- Frederick Skiff
Frederick Woodward Skiff (1867 – 1947), was an author, noted collector,
bibliophile , expert onAmericana , and founder of theAcorn Club .Skiff traveled widely throughout the United States during his adult life, but is most associated with
Connecticut andPortland, Oregon . In about 1900, he founded the Acorn Club inHartford , Connecticut, a membership organization of Connecticut historians which publishes fine press-work specialty books on American historical subjects.Skiff wrote two books -- cite book| title=Adventures in Americana: Recollections of Forty Years Collecting Books, Furniture, China, Guns and Glass (1935, Metropolitan Press, Portland, Oregon) and cite book| title=Landmarks and literature: An American Travelogue (1937, ibid).
Over the course of his life, Skiff amassed one of the most important private libraries in the United States, with particular emphases on literature and history. After his death in 1947, the library's contents were sold at auction by
Butterfield & Butterfield (nowBonham's ) in San Francisco. Many of the books made their ways into other important collections. Countess Doheny purchased 800 books from Skiff's library, becoming part of the Estelle Doheny Collection of American Literature, which was in turn auctioned off byChristie's New York in 2001.
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