• IdentificationWing Mod MS Carrier
  • TitleInventory of the Gertrude Lueneburg Carrier Papers, 1905-1994 Wing.Mod.MS.Carrier
  • PublisherThe Newberry Library - Modern Manuscripts
  • RepositoryThe Newberry Library - Modern Manuscripts
  • Physical Description9.0 linear feet (5 boxes and 4 oversize boxes)
  • Date1905-1994
  • Location4a 26 11-12
  • AbstractChicago calligrapher, illuminator, and designer. The papers consist largely of roughs and correspondence relating to freelance design and lettering projects. There are also a few student works and some juvenalia.
  • OriginationCarrier, Gertrude Lueneburg, 1902-1991

Gift of Walter Lueneburg, 1991.

The Gertrude Lueneburg Carrier Papers are open for research in the Special Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III).

The Gertrude Lueneburg Carrier Papers are the physical property of the Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections.

Gertrude Lueneburg Carrier Papers, The Newberry Library, Chicago.

Tom Greensfelder, 1992; Mette Shayne, 2014-2015

Chicago calligrapher, illuminator, and designer.

Gertrude Lueneburg Carrier (1902-1991) was a broadly talented calligrapher, illuminator, and designer, probably Chicago’s most prominent woman lettering artist in the middle years of the twentieth century. By the time of the calligraphic revival of the 1970s, she was mentor and model to many who were just then discovering the art of calligraphy, as well as a living link with the methods and ideals of Edward Johnston, which had been popularized in the U.S. by her teacher at the School of the Art Institute, Ernst F. Detterer (later curator of the Wing collection at the Newberry). Gertrude Lueneburg graduated from the School of the Art Institute in 1923. She worked for the Scriptorium of Coella Lindsay Ricketts in the mid 1920s and thereafter free-lanced, doing certificates, logos, letterheads, broadsides, greeting cards and bookplates. She married Edward J. Carrier in 1940. Among her most important clients was Samuel Cardinal Stritch (archbishop of Chicago, 1939-1958) who commissioned several sets of altar cards. From 1963 to 1978, Mrs. Carrier worked for the decorating studio of Milan Bulovic. A memorial article and interview appeared in the Chicago Calligraphy Collective Letter of 1995 in conjunction with a small exhibit of her work at the Newberry.

The Carrier papers consist largely of roughs and correspondence relating to free-lance projects of all sorts, from 1928-1989. These is also student work and notebooks from 1921-1923, a small amount of personal correspondence, some printed items and a few artifacts. Several finished calligraphic manuscripts have been catalogued separately.

Papers are organized in the following series:

Series 1: Correspondence, 1930-1987 Box 1 Series 2: Design Projects, 1924-1989 Boxes 1-3, 5-7 Series 3: Religious Works, 1950-1970 Boxes 4, 8 Series 4: Biographical, 1905-1994 Boxes 4, 9

  • Names
    • Bulovic, Milan
    • Carrier, Gertrude Lueneburg, 1902-1991
    • Chicago Calligraphy Collective.
    • Ricketts, C. L. (Coella Lindsay), 1859-1941
    • Stritch, Samuel Alphonsus, 1887-1958.
  • Subject
    • Calligraphers -- Illinois -- Chicago
    • Calligraphy -- Illinois -- Chicago
    • Chicago
    • Design
    • Designers -- Illinois -- Chicago
    • Liturgical books -- Illinois -- Chicago
    • Printing History and Book Arts