFARE The New York Times 22 July 1966 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Alex Hoyt A Conger Goodyear House A Look at an Edward Durell Stone House on Long Island That Narrowly Avoided Demolition Architect magazine November 17 2011 James Trager The New York Chronology 2004 page 653 Goodyear A Conger Anson Conger 1877 1964 research frick org Retrieved 4 September 2015 Berkvist Robert June 14 2017 A R Gurney Playwright Who Explored Upper Crust Anxieties Dies at 86 The New York Times External links editAnson Goodyear at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anson Goodyear amp oldid 1204849452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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