The Baum Oz Years
1900
- Jan. 18 - Baum and Denslow apply for joint copyright on a
manuscript they tentatively call The Land of Oz.
- Jan. 20 - Baum's oversized picture book, The Army Alphabet,
is registered for copyright. It is published Sept. 1 by George
M. Hill, Chicago, with illustrations by Harry Kennedy and lettering by
Charles J. Costello.
- Jan. 21 - Denslow illustrates a comic page for the New York World.
"Father Goose Shows the Children How to Run a Double-Runner -- The
Awful Result" appears without Baum's knowledge.
- Jan. - Baum's short story, "The Loveridge Burglary," appears in Short
Stories.
- Jan. - Baum's article, "The Real 'Mr. Dooley,' " with
illustrations by W.W. Denslow and Ike Morgan is published in The
Home Magazine.
- Mar. 30 - Baum's The Songs of Father Goose For the Home,
School and Nursery - again illustrated by Denslow - with music by
Alberta N. Hall is granted copyright. About 16,000 copies are published
by George M. Hill, Chicago. Many of these musical versions of the Father
Goose: His Book rhymes are printed as supplements to newspapers in
metropolitan areas. A later reprint will use Hall's married name,
Burton.
- May 15 - Baum's renamed fairy tale, The Wonderful Wizard of
Oz, is scheduled for publication by George M. Hill, Chicago, and
printing begins. It includes more than 100 colored illustrations and 24
color plates by Denslow. Selling for $1.50, it becomes the best-selling
children's book of 1900. The author and illustrator receive equal
royalties.
- May 17 - The first copy of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is
hand assembled by Baum as it comes off the presses and is
presented to his sister, Mary Louise. It's pages are sewn together but
it is not bound.
- June 16 - Baum's fairy tale, A New Wonderland, is granted
copyright and is published by R.H. Russell, New York, with
illustrations by Frank Ver Beck. The manuscript had been called Adventures
in Phunniland (1896) and the book will be published with still
another title, The Magical Monarch of Mo, in 1903.
- Baum circulates advance copies of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
to his relatives and closest friends.
- June - Neill works for The Evening Journal in
Philadelphia.
- July 5-20 - The public has its first look at The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz at a book fair held in the Palmer House hotel,
Chicago.
- July 22 - Denslow, again without Baum's involvement, illustrates
a Father Goose comic page of the New York World.
"Father Goose at the Seashore" includes verse by Paul West, editor of
the Sunday comic supplement.
- Aug. 1 - The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is registered for
copyright. Distribution follows in September. Baum saves 202 reviews of
which 200 are favorable. Comments include:
" [Baum's book] is quite as fantastic as the old favorites, and wittier
and more wholesome;"
"... the pages fairly dazzle. It is something to write a story, but it
is even more to catch the spirit of another's story, and this Mr.
Denslow has done;"
"It will indeed be strange if there be a normal child who will not
enjoy the story."
- Aug. 1 - Baum's oversized picture book, The Navy Alphabet,
is registered for copyright and then, on Sept. 1, is published by George
M. Hill, Chicago, with illustrations by Harry Kennedy.
- Aug. 26 - Baum's poem, "To the Grand Army of the Republic, August
1900," is published in the Chicago Times Herald.
- Baum begins to receive mail from his young fans. For the rest of
his life he will respond personally to letters such as this one that
reads: "I am going to write you a letter. You wrote a nice book. It's
called The Wizard of Oz. I couldn't write a book like that. I
think I love you."
- Christmas - Charged by Maud to request his first check in order
to have spending money for the holiday season, Baum asks Hill for his
first royalty payment on The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. The
$3,432.64 total is a fortune by the day's standard.
- Dec. 12 - The Library of Congress receives its copies of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- The Art of Decorating Dry Goods Windows and Interiors is
published in three volumes by the Show Window Publishing Co., Chicago.
It contains material previously printed in Baum's Show Window
magazine.
1901
- Jan. - George M. Hill prints the final copies of the first
edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Denslow's year-end
royalty records indicate that 21,000 copies have been sold. Contrary to
publicity, which claimed 90,000 copies had been distributed, Hill
probably printed fewer than 35,000.
- Feb. - Baum's short story, "The Bad Man," is published in The
Home Magazine (of New York) with illustrations by Fanny Cory.
- Feb. 23 - Baum's American Fairy Tales, a collection of
short stories for children, is submitted for copyright.
- Feb. 28 - Songwriter Paul Teitjens notes in his diary that he
would like to work with Baum and Denslow on a musical. "Baum would be
just the man to write the libretto and Denslow could design the
costumes. I will stick to this idea."
- Mar. 3 - Baum's American Fairy Tales are serialized in
newspapers.
- Mar. 3 - Baum's short story, "A Strange Tale of Nursery Folk," is
published in the Chicago Times Herald.
- Mar. 7 - Teitjens approaches Baum with the idea of developing a
musical together. Baum soon responds by writing a plot for a comic
opera called The Octopus.
- Mar. 26 - Neill starts work at the North American in
Philadelphia.
- April - Denslow suffers a breakdown and is treated at the Alma
Sanitarium in Alma, Mich., for several weeks. His marriage also suffers
and he and Ann soon separate.
- Denslow meets and falls in love with Frances Golsen Doolittle.
- May 1 - Baum's stage play, The Octopus, fails to win
financial backing. It is never sold. The book and lyrics are written by
Baum and the music by Teitjens. Denslow, who had promoted the show and
designed the costumes, was to have received one third of the royalties.
- May 19 - The newspaper serializations of Baum's American
Fairy Tales end.
- May 27 - Baum has ten teeth pulled.
- June - Illustrator Ike Morgan marries. At the wedding party,
Teitjens plays Denslow songs that he has written for a stage version of
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- July - Teitjens spends two weeks with the Baums at Macatawa
Island, Mich.
- Sept. 18 - Baum writes a 5-act stage version of The Wizard of
Oz with lyrics to several songs. Teitjens writes the music.
