1media/Reardon letter_thumb.jpg2021-08-09T14:49:15-07:00Scott B. Spencer3a6e09c2eefd9ca96adbf188c38f589304cf3ce2392795Letter from O'Neill to James A. Reardonplain2021-08-09T15:06:48-07:00Washington University in St. LouisScott B. Spencer3a6e09c2eefd9ca96adbf188c38f589304cf3ce2
This page is referenced by:
1media/Reardon page.jpg2021-08-09T15:02:45-07:00James A. Reardon11James A. Reardon: January 5, 1904plain2023-01-22T20:42:26-08:00O'Neill's Music of Ireland (1903)1/5/19042/26/190838.6477775,-90.325843341.7955346,-87.60629438.6463493,-90.3133937Washington University's Gaylord Music LibraryPresented to James A. Reardon Esq With Compliments of the Compiler and Editor Francis O'Neill Gen Supt Police Chicago J[anuary?] 5th 1904
Biography: James A. Reardon (b. July 17, 1859 in Quincy, Ill, parents born in Ireland; d. May 7 1918 in St. Louis) was a successful St. Louis businessman. By 1901 he was president of the Reardon Manufacturing Company, which began as a glue works and later expanded into the manufacture of "cold water paint, sandpaper, etc." He was active in the organization of the Irish exhibit at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904. To that end he spent at least six weeks in Ireland, 1903-04, engaging crafts people and musicians to come work at the Fair, and selecting art and craft objects to to be sent to St. Louis for display. He married Margaret Kilcullen in 1883. They had at least six children.
For more on Reardon, his relationship with Ireland, and his plans for an Irish exhibit at the World's Fair, see The Gael (An Gaodal), New Series vol. 23 no. 2 Feb. 1904 p. 75.
Thanks to Nick Whitmer for this biography and his extensive research.
Provenance: Washington University in St. Louis, University Libraries, Gaylord Music Library Special Collections. Thanks to Brad Short, Music, Performing Arts, Film & Media Studies Librarian, who writes "Our O'Neill volumes were part of the Ernst C. Krohn musicological library that came to the University in 1966."