The Correspondence series documents Martindell's personal as well as professional life. The series contains family letters as well as those relating to her time in the New Jersey State Senate, State Department, and time as ambassador. There are also letters regarding her activities in New Jersey politics and as an early backer of Jimmy Carter, the head of the Women's Division of the Democratic Party, and an influential financer of campaigns. Many of the letters contain information about both her personal life and her career and political activities. Of special note are folders of letters from Jimmy Carter, Walter Mondale, and Frank Thompson. Additionally there are letters from Bill Bradley, Brendan T. Byrne, Robert Torricelli, Ronald Reagan, and Gary Hart.
Arranged alphabetically by subject.
Ambassadorial, 1979
Bradley, Bill, 1993
Byrne, Brendan T, 1977, 1982
Campaign, 1973-1977
Carter Administration, 1977
Carter, Jimmy, 1982
Center for National Policy, 1990
Democratic National Committee, 1972
Distinguished People, 1980-1984
Family, 1918-1983
Clark, Blair, dates not examined
Dearest Family Letters, 1979-1981
Miscellaneous Family, 1969-1983
Gore, Albert, 1992
Hughes, Richard J, 1979
IRS Inquiry, 1975
Legislative, 1971-1977
Maita, 1976-1977
Mondale, Walter, 1980-1984
New Zealand, 1984-1986
North Country School, 1963-1983
Political, 1972-1973
Position Inquiries, 1976-1977
Rutgers University, 1984
Scott, George, 1945-1971
Senate, 1974-1975
Thank You Letters, 1974-1978
Thompson, Frank, 1967-1975
Torricelli, Robert, 1987
Wellington Letters, 1979-1981
Woollaston, Toss, 1980s-1990s
Miscellaneous and undated, 1958-1997
The Professional and Political Career series documents Martindell's career, including her time in the New Jersey State Senate, as director of the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance, as ambassador to New Zealand and Western Samoa, as well as her involvement with New Jersey Democratic Party and the Carter campaign. The series includes statements, speeches, correspondence and other materials, and is divided into four subseries: Ambassador to New Zealand, Democratic Party, New Jersey State Senate and Subject Files.
All subseries are arranged alphabetically by subject.
Ambassadorial Seminar, 1979
Background Info, 1980-1986
Forms and Memos, 1979-1981
Oral History Interview, 1981
Personal Finances, 1978-1979
Speeches, 1991
Miscellaneous, 1971-1989
General, 1985-1989
Ambassadorial Files, circa 1979
Clippings, 1971-1987
Carter, Jimmy, 1975-1976
Democratic National Committee, 1970
Democratic National Convention, 1976
Hart, Gary, 1983-1984
McCarthy Campaign, 1968
Mondale Fundraising, 1979-1983
New Jersey, circa 1969
New Jersey (continued), 1972-1974
Presidential Candidates, 1992
Schroeder, Patricia, 1987
Miscellaneous, 1963-1973
Bills, 1974-1977
Campaign, 1973
Election (Clippings), 1973
Joint Appropriations Committee, 1977
Mailings, 1973
Press Releases, 1973-1977
Resolutions, 1974-1977
State Committee Issues Forum, 1969
Statements, Legislative, 1974
Women, 1972-1976
Miscellaneous, 1974-1977
General, 1973-, circa 1975
Clippings, 1974-1977
Scrapbooks, circa 1975
Congressional Testimony, circa 1985
Dugan, James, 1975-1976
Eagleton Institute, 1971
Insurance Report, 1973-1977
Clippings, 1973
Legal Documents, 1973
Legal Documents (continued), 1973
Miscellaneous, circa 1973
Meyner, Helen, 1972
New Jersey Institute on Conflict Resolution and Peace Studies (continued) (1 folder), 1984-1987
Nuclear Weapons, circa 1983
Partners for Peace, circa 1977
Prison Case Work, 1974-1976
Publicity Clippings, 1971-1992
Queen's Service Order, 1990
Soviet Conference, 1983
Speeches, 1972-1994
Speeches (continued), 1972-1994
State Department, 1977
Statements, undated
Thompson, Frank, 1970
Watergate, circa 1973
Welfare, undated
Women, 1972-1996
General (1 folder), 1972-1996
General (continued), 1972-1996
Women's Committee, 1981-1986
Miscellaneous Clippings, undated
The Memoirs series consists of Martindell's source material, notes, and drafts relating to the unpublished autobiography that she wrote in the late 1990s. These documents were moved by Martindell, during the writing process, to their present arrangement from elsewhere within her own files. Materials range from family information from the late 19th century to records documenting Martindell's political activities in the late 1980s. This series is divided into two subseries: Chapter Files and Subject Files
The materials in this series are arranged into Chapter files and Subject files.
Chapter 3: Beginnings, 1990-1992
Chapter 4: Nanny, 1994
Chapter 5: The Blairs, 1898-1985
Chapter 6: The Clarks, 1970-1989
Chapter 8: School Days, 1991
Chapter 10: Door Slams Shut, undated
Chapter 11: The War, undated
Chapter 13: Innkeepers, 1978-1995
Chapter 15: Remarriage, 1950-1986
Chapter 19: City of God, undated
Chapter 23: Party Discipline, 1969-1971
Chapter 28: Casinos - No Dice, 1974
Chapter 29: Taxes, Taxes, 1974-1976
Chapter 33: Wellington, 1979-1980
Chapter 34: Samoan Tales, 1979-1980
Chapter 35: Antarctica, 1979
Chapter 39: Farewells, 1981
Chapter 40: Toss, 1992
Clippings, 1983-1991
Correspondence, 1973-1997
Diary, undated
Drafts, undated
Expenses, 1990-1992
Publication, 1989-1992
Miscellaneous and undated, 1968-1995
The Subject Files series is primarily composed of documents relating to Martindell's personal activities and is arranged alphabetically. Included are materials detailing Martindell's education, from high school to a course taken at Princeton University in 1999, as well as correspondence and Freedom of Information Act requests regarding Federal Bureau of Investigation documents pertaining to Martindell, and a draft of a New Jersey legislature resolution regarding impeachment of Richard Nixon. There is also a scrapbook from a trip taken by Martindell in 1923. Materials include school records, correspondence, clippings, and notebooks.