- Sept. 21 - Baum, Teitjens and Denslow contract with one another
to produce The Wizard of Oz as a stage musical.
- Oct. - Baum's Dot & Tot of Merryland is published by
George M. Hill, Chicago, with illustrations by Denslow. This new
children's fairy tale is not as commercially successful as Oz.
- Oct. 19 - Baum's American Fairy Tales are published in a
single volume by George M. Hill, Chicago, with illustrations by Ike
Morgan, Harry Kennedy, N.P. Hall and Ralph Fletcher Seymour (who
provides the cover illustration).
- Denslow's Mother Goose is published by McClure, Phillips
and Company, New York. This is often referred to as Denslow's best
work. More than 40,000 copies sell. Frank Goudy, later a distinguished
type-designer, hand-letters the book for $2 per page. His lettering
style is copied by the Inland Type Foundry of St. Louis and introduced
to the public as a new type font, "Hearst."
- Nov. 11 - Denslow illustrates a weekly, syndicated comic page,
"Billy Bounce." The character becomes popular and soon appears on
promotional merchandise such as banks, cigars and other novelties.
Denslow draws the strip through August 1902. Another illustrator, C. W.
Kahles, then picks up the task and continues the series until about
1906.
- Baum's The Master Key: An Electrical Fairy Tale is
published by Bowen-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, Ind., with illustrations
by Fanny Y. Cory. He dedicates the book to his son, Robert Stanton
Baum, who, like the book's hero, Robert Joslyn, is fascinated by
electricity.
- Two Baum short stories, c. 1901, "The King Who Changed the World"
and "The Runaway Shadows" (a.k.a. "A Trick of Jack Frost's") are
printed in newspapers. Clippings from the period provide no further
detail.
- Baum works on a stage treatment and lyrics for King Midas,
a comic opera, with music by Teitjens. It is never produced and may not
have been completed.
1902
- Mar. 29 - Baum's short story, "An Easter Egg," is published in The
Sunny South, Atlanta, Ga. An expanded version of the same story
called "The Strange Adventure of an Egg" is published Mar. 30 in the
Chicago Daily Tribune.
- Feb. 5 - Baum and Fred Hamlin agree to produce The Wizard of
Oz for the stage.
- Feb. - George M. Hill Company goes bankrupt.
- Apr. 12 - Baum's The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus is
submitted for copyright and is published by Bowen-Merrill Co.,
Indianapolis, Ind. Mary Cowles Clarke illustrates this new children's
fantasy. In it, the infant Santa Claus is saved by a woodman and reared
by a wood-nymph. He makes the first toy in the world, then more. He
gets permission to borrow up to ten deer once a year, to speed his
journey. As he gets old, the Immortals of the world vote to give him
Immortality.
- May - George W. Ogilvie & Co. buy the assets and good will of
the bankrupt Geo. M. Hill Co.
- Spring - Baum resigns as editor of The Show Window.
- June - Ogilvie sells the Geo. M. Hill Co. material to the Hill
Bindery Co., of which George M. Hill is manager.
- June 16 - The Wizard of Oz opens on stage at the Grand
Opera House in Chicago starring Fred Stone as the Scarecrow and Dave
Montgomery as the Tin Woodman. Baum is called to the stage repeatedly
by a cheering audience that sits and applauds till after midnight. He
makes a gracious speech, crediting the success of the production to its
many talented contributors.
Within weeks Montgomery and Stone are the best-known comic team in
America. The roles of Dorothy (Anna Laughlin) and the Cowardly Lion
(Arthur Hill) are secondary to those of the vaudeville pair.
The Wizard of Oz is directed for the stage by Julian
Mitchell who had written Montgomery and Stone to return from England
for the parts. Mitchell originally cast Montgomery as Sir Wiley Zile.
He said the Tin Woodman's part had to be played by a tenor and be a
love interest. The two partners, however, insisted that Montgomery play
the Tin Woodman. Julian invents several additional characters. Baum
uses one of them, Pastoria II - a former King of Oz, in later books.
Significant plot changes from the book include cutting the Wicked Witch
of the West from the story entirely, and turning Dorothy's dog Toto
into Imogene the Cow - played by Fred Stone's brother, Edwin. The
rescue of Dorothy and her friends from the deadly poppy field is
accomplished by a snow fall ordered by the Good Witch Locasta. This
production is based on a much-revised version of the Sept. 18, 1901,
script which had been more faithful to the book.
At least 10 pieces of sheet music are published that combine Baum
lyrics with Teitjens music: "Poppy Song," "When We Get What's A 'Comin'
to Us," "The Traveler and the Pie," " The Scarecrow," "The Guardian of
the Gate," "Love is Love," "Just a Simple Girl from the Prairie," and
"When You Love, Love, Love." Nathaniel D. Mann provides music for at
least two other titles that offer Baum lyrics, "It Happens Everyday"
and "The Different Ways of Making Love." Two songs used in the plan
originally had been written for the unproduced Baum play, The
Octopus (1901).
Fred Stone's memories of opening night are recorded in his biography,
Rolling Stone (1945):
". . . they carried me on the stage too soon, and I hung motionless, my
weight balanced on the side of one ankle, for eighteen minutes. . . I
was hung on a stile by two nails, one in one sleeve of my costume and
one in the elbow, with my whole body thrown off balance. . . . First
one arm, then a foot, went to sleep. It seemed to me that I simply had
to move, but I held on like grim death, with the sweat pouring down my
face and into my eyes. The part of the little Kansas girl, Dorothy, was
played by Anna Laughlin, who had a good number just before she was to
release me, and that night there was one encore after another. When she
finally came for me, I was so numb I just hung on to her for support.
Fortunately the audience, taken by surprise at having me come to life,
burst into prolonged applause, which gave me a chance to limber up
before I had to dance."
- Aug. 3 - Tired of illustrating the "Billy Bounce" comic strip
which he began in November of 1901, Denslow turns it over to Charles W.
Kahles.
- Sept. - Bowen-Merrill Company of Chicago buys the printing plates
for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz from Baum and Denslow.
