The following biographical data has been supplied by Thomas Henry Kenny. Paul C. Stahr, 69, noted illustrator, who contributed to Harper's Bazaar, American Magazine, Argosy, Collier's Weekly, Woman's... Read full biography
The following biographical data has been supplied by Thomas Henry Kenny. Paul C. Stahr, 69, noted illustrator, who contributed to Harper's Bazaar, American Magazine, Argosy, Collier's Weekly, Woman's Home Companion and other magazines, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died at Long Beach, New York... Read full biography
The following biographical data has been supplied by Thomas Henry Kenny. Paul C. Stahr, 69, noted illustrator, who contributed to Harper's Bazaar, American Magazine, Argosy, Collier's Weekly, Woman's Home Companion and other magazines, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died at Long Beach, New York Hospital in 1953. (I do not have the day or month of his death). In 1954, I purchased 100 paintings on canvas with Argosy paste-ups, from John Mulraney, a dealer in Woodmere, New York. The paintings... Read full biography
The following biographical data has been supplied by Thomas Henry Kenny. Paul C. Stahr, 69, noted illustrator, who contributed to Harper's Bazaar, American Magazine, Argosy, Collier's Weekly, Woman's Home Companion and other magazines, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died at Long Beach, New York Hospital in 1953. (I do not have the day or month of his death). In 1954, I purchased 100 paintings on canvas with Argosy paste-ups, from John Mulraney, a dealer in Woodmere, New York. The paintings were part of the Paul Stahr estate. Over the years I sold off the paintings until I now have only two left, which I intend to keep. His son Jerry, an accountant, was a neighbor on Jerome Avenue in Mineola, New York. A friend of mine, George Gaydos,... Read full biography
The following biographical data has been supplied by Thomas Henry Kenny. Paul C. Stahr, 69, noted illustrator, who contributed to Harper's Bazaar, American Magazine, Argosy, Collier's Weekly, Woman's Home Companion and other magazines, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died at Long Beach, New York Hospital in 1953. (I do not have the day or month of his death). In 1954, I purchased 100 paintings on canvas with Argosy paste-ups, from John Mulraney, a dealer in Woodmere, New York. The paintings were part of the Paul Stahr estate. Over the years I sold off the paintings until I now have only two left, which I intend to keep. His son Jerry, an accountant, was a neighbor on Jerome Avenue in Mineola, New York. A friend of mine, George Gaydos, when a young man knew the Stahr family well and dated one of the daughters. Paul Stahr did a portrait of John P... Read full biography
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