Marjorie Torrey Explained
Marjorie Torrey Chanslor (Hood; November 10, 1888/1891 – September 1, 1964)[1] was an American illustrator and writer of children's books. She also wrote two mystery novels for adults under the name Torrey Chanslor and published under the name Torrey Bevans. She was a runner-up for the annual American Library Association Caldecott Medal for children's picture book illustration, in both 1946 and 1947; Opal Wheeler wrote both books, Sing Mother Goose and Sing in Praise).[2]
Personal life
Chanslor was born Marjorie Torrey Hood in Brooklyn, New York to William A. Hood (1860–1918) and Caroline Lincoln Torrey (1861–1949).[1] The year of birth has been disputed with the years 1888 and 1891 being preferred.[3] The writer herself would give her year of birth as 1899, which has been discredited, particularly in light of her 1911 marriage to Thomas Murray Bevans (1879–1953) in Jersey City, New Jersey. He had previously been married to Anna Fessenden Bradley (1877–1920) from around 1899 to around 1905; they had a son, Thomas Torre Bevans (1912–2003),) who renewed copyright to several of Torrey's books in the 1970s. Thomas Torre Bevans was married to Margaret Van Doren, also a writer and illustrator.[4]
She married, secondly, to screenwriter Roy Edwin Chanslor (1899–1964), who wrote The Menace.[5] In April 1935, she was fined $1,450 for throwing a cocktail at screenwriter Lon Young at a New Year's Eve party at the Cafe Trocadero nightclub in Los Angeles.[6]
Marjorie Torrey Chanslor died on September 1, 1964, in Manhattan.[7] There was no funeral service, at her direction.[8]
Books
- Sarah's idea (1938), illustrator
- Our First Murder (Frederick A. Stokes, 1940) – mystery fiction for adults, featuring the Beagle Sisters,
- Our Second Murder (Stokes, 1941),
- Penny (1944)
- Artie and the Princess (1945)
- Three Little Chipmunks (1947)
- The Merriweathers (1949)
- New star of the show (1949), illustrator
- Alice in Wonderland (1955), illustrator
- Far from Marlborough Street
- Trouble for Jerry Doris Gages, illustrator
- Saturday Night is My Delight
- Sing Mother Goose, written by Opal Wheeler (E. P. Dutton, 1945)
- Sing in Praise: a collection of the best loved hymns, by Opal Wheeler (Dutton, 1946)
- Abide with Me, illustrator
- Hoodoo that Voodoo, illustrator
- Songs to sing with the very young, by Phyllis Brown Ohanian (1966)
- Peter Pan (Random House, Inc. 1957), illustrator,
External links
Notes and References
- Marjorie Torrey Chanslor in U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007. Social Security Administration. Accessed December 5, 2023.
- Web site: Caldecott Medal & Honor Books, 1938-Present. 22 April 2010 . American Library Association . 1999-11-30.
- According to the 1910 United States Federal Census, Marjorie T. Hood was actually born in 1888, in Connecticut (not New York, as was claimed on the 1920 census). She was single, and living in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey with her parents, William A. Hood, born 1859 in New York, and Carolyn [sic] L. Hood, born 1862 in New York.
- News: Howe. Marvine. Margaret Van Doren Bevans, 75, Children's Author and Illustrator. July 12, 2017. The New York Times. July 18, 1993.
- Book: International Motion Picture Almanac. 1941. Quigley Publishing Company. 104. July 12, 2017. en. CHANSLOR, ROY: Writer, b. Liberty. Missouri..
- News: Glass Thrower Taxed. San Antonio Express. Associated Press. April 30, 1935.
- Marjo(rie) Chanslor in New York, New York, Death Index, 1949-1965
- News: Deaths. July 12, 2017. The New York Times. September 4, 1964.