- Sept. - Baum and composer Nathaniel D. Mann copyright a comic
opera in two parts, King Jonah XIII.
- Oct. 7 - Neill marries Elsie G. Barrows in Philadelphia.
- The Denslows reconcile and spend the winter at the Hotel
Inverurie in West Bermuda.
- Dec. 9 - Margaret Hamilton is born in Cleveland, Ohio. As an
actress, she will star as the Wicked Witch of the West in MGM's classic
film The Wizard of Oz (1939).
- Baum buys a summer cottage in Macatawa, Mich., with profits from Father
Goose that he names the "Sign of the Goose." Following an attack of
facial paralysis, Baum's doctor recommends he take a break from writing
and do some manual labor. So, Baum builds oak furniture by hand and
trims the pieces with brass finish nails with heads that depict a
flying goose. He goes on to decorate the entire cottage with a goose
theme: a frieze of geese is stenciled on the walls; a goose image
dominates a stained glass window; a front porch rocking chair is
painted with geese on either side. Other pieces of furniture, including
a custom-
made grandfather's clock, are decorated with characters from the book.
- The Baums also relocate in Chicago, moving from 1667 Humboldt
Ave. to 3726 Forest Ave.
- Denslow's Night Before Christmas by Clement C. Moore is
published by G.W. Dillingham Co., New York. The successful title earns
him $3,000. In addition to the illustrations, Denslow hand-letters the
text himself.
- Pictures From the Wizard of Oz (stageplay), is
published by George W. Ogilvie Co., Chicago, with text by Thomas H.
Russell.
1903
- Jan. 21 - The Wizard of Oz musical opens in New York
City's Majestic Theater on Columbus Street and becomes the greatest
Broadway success of its time. Reviews are mixed, but it is an instant
favorite with audiences. At 293 performances, it becomes the longest
lasting show of the decade. Seven traveling road companies keep The
Wizard of Oz on the road for years.
The entire production company socializes together. When the men in the
cast form their own baseball team, Stone begins recommending new
performers and stage hands based on their skill at the game. For at
least one game - an entertaining celebrity fund-raiser - Stone plays in
his Scarecrow costume with a birdcage on his head. Though Montgomery
spends his summers in Europe, Stone stays with the show continually.
- Feb. 2 - "The Scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz" song sheet appears
as a Sunday newspaper supplement.
- Feb. 23 - Baum and Denslow contract with Bowen-Merrill for the
exclusive book-publishing rights to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- April 12 - A Baum short story, "The Ryle of the Lillies," appears
in newspapers. Clippings from the period do not include other
identifying information.
- Apr. 15 - The first Oz novelties - brass jewel boxes with tiny
Cowardly Lions mounted on the lids - are presented to ladies in the
audience at the 100th performance of The Wizard of Oz musical.
- May 1 - The Baum family moves to an apartment at 5243 South
Michigan, Chicago.
- July - Baum tries to place a play in New York or London without
success. It is called Search for Montague, and is based on
Madre d'Oro, an Aztec Play (1889) by Emerson Hough.
- July 4 - Baum writes the treatment and lyrics for a stage version
of Father Goose (1899). Teitjens writes the music. The show is
never completed.
- July 11 - Metal folding-cup souvenirs mark the 200th performance
of The Wizard of Oz on stage.
- Publisher Bowen-Merrill, which currently has rights to The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz, becomes Bobbs-Merrill.
- July 15 - Bobbs-Merrill reprints The Wizard of Oz. The
word "wonderful" is dropped from the title, due, at least in part, to
the success of the Broadway production that is known by the shorter
name.
- Aug. 3 - G.W. Dillingham Co., New York, publishes twelve Denslow
picture books and commissions him to do an additional six for the
following year. Each volume is an adapted nursery rhyme that Denslow
expurgates of violence, bloodshed or other concepts he considers
offensive to children. In one, Denslow's Five Little Pigs, Baum
is characterized as a policeman.
- Aug. 14 - Newspapers report that Denslow saves a 17-year-old girl
from drowning in the canal in Madison Square Garden. (Note: The actual
date of the event is unclear, but papers report the incident Aug. 14)
- Baum writes a play prospectus with Edith Ogden Harrison, wife of
Chicago Mayor, Carter H. Harrison, based on her book, Prince
Silverwings (1902, A.C. McClung & Co., Chicago). Several Baum
characters and plot lines are incorporated and Teitjens writes the
music. One song, "Down Among the Marshes; the Alligator Song," is
published by M. Witmark & Sons, Chicago/NY/London/San Francisco
(1903). When an historic fire destroys the Iroquois Theater during a
Dec. 30 matinee claiming more than 570 lives, all Chicago theaters are
closed and the play is never produced.
- Sept. 1 - Russell P. MacFall is born in Indianapolis, Ind. With
Frank J. Baum, he will co-author Baum's first biography, To Please
a Child (1961).
- Sept. 17 - Denslow's wife of seven years, Ann Waters Holden
Denslow, is granted a divorce. In less than a month she marries a young
artist, their friend, Lawrence Mazzanovich, and leaves with him for
Paris.
- Oct. 30 - Denslow leases a 4-acre island in the Bermuda Islands.
Harris Island (a.k.a. Dyer) is in Hamilton Harbor.
- Dec. 24 - Denslow marries Mrs. Frances G. Doolittle and buys an
apartment on Riverside Drive on Long Island where the couple, and her
daughter, Frances, live. They honeymoon on his Bermuda island spending
time on his yacht, which they name Wizard.
- St. Nicholas magazine reports that Baum's The Master
Key (1901) has been "chosen one of the most popular books" by their
young readers.
- Baum's latest fairy tale, The Enchanted Island of Yew, is
published by The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, Ind., with
illustrations by Fanny Y. Cory. In it, a wood nymph becomes a young
knight and seeks adventure.
- Baum's The Magical Monarch of Mo (a.k.a. Adventures
in Phunniland, A New Wonderland) is revised and published
by The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, Ind. with illustrations by
Frank Ver Beck.
