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Meredith Harless Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MSS-167

Scope and Content Note

The Meredith Harless Papers consist of 21 boxes of correspondence, newspaper articles, photographs, and memorabilia documenting Harless' family life, social and charitable work, and professional broadcasting career. The collection has been arranged in four series.

Series I: Personal (5 boxes) houses photographs, Meridith Howard's personal correspondence, personal papers, documents, and memorabilia showing the Howard family and social and family events.

Series II: Social Clubs & Volunteer Work (8 boxes) includes photographs, newsclippings, scrapbooks, correspondence, and memorabilia documenting Meredith Harless' social and charitable activities. The bulk of this series documents the United Nations Club, which Harless founded in 1941. Also included are photographs, correspondence, and memorabilia regarding dozens of social organizations and volunteer events in Washington D.C. and Arizona, including the Washington Fashion Group, the Salvation Army, the Red Cross, the Stage-Door Canteen, and the Women's National Democratic Club.

Series III: Professional (7 boxes) is comprised of photographs, correspondence, documents, and memorabilia regarding Meredith Harless' career in show business, public relations, advertising, radio and television broadcasting, and real estate. The bulk of this series shows Harless' broadcasting career and includes scripts, interview questions and answers, publicity photographs, and correspondence with the several broadcasting organizations she worked with in Washington, D.C. and Arizona. Also included are photographs and memorabilia documenting her show business career, including autographed photographs from fellow members of the Ziegfeld Follies, newsclippings, and telegrams. Harless also collected materials showing her sisters, Virginia and Mary.

Series IV: Artifacts (1 box) houses books, a sash from the Miss Tulsa Beauty Pageant, invitations, and a jewelry box.

Dates

  • Creation: 1925-1970

Language of Materials

Material in English

Access Restrictions

To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.

Copyright

The Arizona Board of Regents retains copyright to this collection for and on behalf of the Arizona State University Library. Requests to publish, display, or redistribute information from this collection must be submitted via our online application.

Biographical Note

Florence Meredith Howard was born to Samuel J. and Florence Howard in Bartlesville, Oklahoma on September 6, 1909. She was one of four children, including her twin, Virginia (Howard) Hayes (1909-1990); William (1911-); and Mary (Howard) de Liagre (1914-2009). In 1927, she and her twin sister tied for first place in the Miss Tulsa beauty pageant. A winning coin flip earned Meredith Howard a trip to the 1928 Miss America Pageant, where she finished as a runner-up. Howard went on to perform with the Ziegfeld Follies, where she worked with such stars as Eddie Cantor, Fred Astaire, and Ed Wynn, for five years.

Howard married Albert Russell Erskine, Jr. in January of 1934. She soon became disenchanted with her marriage and moved to Hollywood to work directly with Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios on public relations, advertising, and fashion in 1935. While at MGM, she continued to model with her sisters Virginia and Mary, who starred in several MGM films. Howard divorced her husband in November of 1937 and moved to Washington, D.C. where she worked in Crowell-Collier's advertising department and wrote two syndicated columns, At Random (under her own name) and Selective Tuning (under the name Jean Abbey). On November 28, 1948 Howard married Arizona Congressman Richard F. Harless.

With the outbreak of World War II, Harless concentrated on her writing and radio career with the Hecht Broadcasting Company. In 1940, she became the first woman to broadcast a presidential inauguration and the first woman to have her own radio commentary show, News and Personalities in the News. In addition to her broadcasting work, Harless volunteered with the Treasury Department to raise a total of $250 million dollars worth of war bonds and worked with the Civilian Defense Home Hospitality Committee, the Stage-Door Canteen, and the Russian War Relief Committee. She also helped to found the United Nations Club in December of 1941. With the participation of ambassadors from 58 countries, the United Nations Club became one of the major social organizations promoting the allied war effort and the United States' post-war charitable initiatives.

In 1948, Harless returned to Arizona support her husband's gubernatorial campaign. After working briefly for KTAR radio, she became the producer of CBS's A Look Behind the News and worked as a regular commentator. During the next several years, Harless wrote, produced, and starred in several radio and television programs for stations in the valley, including Arizona Close-Ups for NBC and Arizona Caravan for ABC, where she also worked as Public Relations Director. In 1951, Harless was honored with Arizona's Outstanding Woman award.

Harless continued to work in local Arizona broadcasting and participated in local charities like the Salvation Army (where she served as Vice President for the national organization) and Washington D.C. organizations including the Washington Fashion Group, the National Symphony Orchestra, and the Business and Professional Women's Club. Although Harless was married and widowed twice after Richard Harless' death in 1970, she continued to use the Harless name professionally because she believed that it was the name that she was best known by. Meredith (Howard) Harless died on June 19, 1996 at the age of 87.

Full extent

21 Box(es)

Full extent

11.5 Linear Feet

Abstract

The Meredith Harless Papers house correspondence, newspaper articles, photographs, and memorabilia documenting Harless' family life, social and charitable work, and professional broadcasting career.

Arrangement

This collection consists of twenty-one boxes divided into four series:

  1. Series I: Personal
  2. Series II: Social Clubs and Volunteer Work
  3. Series III: Professional
  4. Series IV: Artifacts

Provenance

Mary (Howard) de Liagre donated these papers to the Arizona Collection in 1997 (Accession #1997-01820).

Related Materials

The Richard F. Harless Papers (MSS-166) house the personal, social, and professional papers Meridith Harless' husband.

Separated Materials

Some materials were removed from the Meredith Harless Papers and placed in the Richard Harless Papers while others (photographs, correspondence, etc.) were kept with the Meredith Harless Papers in order to preserve their original context and physical state.

Title
Meredith Harless Papers
Status
Completed
Author
Processed by Michael Lotstein in November 2002; Encoded by Michael Lotstein in June 2004.
Date
2012
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding guide encoded in English.

Repository details

Part of the Greater Arizona Collection Repository

Contact

Arizona State University
P.O. Box 871006
Tempe AZ 85287-1006 United States
(480) 965-4932