Arranged alphabetically by subject.
Birthday, 1994
Education, 1928-2002
Impeachment, 1974
Oral History Project, 1986-1991
Veendam (Trip Scrapbook), 1923
Miscellaneous, 1964-2008
Series 5: Photographs, 1929-2002
The Photograph series contains photographs, arranged alphabetically by subject, from Martindell's personal and professional lives. Included are photographs of Martindell with Jimmy Carter and George McGovern and from Martindell's state senate campaign, as well as publicity shots and photographs of her various travels. Researchers should note that a small number of photographs are available in the Memoirs series.
Arranged alphabetically by subject.
Ambassador, 1980
Antarctica, undated
Book, undated
Byrne, Brendan, 1974
Boston Globe, undated
Carter, Jimmy, undated
Charles, Prince of Wales, undated
Clinton, William, 1994
Hart, Gary, 1987
McGovern, George, 1972
Personal, 1929-2001
Publicity, undated
Professional, undated
Queen's Service Order, undated
Requests - Personal, 1970
Rutgers, undated
Senate, 1972-1975
Smith College, 2000-2002
Zip disk (JPG files), undated
Box 31 includes 3 folders of oversize material removed from the series listed above, including a reception book from the United States Embassy in New Zealand which was used during Martindell's time as Ambassador.
For purposes of appropriate storage, the materials in this series are not arranged in any particular order.
- Scope and Contents
The Anne Martindell papers document Martindell's personal and professional activities from the 1920s to the 1990s. The bulk of the collection concerns Martindell's professional career in New Jersey politics, the State Department's Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance, and as ambassador to New Zealand and Western Samoa. There is little material related to the United States-New Zealand Council, which Martindell helped to found.
- Collection Creator Biography:
Martindell
Anne Clark Martindell was born in New York City's Park Plaza Hotel on July 18, 1914. She attended boarding school in Maryland and enrolled at Smith College in 1932. After her first year at Smith, Martindell's father insisted that she return home, maintaining that no man would want to marry an educated woman. (Martindell, who had wanted to go on to law school, would later return to Smith College and earn her bachelor's degree in the class of 2002, at the age of 87. She was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.) After leaving Smith, Martindell married George Scott, with whom she had three children. Martindell divorced Scott after thirteen years of marriage. She later married Jackson Martindell, owner of the Who's Who publications, and had a son.
Martindell was in her fifties when she first became active in politics. She attended the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago in support of Senate candidate Eugene McCarthy, where she observed the violence against protesters of the Vietnam War. Shortly thereafter, she was invited to become vice-chair of the New Jersey Democratic Party. After four years in that post, Martindell was encouraged to run for the state senate seat in predominantly Republican Mercer County, and after an unexpected victory she spent her four-year term concentrating on women's issues, education, and the environment. While in the state senate, she served as chair of the Education Committee, member of the Appropriations Committee, chair of the Budget Revision Subcommittee for Higher Education, chair of the Joint State Library Committee, member of the Senate Nursing Home Commission, and chair of the Committee to Defeat Casino Gambling.
Martindell attended the 1976 Democratic National Convention as a Carter delegate, and was an active voice for Jimmy Carter throughout New Jersey. After Carter's election to the presidency, Martindell was appointed to the Commission to Review Ambassadorial Appointments, and went on to become director of the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA), part of the State Department's Agency for International Development. In the course of her work for OFDA, she surveyed the reconstruction efforts at natural disaster sites throughout the world. This work would eventually bring her to the attention of the Ambassadorship Review Board. She was later nominated for the ambassadorship to New Zealand and Western Samoa in 1979, and served in that capacity until 1981.
During her two-year term as ambassador, Martindell traveled widely, and worked hard to improve and maintain positive relations between the U. S. and New Zealand. As the first female ambassador to New Zealand, she faced some resistance, but her persistence and personal charm endeared her to the people of New Zealand. She met New Zealand painter Tosswill Woollaston during her time as ambassador, and maintained a close relationship with him until his death in 1998.
After returning from New Zealand, Martindell retained close ties with the country, helping to found the United States-New Zealand Council in 1986. Though she continued to travel frequently, Martindell remained active in New Jersey politics as a fundraiser and donor
- Acquisition:
Received in 2003 . Accession records associated with this collection are ML.2003.017 and ML.2006.003.
An accrual of one box of papers was received from Roger Martindell in February, 2019 (ML.2019.007).
- Accruals
No accruals are expected.
- Appraisal
Duplicates, personal material, and documents of little evidential or information value were separated from the collection and returned to Ms. Martindell's family.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Leah A. Smith in 2004. Finding aid written by Leah A. Smith in August, 2004. Material in a subsequent accession was incorporated in 2006 and the finding aid was updated at this time. Zip disk in Series 5 was processed by Elena Colon-Marrero in June 2015. Finding aid updated in February, 2019 by Phoebe Nobles.
- Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
- Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
This collection contains materials acquired from a Zip Disk. Researchers are responsible for meeting the technical requirements needed to access these materials, including any and all hardware and software.
- Credit this material:
Anne Martindell Papers; Public Policy Papers, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/fb494841v
- Location:
-
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library65 Olden StreetPrinceton, NJ 08540, USA
- Storage Note:
- Mudd Manuscript Library (scamudd): Box 1-32