- Baum writes the prospectus for a new play, The Maid of Athens
(a college phantasy in 3 acts) with Emerson Hough. It is privately
printed but never produced.
- Sheet music, recordings, penny postcards and other novelties
associated with the stage success of The Wizard of Oz become
available.
- A Baum short story, "The Ruby Wedding Ring," is published in
newspapers (c. 1903), but surviving clippings provide no additional
details.
- Baum begins the book and lyrics for a play, The Whatnexters,
with Isadora Witmark. It is never completed.
- Denslow designs six posters as a wallpaper frieze for children's
rooms. Descriptive verses run below the Oz characters (c. 1903).
1904
- Jan. 10 - Raymond Wallace Bolger is born in Dorchester, Mass.
As an actor, he will star as the Scarecrow in MGM's classic film, The
Wizard of Oz (1939).
- Jan 15 - A newspaper clipping reports that Denslow has
established a new sovereignty on his own Bermuda Island and has
declared himself its king. He builds a castle on it of local sandstone
and raises a seahorse flag.
- Winter - The Baums visit Coronado Island, Calif., and stay at the
famous Victorian landmark, The Hotel del Coronado. They will return to
the hotel in 1905, 1907 and 1908 where Baum takes up golf, archery and
other interests. On a southern California beach - probably here - Baum
sees a child with a sand crab and tells her the creature is a "woggle
bug," a name he later will use in Oz books. Another of his fantasy
characters, Lurline, is named after the yacht of the Hotel del
Coronado's owner.
- Mar. 1 - The Madison Book Co., Chicago, becomes the Reilly &
Britton Co. with Frank Kennicott Reilly as secretary/treasurer, and
Sumner S. Britton as president. The two men had worked for the Geo. M.
Hill Co. - Reilly as production manager and Britton as secretary and
head salesman.
- Spring - Denslow illustrates The Pearl and the Pumpkin.
The story is based on some ideas of Denslow's and is written by Paul
West. The two collaborate on a stage version funded by A.L. Erlanger of
Klaw and Erlanger, a leading theatrical syndicate. Denslow prepares
more than 125 illustrations. At one point, Denslow takes up diving in
Bermuda in order to better design the underwater sets required for a
particular scene.
- July 5 - The Marvelous Land of Oz, Baum's first sequel to
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, is the first book published by Reilly
& Britton, Chicago. Its twenty-five year old illustrator, John Rea
Neill, will continue to illustrate Baum and Oz books until his death in
1943.
The new book is dedicated to actors Montgomery and Stone and furthers
the adventures of the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman. Several new characters
are introduced including Jack Pumpkinhead, the Sawhorse, Prof. H. M.
Wogglebug, T. E. and Ozma, the rightful ruler of Oz. The Marvelous
Land of Oz is accompanied by The Ozmapolitan, a four-page
"newspaper from Oz." (Editor's note: Wogglebug is spelled
inconsistently in future uses as both Woggle Bug, and Woggle-Bug).
- Summer - Baum develops another special interest in Macatawa,
Mich., when he has a 25-foot mahogany launch custom built of specially
selected and matched woods. He names it the Maybelle.
- Aug. 23 - Fred Stone, the now-famous Scarecrow of The Wizard
of Oz Broadway musical, marries actress Allene Crater in
Newark, N.J. Allene is a member of the Oz cast. They eventually have
three daughters, Dorothy, Paula and Carol. As an adult, Dorothy becomes
Stone's stage partner. Celebrities who will attend the premier of Stepping
Stones, their first show together, include actress Billie Burke.
- Aug. 28 - The first story of Baum's "Queer Visitors from the
Marvelous Land of Oz" newspaper comic page, illustrated by Walt
McDougall, is published in the Philadelphia North American, The
Chicago Record Herald and other papers. Twenty-six additional
stories follow. McDougall illustrates Baum into the strip twice: in the
first story, Baum is a policeman and in the final story he is a beggar.
Its principal character, the Woggle-Bug, touches off a national fad
marked by ad posters, postcards, sheet music and buttons printed with a
contest catch phrase, "What did the Woggle-Bug Say?" Promotions for the
strip include tongue-in-cheek news reports of telegraphs from outer
space about activities of the Woggle-Bug on other planets. Others, such
as "Goat tries to eat woggle-bug button," and reports of flying objects
believed to be the character also prompt public interest.
- Sept. - Neill starts working for The Public Ledger in
Philadelphia.
- Nov. - Baum's new fairy tale, Queen Zixi of Ix, is
serialized in St. Nicholas magazine with illustrations
by Frederick Richardson.
- Dec. 11 - Marge Henderson Buell is born in Philadelphia. She
will later illustrate Ruth Plumly Thompsons 1938 non-Oz book King Kojo,
while gaining fame as Little Lulus cartoonist.
- Dec. 31 - Baum's Queen Zixi of Ix is granted copyright.
- Baum writes two stories, "Chrome Yellow" and "The Diamondback"
and mentions two others in correspondence, "Mr. Rumple's Chill" and
"Bess of the Movies." No complete copies survive. Another story,
possibly from this time period, is "The Man With the Red Shirt." Again,
no copy of the original survives, but Baum tells it to his niece,
Matilda Gage, who will write it from memory as a class assignment in
1905. Matilda's version is preserved. Its theme is more consistent with
stories Baum wrote in 1896-1897.
- Denslow begins to capitalize on the success of Oz with work that
is independent of Baum: The Scarecrow and Tin Man
booklet is published by G.W. Dillingham, New York, and he creates a
comic page with 17 installments.
- Dec. - Baum's short story, "A Kidnapped Santa Claus," appears in The
Delineator with illustrations by Frederick Richardson.
- The Woggle-Bug Game of Conundrums is produced by Parker Brothers.
- Baum writes the song "What Did the Wogglebug Say?" with music by
Teitjens. It is published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago.
- Baum writes the book and lyrics for a play called The Pagan
Potentate with music by Teitjens. It is never completed. Circa
1904.
