Harvard: [22]; Princeton: [23]; University of Albany (now so named): [24]; Vassar: [25], Pennsylvania State University: [26].
books.google.com
According to Shapiro, this refers to the article Henry Aspinwall Bradley (1915) Song-ballets and devil's ditties. Harper's Magazine, Vol. 130, p. 901. This may be read online at [11]. Source: Henry D. Shapiro (1986) Appalachia on Our Mind: The Southern Mountains and Mountaineers in the American Consciousness, 1870–1920, UNC Press Books, available online at Google Books: [12].
See the review in The Musical Leader, Vol. 36, at [15].
It is not widely reported in newspaper reviews, and may have been a one-off item, performed at the premiere of the Kentucky songs. Musical America reported: "Miss Wyman confessed that playing the instrument was for her as difficult as the well-known "stunt" of patting the head with one's hand while the other rubs the diaphragm and vice versa. Despite this, she played "Yankee Doodle" so that one could actually recognize it." Source: Musical America, 11 November 1916, p. 25. Available online at Google Books: [16].
Handler, Richard (1988) Nationalism and the Politics of Culture in Quebec. University of Wisconsin Press, p. 73. Online at Google Books: [18].
Barbeau, Marius (1920) "La deuxième séance annuelle de lla Section de Québec, le 18 Mars 1919" Journal of the American Folklore Society 32:181–183. Online at Google Books: [19]
See Musical America, 25 May 1918, p. 12. Available online at Google Books: [20].
Harvard: [22]; Princeton: [23]; University of Albany (now so named): [24]; Vassar: [25], Pennsylvania State University: [26].
"Three girls missing: daughters of Walter C. Wyman mysteriously disappear", Chicago Tribune, 13 March 1897, at [4].
See Chicago Tribune, "Society and entertainments", 22 April 1924, p. 14. The long absence was pointed out by the Tribune society columnist, who fondly recalled her mother's performances (issue of 8 February 1914, online at [8]). The Evanston performance is recorded on the Iowa Digital Library site at [9].
harrykolb.com
The Los Angeles Times on 15 February 1915 announced a concert at the Friday Morning Club and later on 2 March at the Huntington Library. She also performed at the palatial home of Frederick Forrest Peabody in Montecito, California|Montecito; see [10].
metmuseum.org
She was the first female artist to have a solo exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; see [29].
Rhode Island Archive and Manuscripts Collection Online, Loraine Wyman collection, Biographical Note. Online at [5]
"Biographical note". Loraine Wyman Collection. Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online (RIAMCO). Retrieved 2016-03-16.
si.edu
nmai.si.edu
A one-paragraph biography of Wyman appears in Bergen (1915); it mentions "coal mining operations in Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania". For Wyman as collector: various web references attest to the presence of his artifacts in museums today; see e.g., [3]
studylib.net
Harvard: [22]; Princeton: [23]; University of Albany (now so named): [24]; Vassar: [25], Pennsylvania State University: [26].
thecrimson.com
For year of birth as well as her family members see Wilson (1900:72). For her voice see Harvard Crimson, announcement of concert at Harvard University, 7 April 1919; [1].
Harvard: [22]; Princeton: [23]; University of Albany (now so named): [24]; Vassar: [25], Pennsylvania State University: [26].
uiowa.edu
digital.lib.uiowa.edu
A collection of very positive reviews is given at the Iowa Digital Library at [6], which includes the Boston Transcript review quoted below.
See Chicago Tribune, "Society and entertainments", 22 April 1924, p. 14. The long absence was pointed out by the Tribune society columnist, who fondly recalled her mother's performances (issue of 8 February 1914, online at [8]). The Evanston performance is recorded on the Iowa Digital Library site at [9].
unimelb.edu.au
digitised-collections.unimelb.edu.au
Clifford, Phil (1983) Grainger's collection of music by other composers. Grainger Museum, University of Melbourne, p. 119. Available online: [30]
vassar.edu
newspaperarchives.vassar.edu
Harvard: [22]; Princeton: [23]; University of Albany (now so named): [24]; Vassar: [25], Pennsylvania State University: [26].
wmct.on.ca
Feuerriegel, Hanna and Fred Feurriegel (2016) History of concerts and performers of the Women's Musical Club of Toronto, 3rd ed. Toronto: Women’s Musical Club of Toronto. Available online: [7].
For the relationship of Wyman and Painter and its consequences for his family, see Minton (2002:124), as well as the memoirs of Painter's son Thomas (pseudonymized as "Will G") in Henry (1948). Further details concerning Painter (including the date of his marriage to Wyman) are given in the obituary compiled for him at Yale University (online at [28]).