tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3068187502892408957.post6167268813468760214..comments2024-03-13T13:52:01.358-04:00Comments on Indiana Illustrators and Hoosier Cartoonists: Elizabeth Buchsbaum Newhall (1909-1942)-Part OneTerence E. Hanleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08268641371264950572noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3068187502892408957.post-61142937717235876772018-12-05T19:38:04.209-05:002018-12-05T19:38:04.209-05:00Thank you, Sherry,
For corrections and further in...Thank you, Sherry,<br /><br />For corrections and further information. I have made changes to the two parts of this article to reflect the new information you have provided.<br /><br />Terence HanleyTerence E. Hanleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08268641371264950572noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3068187502892408957.post-33623322818792103722018-12-02T02:44:55.483-05:002018-12-02T02:44:55.483-05:00One correction: Elizabeth’s husband Franklin Newha...One correction: Elizabeth’s husband Franklin Newhall was an agricultural climatologist specializing in soil moisture. The description of Franklin better applies to Elizabeth’s brother Ralph who, though not a physician, was a Professor of Zoology, a publisher, photographer, and author of a number of books and scientific papers. My husband Monte Stuart Buchsbaum, M.D. (Elizabeth’s nephew, only 2 at the time of her death) has been researching his grandmother Mabel Victoria Roberts Buchsbaum. Before she married Maurice, Mabel was a schoolteacher in Flint, Michigan. Both Mabel and her daughter Elizabeth died either in childbirth or due to complications of pregnancy (in the case of Elizabeth). Ralph, his wife Mildred (co-author of Animals Without Backbones, who collaborated closely with Elizabeth) and Franklin remained close until the end of their lives, drawn together by their mutual love of Elizabeth.Sherry Buchsbaumhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04786940767379791571noreply@blogger.com