1905
- Jan. -Sept. - Baum's series of nine short stories, "The Animal
Fairy Tales," are printed in The Delineator.
- Jan. 12 - Baum's The Woggle-Bug Book is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by Ike Morgan.
- The Woggle-Bug play opens in Milwaukee as a try-out to its
premiere. The story is based on Baum's The Marvelous Land of Oz.
Music is written by Fredric Chapin. Fred Mace has the title role.
Blance Dayo is Tip, Hall Goodfry is Jack Pumpkinhead, Phoebe Coyne is
Mombi, Mabel Hite is a character named Cap'n Prissy and Beatrice
McKenzie is General Jinjur. A book of songs and 12 pieces of sheet
music are published by M. Witmark & Sons, Chicago/New York.
- Feb. 14 - Baum's mother, Cynthia Stanton Baum, dies.
- Feb. 15 - Harold Arlen is born in Buffalo, N.Y. He will write the
music for the classic MGM film, The Wizard of Oz (1939). His
biography, Happy With the Blues, is published by Doubleday and
Company in 1961.
- Feb. 26 - "Queer Visitors from the Marvelous Land of Oz" comic
strip ends.
- In an apparent publicity stunt, newspapers announce that Baum has
purchased Pedloe Island off the coast of California. He will reportedly
turn the island into an Oz playground. No records confirm such a
purchase and no records indicate that a Pedloe Island exists. Future
reports indicate that though Baum was interested in an Oz amusement
park, he never pursued the idea.
- Feb. - Neill returns to The North American.
- Feb. 23 - Baum copyrights a new 3-act musical, The King of
Gee Whiz, (a.k.a. The Son of the Sun) with Emerson Hough.
The work is never completed but in 1906, Hough uses the title for a
children's book published by Bobbs-Merrill, Co.
- Mar. 5 - A Baum poem "Coronado, The Queen of Fairyland," is
published in the San Diego Union.
- Mar. 7 - Baum gives a public reading of chapters from his books.
- Mar. 31 - Baum lectures on "The Origin of the Fairy Tale" at the
San Diego Club.
- April 5 - Denslow purchases his Bermuda island using a $2,400
loan from Paul Teitjens.
- June 4 - The Chicago Weekly Amusement Guide mentions that on one
ride at the first modern amusement park, the Chutes, "...boats speed
through all the enchanted 'Land of Oz,' the 'Poppy Fields,' Santa Claus
Land, and a zoo of small animals."
- June 12 - Denslow designs all the character costumes for The
Land of Nod, which opens at the Chicago Opera House.
- June 18 - The Woggle-Bug premiers at the Garrick Theater
in Chicago to unanimously bad reviews. One paper notes that not even
the summer mosquitoes could have driven audiences away quicker that had
"Baum's bug." Another prints "An Epitaph" for the show which, it
writes, "died a lingering death."
- June 18 - A Baum article, "Fairy Tales on the Stage," is printed
in the Sunday Chicago Record Herald. In it, Baum says a "young
lady" had suggested he create a musical extravaganza based on The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- June - Baum's short story, "Nelebel's Fairyland," appears in The
Russ, the San Diego High School paper, following an interview Baum
granted a student reporter.
- June 24 - The Chicago Sunday Tribune includes a reference
to "Fairies of Oz" as an attraction at The Chutes, America's first
modern amusement park. Large Oz characters had been erected as a new
attraction.
- July 11 - The Woggle-Bug musical closes.
- July 16- Boston's Colonial Theatre presents the first performance
of the Denslow/Paul West production of The Pearl and the Pumpkin.
A month later, the show moves to New York City for 72 performances.
Reviews are favorable and the show goes on the road for several months
traveling as far west as Chicago. The sets are particularly remarkable,
for example, an enormous mechanical whale fills the stage; inside it is
an apartment for Davy Jones.
- Aug. - Baum's short story, "Jack Burgitt's Honor," is copyrighted
by the American Press Association and appears in Novelettes.
- Oct. 1 - Baum's Queen Zixi of Ix is published by The
Century Co., N.Y., with illustrations by Frederick Richardson. Baum
considers it one of his finest books. More traditional in its approach
to fairy tales, the book sells well but, as Baum's relentless fan mail
indicates, it doesn't satisfy the demands of children for more stories
about Oz.
- Oct. - The serialization of Baum's Queen Zixi of Ix in St.
Nicholas magazine ends .
- Denslow prepares preliminary costume designs for Uncle Remus.
Teitjens writes the score for the production which is based on the
story by Joel Chandler Harris.
- The second issue of The Ozmapolitan promotional newspaper
is produced by Reilly & Britton, Chicago.
- Baum's adult novel, The Fate of a Crown, is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Schuyler Staunton
(the name of a deceased uncle). It is illustrated by Glen C. Sheffer.
The first half of the book is serialized in the Philadelphia North
American prior to publication. The serialization uses illustrations
by John R. Neill.
- Baum purchases one of the first Ford automobiles. His son Robert
who is at school in Pontiac, Mich., picks the engine by serial number
in Detroit and visits the assembly line during the winter to watch the
car being produced.
- 1905-1906 - Baum provides an introduction to The Christmas
Stocking series of small books. They are published by Reilly &
Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by an anonymous artist. His
introduction - a short history of the traditional Christmas stocking -
is included in all six titles: The Night Before Christmas;
Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty; Animal A.B.C. - A Child's
Visit to the Zoo; The Story of Little Black Sambo; Fairy Tales from
Grimm; Fairy Tales from Anderson.
1906
- Jan. 28 - Frank and Maud Baum sail from New York to see Egypt and
parts of Europe. They reach the Straight of Gibraltar on Feb. 6,
Alexandria on Feb. 8 and the Italian mainland just as Mount Vesuvius
erupts on April 15. Baum described it as "the only thing that smoked
more than I did." Baum's life-long heart condition keeps him from
climbing the Great Pyramid, but Maud goes up. Even in Egypt they
encounter Oz fans. One young girl they meet had even carried The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz with her while crossing the desert from
North Africa in a camel caravan.
