Saturday, January 28, 2012

Had I But Known Authors #2: Margaret Armstrong, HIBK Patrician

Another of the lesser known HIBK (Had I But Known) authors praised by Howard Haycraft in his classic 1941 mystery genre survey, Murder for Pleasure, is Margaret Neilson Armstrong (1867-1944), a remarkable woman of many talents who happened to write three critically praised mystery novels near the end of her life (for Part One of this series see Anita Blackmon: HIBK Queen of Arkansas ).


Born into one of New York's most socially prominent families, Margaret Armstrong surely had one of the most privileged backgrounds of any mystery writer from the Golden Age, on either side of the Atlantic.

Armstrong's father was David Maitland Armstrong (1836-1918), an interesting combination of diplomat and stained glass artist.  Born at the family country home of Danskammer, an imposing Greek Revival mansion overlooking the Hudson River just north of Newburgh, New York, Maitland Armstrong, as he was known, was admitted to the bar after graduating from Trinity College; but rather than continuing with his practice he traveled to Italy in the 1860s to study painting.  During his time in Italy he served for four years as the United States Consul General to the newly unified Italian state.

David Maitland Armstrong, diplomat and artist

After returning to the United States with his family (he had married Helen Neilson, a descendant of Peter Stuyvesant and a niece of Hamilton Fish, United States Secretary of State under President Ulysses S. Grant), Armstrong continued artistic work, most notably in the field of stained glass, where he was a preeminent figure, along with his daughter Helen Maitland Armstrong (1869-1948).

Margaret Armstrong's great uncle, Hamilton Fish
(named for Alexander Hamilton, a friend of his parents),
Governor of New York and U. S. Secretary of State

Maitland Armstrong maintained two homes, the one on the family country estate of Danskammer and a splendid New York City townhouse on 58 West Tenth Street.  Family friends included the great stained glass artist John La Farge, Winslow Homer, William Dean Howells and Mark Twain.

Danskammer, overlooking the Hudson River above Newburgh

the ionic columns salvaged from Danskammer,
now located at the Storm King Art Center, New York

the 58 West Tenth Street townhouse


Family friend Stanford White designed
the town house's skylight 


Like their father, Margaret and her sister Helen achieved great distinction in artistic endeavors, Helen as a stained glass artist like her father and Margaret as a book designer.  Margaret Armstrong has been called "the most productive and accomplished American book designer of the 1890s and early 1900s."  Additionally, their youngest brother, Hamilton (Ham) Fish Armstrong, was editor of Foreign Affairs from 1928 to 1972 and, as such, an influential voice in American foreign policy for over four decades.

front row, left to right:
Maitland Armstrong, Helen Armstrong, Ham Armstrong, Margaret Armstrong
a family canoe excursion in Canada:
Helen (?) first from left; Margaret second from left, Ham fifth from left

Another brother, Edward Maitland Armstrong, married into the King family of Newport, Rhode Island and with his wife and children resided at the renowned Newport "cottage" of Kingscote, picture below.



Some examples of Armstrong stained glass design are give below, the first pair by Helen Armstrong, the latter by her father (to whom Helen was principal assistant during his life).





And here are some of Margaret Armstrong's book designs, equally stunning.



note at top Margaret Armstrong's
"MA" signature


Margaret Armstrong produced much less book design work after 1910, when dust jackets became increasingly popular.  She spent several years in the American West, camping and hiking.  In 1915 she produced the fruit of these years, the standard botanical reference book, "Field Book of Western Wild Flowers."  Armstrong's experiences also resurfaced in her final murder tale, The Blue Santo Murder Mystery (1941), set in a fictionalized Taos, New Mexico.


In her seventies Margaret Armstrong's artistic career went into a sudden late bloom, as Armstrong published two bestselling biographies, Fanny Kemble: A Passionate Victorian (1938) and Trelawny: A Man's Life (1940) and three praised murder mysteries: Murder in Stained Glass (1939), The Man with No Face (1940) and The Blue Santo Murder Mystery (1941).  After this impressively fecund four years, Armstrong spent the remaining part of her life residing with sister Helen and brother Ham in the old family townhouse in New York City (the mansion at Danskammer had been torn down in 1935), dying in 1944 after a short illness at the age of 76.

What of these murder mysteries, you must be asking at this point!  Well, check back in with the passing tramp in a few days and find out.

5 comments:

  1. I enjoyed touring several palatial homes in Newport, RI when I was on a vacation with my family back in my teens. I wonder if one of them was her brother's home? Lovely looking place.

    Copies of THE MAN WITH NO FACE turn up all over the place and I almost bought one last year. I will have to get that copy now. Interesting her book design work. This makes her the second book artist turned mystery writer I know of. The insanely prolific Lee Thayer, of course, being the other. A mystery novel about stained glass? Seems she anticipated the trend of arts and crafts inspired detective novels that crowd the shelves these days.

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  2. John,

    I have never been to see the houses at Newport, though I have some books on them. I was always amused about their being called cottages. The Man with No Face is indeed by far her most common mystery. Not as common as her bios, which were book-of-the-month club sections, but still pretty common for an old mystery novel.

    Yes, she definitely takes advantage of her family's background in Stained Glass.

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  3. John,

    Forgot to note your Lee Thayer comment. Yes, she and Armstrong were both involved in a serious way in book design, though Thayer produced many more mystery novels (and lived longer)! Thayer seems to have gotten interested in jacket art too, which Armstrong apparently didn't. Armstrong designed books are quite valuable, it appears. They really are lovely works of art.

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  4. What a nice surprise to stumble across your blog. Really nice summary and research on the family. I'd never seen the portrait of Ham. Fish before. Thanks! David Maitland Armstrong was my gr. gr. grandfather and Margaret and Helen gr.gr. aunts, and they are definitely interesting to me. Margaret's original manuscript for the wildflower book was recently put on the Metropolitan Museum of Art's website (type Margaret Armstrong in the search bar). Really gorgeous watercolor/drawings.

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  5. Lisa P.,

    Thank you so much for commenting! I find your family so very interesting. I hope you looked at my review of Margaret Armstrong's Murder in Stained Glass as well. I enjoyed it very much.

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