Frederick Baldwin Adams Jr. (March 28, 1910 – January 7, 2001) was an American bibliophile and the director of the Pierpont Morgan Library in New York City from 1948 to 1969.
After Cambridge, he worked at the Air Reduction Company, a manufacturer of oxygen, acetylene, and other gasses and oxy-acetylene cutting and welding equipment, founded by his father and uncle, among others. At the company, he researched how New Deal legislation might affect the company.[5]
After his third marriage in 1969, Adams resigned from the Morgan Library and moved to Paris with his wife after their marriage. There he served at president of the Association Internationale de Bibliophilie, the most prestigious organization of bibliophiles in the world,[5] from 1974 to 1983.[7]
His own collection, which included the largest holdings of works by Thomas Hardy and Robert Frost and an extensive collection of writing by Karl Marx, was dispersed at Sotheby's in London in November 2001.[5]
Personal life
On June 10, 1933, Adams was married to Ruth Potter at the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Buffalo, New York.[8] Ruth, a writer and editor, was the daughter of Roderick Potter and Eleanor (née Hotchkiss) Potter, and the attendees at the wedding included Sara Delano Roosevelt, the president's mother.[9][10] Before their divorce on August 5, 1940, they were the parents of Gillian Adams who married Jerry Thomas Bidlack, Kurt Heinzelman, and Warner Barnes and was a teacher at the Buxton School in Williamstown and editor and publisher of Children's Literature Abstracts for the International Federation of Library Associations.[11][12][13][14] Their other daughter was Anne Baldwin Adams, who married Carl Avery Bross in 1959 and Durno Chambers Jr. in 1992.[15]
In 1941, Adams remarried Betty Abbott, the daughter of Hunt Abbott of Wellesley, Massachusetts.[16] Together, they were the parents of two more daughters: Judith Adams, and Lauren Adams, who married Hubert C. Fortmiller Jr. in 1967.[17][18]
Radical Literature in America: An Address by Frederick B. Adams Jr., to which is Appended a Catalogue of an Exhibition Held at the Grolier Club in New York City Overbrook Press, 1939, 61 pages[22]
An Introduction to the Pierpont Morgan Library. 1964.[23]
Homage to the Book, written with Leonard Baskin. Westvaco Press, 1968[24]
References
^"Frederic Adams, Rail Officer, Dies: Director of Several Lines, 83, Had Also Been Banker". New York Times. October 24, 1961. p. 37.
^Adams, F. B., Rogers, B., Overbrook Press., & Pforzheimer Bruce Rogers Collection (Library of Congress) (1939). Radical Literature in America: An Address. Stamford, Conn: Overbrook Press.
^Adams, F. B. (1964). An Introduction to the Pierpont Morgan Library. New York.
^Adams, F. B., & Baskin, L. (1968). Homage to the Book. New York: Westvaco.