- May 19 - Baum's six short books, The Twinkle Tales with
illustrations by Maginel Wright Enright (a sister of architect Frank
Lloyd Wright) are published by Reilly and Britton, Chicago, using the
pseudonym Laura Bancroft. They are: Mr. Woodchuck, Bandit Jim Crow,
Prince Mud Turtle, Twinkle's Enchantment and Sugar-Loaf
Mountain.
- June 27 - Baum's son Frank Joslyn Baum marries Helen Louise Snow.
The couple has two children.
- Fall - The Baum family moves from Forest Ave. to an apartment at
5243 Michigan Ave.
- Oct. 6 - A Harper's Weekly cover features cartoonist W.A.
Rogers' drawing of W. R. Hearst dressed as a scarecrow standing in a
mud puddle. The cartoon is titled "The Wizard of Ooze." Similar
cartoons follow.
- Baum's John Dough and the Cherub is published by Reilly
& Britton, Chicago with illustrations by John R. Neill. This new
fantasy also is serialized in the Washington Sunday Star and
other papers from Oct. 14 to Dec. 30. The character of the Cherub is
described throughout the book with no gender references. A contest
blank in the front of the book's first edition invites readers to
participate in a contest by writing an essay describing why they think
the Cherub is either a boy or a girl.
- Baum's first books for older girls, Aunt Jane's Nieces
and Aunt Jane's Nieces Abroad, are published by Reilly &
Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Edith Van Dyne. Emile A. Nelson
provides illustrations for both books. Baum's Oct. 6 contract (which he
wrote) reads that he "shall deliver to the Reilly & Britton Co. on
or before March 1, 1906, a book for young girls on the style of the
Louisa May Alcott stories but not so good ... the authorship to be
ascribed to ... some ... mythological female."
- Baum's next adult novel, Daughters of Destiny, is
published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym
Schuyler Staunton with illustrations by Thomas Mitchell Pierce and
Harold DeLay.
- Baum's new book for girls, Annabel, is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Suzanne Metcalf. The
illustrations are by H. Putnam Hall.
- Baum's first boys' adventure story, Sam Steele's Adventures
on Land and Sea, is published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago,
using the pseudonym Captain Hugh Fitzgerald. Howard Heath provides the
illustrations.
- The Baums are spending summers in Macatawa, November to January
in a Chicago apartment on Michigan Avenue, and the rest of the year at
the Hotel del Coronado in California.
- Denslow illustrates Billy Bounce. The book is published
by G.W. Dillingham Co., New York. Both Denslow and Dudley A. Bragdon
are credited as authors. The book is based on a comic strip character
that Denslow originally illustrated in 1901. Billy Bounce is
considered one of the worst efforts of Denslow's career.
- Denslow's wife, Frances (Doolittle) Denslow, leaves him.
1907
- Jan 11 - Baum's brother Henry Clay "Dr. Harry" marries Luise
Grosse Dattam. The couple has two children, Cynthia and Elizabeth.
- Feb. 10 - The San Diego Union publishes Baum's "Witty
Presentation Speech" honoring Morgan Ross, manager of the Hotel del
Coronado. At the event, Baum presents Ross with a gold watch set with
diamonds that follows a crown design used like a logo in Coronado
publicity literature.
- A Wizard of Oz float is featured in the children's literature
parade during New Orleans' Mardi Gras festivities. Attendees include L.
Frank Baum. A penny postcard pictures the colorful carnival attraction.
- July 22 - Baum's Father Goose's Year Book is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by Walter J. Enright.
- Baum's new fantasy, Policeman Bluejay, is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Laura Bancroft.
- July 29 - Baum's second Oz sequel, Ozma of Oz, is
published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago with illustrations by John
R. Neill. In it, Dorothy Gale returns to Oz for her second adventure.
In order for his central character to be more fashionable, Dorothy is
now blonde. Apparently for contrast, Ozma, who had "ruddy gold tresses"
in The Marvelous Land of Oz, is suddenly brunette. Also to be
in fashion, Dorothy speaks in a lisping baby-talk style. New characters
include Tik-
Tok, a copper clockwork man, a yellow hen named Billina and a new
antagonistic, the Nome King. (Note: In later Oz books "Nome" is spelled
Gnome.)
- Aug. 15 - John Frederick "Jack" Snow born in Piqua, Miami County,
Ohio. As an author, he will write The Magical Mimics of Oz (1946),
The Shaggy Man of Oz (1949) and Who's Who in Oz (1954).
He also will do extensive Baum research and be one of the first private
"collectors" of Oz/Baum material.
- Aug. 18 - A lengthy interview with Baum appears in the Grand
Rapids Herald accompanied by interior photos taken at his
summer cottage, The Sign of the Goose.
- Sept. 1 - A Baum poem, "To Macatawa," is published in the Grand
Rapids Sunday Herald.
- Nov. 9 - Baum's invitation to his and Maud's 25th anniversary
reads in part: "Quarrels: just a few. Wife in tears: three times (cat
died; bonnet spoiled; sore toe). Husband swore: one thousand one
hundred and eighty-seven times; at wife 0. Broke, occasionally; bent,
often."
- Baum privately prints a new novel for adults, Tamawaca Folks,
a Summer Comedy, using the pseudonym John Estes Cooke. Publisher
credit is listed as Tamawaca Press, U.S.A. "Tamawaca" is a thinly
veiled reference to Macatawa Island where the Baum family spends
summers. Area residents and community activities are satirized
including "an author fellow ... stubborn, loud-mouthed and pig-headed
... He had about as much diplomacy as a cannon ball..."
- Baum's first boys' series continues with Sam Steele's
Adventures in Panama is published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago,
using the pseudonym Captain Hugh Fitzgerald with illustrations by
Howard Heath.
- Maud Baum writes In Other Lands Than Ours. Her record of
their recent travels abroad is printed privately. The preface and
photographs are Baum's.
- Baum begins two plays, though neither is produced and may not
have been completed. They are Down Missouri Way and Our Man.
- Denslow illustrates The Jeweled Toad by Isabel Johnston.
It is published by Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis, Ind.
- An undated clipping from this period reports that students at a
school in Muskogee, Indian Territory, are asked to vote on the greatest
American who ever lived. Their results: Abraham Lincoln, 7; George
Washington, 14; L. Frank Baum, 68.
1908
- April 2 - Christian "Buddy" Ebsen, Jr., is born in Belleville,
Ill. He will be briefly cast by MGM as the Scarecrow for The Wizard
of Oz (1939), switch roles with Ray Bolger to be the Tin Man, then
be replaced by Jack Haley following a life-threatening allergic
reaction to his character's metallic make-up.
- April 5 - Baum writes a poem to a new baby born at the Hotel del
Coronado. The guests present the new parents with a silver loving cup.
- June 18 - Baum's Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz is
published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by John
R. Neill. It returns Dorothy to Oz for her third adventure.
- July 13 - Baum's first grandchild, Joslyn Stanton Baum, born in
Chicago to Helen Snow and Frank Joslyn Baum. The Road to Oz is
dedicated to him and soon he is nick named Tik-Tok after the popular Oz
character.
- Sept. 24 - Baum's Fairylogue and Radio-Plays open in
Grand Rapids, Mich. In this traveling stage production filled with
special effects, Baum supports a two-hour lecture he wrote with a show
that includes live actors, music, color film (hand-
tinted in Paris using a technique invented by Michel Radio) and slides
to tell Oz stories and John Dough and the Cherub. The Chicago Tribune
describe it as ". . . a travelogue that takes you to Oz instead of
China."
William Nicholas Selig, Chicago, does the film production work. Frank
Jr. is the projectionist. The cast includes: Romola Remus, Dorothy;
Frank Burns, Scarecrow; Joseph Schrode, Cowardly Lion, Imogene the Cow
and the Gingerbread Man; Grace Elder, Chick the Cherub. An orchestra
travels with the cast and crew.
- Nov. 8 - The first of twelve issues of St. Nicholas
magazine include Denslow illustrations of the theme, When I Grow Up.
Each illustration describes a child's perspective on life in a certain
profession. This material is published later in a single volume in (When
I Grow Up, The Century Co., New York, 1909).
- Dec. 16 - Fairylogue and Radio-Plays closes in New York
City. Baum had seriously underestimated the financial backing needed to
sustain such a large show.
- Baum's adult novel, The Last Egyptian, a Romance of the Nile,
is published anonymously by Edward Stern & Co., Philadelphia, with
illustrations by Francis P. Wightman. Baum had met Stern during his own
Egyptian adventure (1905-1906) and submitted the book at the
publisher's request. "It will have to be published under a pen name (if
it has the luck to be published at all) because I cannot interfere with
my children's books by posing as a novelist," wrote Frank.
- The two Sam Steele books (1906 and 1907) are reissued by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, under the titles The Boy Fortune
Hunters in Alaska and The Boy Fortune Hunters in Panama
with the pseudonym changed to Floyd Akers. The original illustrations
are maintained.
- Baum continues his boys' series with The Boy Fortune Hunters
in Egypt published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the
pseudonym Floyd Akers with illustrations by Howard Heath.
- Baum continues his successful girls' series with Aunt Jane's
Nieces at Millville published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago,
using the pseudonym Edith Van Dyne. A frontispiece is provided by Emile
A. Nelson.
- Baum's American Fairy Tales are reprinted by Bobbs-
Merrill, Indianapolis, Ind., with 16 two-color plates by George Kerr.
Three new stories are included.
- Denslow moves to Buffalo, N.Y., and becomes increasingly
dependent on post and advertising work. Niagara Lithography Co. of
Buffalo, N.Y., provides many of these jobs including The Teddy
Bear's Christmas.
- Baum designs the crown chandeliers in the Hotel del Coronado's
dining room. They are still in use at the Coronado Island resort 90
years later. Circa 1908.
1909
- July 10 - Baum's The Road to Oz, is published by Reilly
& Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill, is
Dorothy's fourth trip to Oz. The plot includes a birthday party for
Ozma attended by Santa Claus and other central characters from Baum's
earlier fairy tales. Neill illustrates a visit by Dorothy and Toto to
statues of themselves. The statues are styled after Denslow's original
drawings with his distinctive sea horse mark at each sculpture's base.
All illustrations for this Oz book are detailed line drawings. The
publishers used colored paper for interior pages. As Dorothy travels
from country to country, the pages of the text change to mirror a
dominant color of that country. Thus, when action is taking place in
the Emerald City, the pages are green.
- A lengthy interview with Baum is published in The Advance,
a journal of the Congregational Church.
- Aug. - Denslow mortgages his island to Paul Teitjens for $500. In
less than two years a $3,000 mortgage follows. Neither loan is ever
repaid. The island eventually becomes the home of a former mayor of
Hamilton, Bermuda, Arthur William Bluck.
- Aug. - Theater magazine reports that a "pet project" of
Mr. Baum's is a children's theater, being built in New York City on
West 57th street near Carnegie Hall.
- Denslow's When I Grow Up (a.k.a. Dreams of Childhood)
is published by The Century Company, New York. The book reprints
material published in St. Nicholas magazine (1908-
1909) with 10 additional episodes.
- Dec. 9 - A Baum short play, "The Fairy Prince," is published in Entertaining
complete with a toy theater and miniature puppets to cut out and
assemble
- Winter - The Baums rent a home on Coronado Island.
- Aug. 19 - Baum's article about writing for children, "Modern
Fairy Tales" is printed in The Advance.
- Baum's girls' story, Aunt Jane's Nieces at Work, is
published by Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Edith
Van Dyne. The frontispiece again is provided by Emile A. Nelson.
- Baum's The Boy Fortune Hunters in China is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Floyd Akers. The
story reflects Frank J. Baum's tour of duty in the Pacific in 1904.
- Baum begins the book and lyrics with Charles Dillingham for an
opera, Peter & Paul, with music by Arthur Pryor. It is
never produced and may not have been completed. Reportedly, it is being
developed for Montgomery and Stone.
- With George Scarborough, Baum writes the book and lyrics for a
3-act musical comedy, The Pipes O' Pan, which is never
produced. It was reportedly written to be staged by the Shuberts at the
Lyric in New York City early in the Fall. Paul Teitjens writes the
music.
- Following the failure of his "Fairylogue and Radio Plays,"
financial difficulties for Baum increase and he establishes a contract
with Reilly & Britton for a monthly salary based on his 1908 sales.
- Denslow visits his brother, Norton, in England.
- 1909-1910 Neill illustrates "The Little Journeys of Nip and
Tuck," with verses by W. R. Brandford, for the Philadelphia North
American.
- Baum writes an unproduced play, The Girl from Oz about a
girl named Elile. Circa 1909.
- Baum begins and possibly completes an unproduced musical
extravaganza - also planned with Montgomery and Stone in mind, - The
Rainbow's Daughter, or the Magnet of Love (a.k.a. Ozma,
or the Rainbow's Daughter). Circa 1909.
- Baum writes the book and lyrics for a musical, Ozma of Oz,
with music by Manuel Klein. It may be a rewrite of The Rainbow's
Daughter. Circa 1909.
- Baum begins and possibly completes an unproduced musical
extravaganza, The Koran of the Prophet. Circa 1909.
1910
- Mar. 26 - The Selig Polyscope Production Co. releases a new
feature film, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Baum may have written
the scenario for this and later Selig film releases.
- April 19 - The Selig Polyscope Production Co. releases a film
short, Dorothy and the Scarecrow in Oz. Selig releases both
this and The Land of Oz (5/19/10) as payment for his last
investment in the Radio Plays (1908). The films use either out-takes or
new material re-using sets and costumes from the Fairylogue and
Radio Plays - opinions differ and no authoritative records remain.
- The Selig Polyscope Production Co. releases a film short, The
Land of Oz..
- July 20 - Baum's The Emerald City of Oz is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
Baum insists that Dorothy's fifth Oz adventure will be his last. In it,
she, Toto, Aunt Em and Uncle Henry take up permanent residence in Oz
and Oz is magically cut off from the rest of the world. Twenty thousand
copies sell in the first year of publication.
- Oct. 22 - Baum's son Harry Neal marries his second wife, Mary L.
Niles.
- Dec. - Baum's short story, "Juggerjook," is published in St.
Nicholas.
- Dec. - Baum's short story, "The Man Fairy," is published in Ladies
World.
- Dec. 19 - The Selig Polyscope Production Co. releases another
Baum film short, John Dough and the Cherub.
- Dec. - The Baums move to "Ozcot," a new family home built on a
double lot at 1749 Cherokee (a.k.a.149 Magnolia Ave. - the house was
located on the southwest corner of the intersection of Cherokee and
Yucca or the northwest corner of the 1700 block) in Hollywood with
money Maud inherits from her mother. The home includes an aviary and
fish pond in an enclosed garden. Baum becomes a champion amateur
horticulturist receiving 21 prizes for his flowers during his lifetime.
He plants chrysanthemums to spell Oz in the garden. He also keeps
chickens (Rhode Island Reds). In the house, one wall is covered with
favorite photos of Maud.
- Baum's Aunt Jane's Nieces in Society is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Edith Van Dyne. The
frontispiece is provided by Emile A. Nelson.
- Baum's The Boy Fortune Hunters in Yucatan is published by
Reilly & Britton, Chicago, using the pseudonym Floyd Akers. The
frontispiece is provided by George A. Reiman.
- L. Frank Baum's Juvenile Speaker; Readings and Recitations in
Prose and Verse, Humorous and Otherwise is published by Reilly
& Britton, Chicago. This collection of short stories, poems and
other readings are drawn from previous Baum books and reuses original
illustrations by John R. Neill and Maginel Wright Enright.
- Baum writes an untitled poem on the occasion of the birth of a
grandson to his friend P.M. Musser.
- Baum writes two plays, The Pea-Green Poodle, based on one
of his Animal Fairy Tales, and The Clock Shop.
- Denslow's son from his first marriage, W.W. Denslow III, marries
Annalia Delemmo.
© Copyright The International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc.
Page design copyright 1996, 1997 The Cuttenclips, Houston, Texas
First Draft © Copyright Nate Barlow 1994
Revised/expanded - June 10, 1995, to include contributions from Bill
Stillman.
Revised - June 25, 1995, to include contributions from John Fricke,
Steve Teller.
Edited for style - July 8, 1995, Jane Albright.
Further Revised - July 24, 1995, to include contributions from Peter
Schulenburg.
Further revised - August 21, 1995, to include contributions from
Willard Carroll.
Further revised - Sept. 5, 1995, to include
contributions/corrections by Eric Shanower.
Further revised - Sept. 11, 1995 to correct and include information
gathered so far using my own reference collection and cross-referencing
an extensive chronology contributed by Angelica Shirley Carpenter.
Sept. 25-30, 1995 - New material from Carpenter's list included.
Oct. 1-4, 1995 - Copyedited, Patty Tobias
Oct.16. - Dec. 13, 1995 - Incorporated additional info. from Baum
Bugles and material provided by Peter Schulenburg.
April/May 1996 - More edits. Input from Doug Greene, Mike Gessel,
Ozma Baum Mantele, Baum family history records and wills.
July 4, 1996 - Copyedits and corrections noted during 1996
Ozmopolitan convention. Also material gleaned from Our Landlady
(Koupal).
Note: edits from Feb-June, 1997 lost due to disk corruption.
Sept. 24, 1997 - Additional info from recent publications
including Brandywine's Denslow exhibit catalog, Cox's expanded MGM
Munchkin book, Bugles and primary research.
Oct. 28, 2007 - Additional information for 1997, to include
contributions from Scott Cummings
Oct. 28, 2007 - All information for years 1998-2007 courteously
provided by Scott. Cummings