1. ∗entry included in the 27 pieces of Professor Murray’s writings gathered in Endeavors in psychology: Selections from the personology of Henry A. Murray, edited by E.S. Shneidman, New York: Harper & Row, 1981a, 641 Pages, with a B&W photograph of Professor Murray. On page 99, Dr. Shneidman indicates that the title of this collection was selected by Professor Murray himself - it obviously had great personal meaning for him - JSM.
2. Murray, H. A. (1925–1988: inclusive). Papers of Henry A. Murray [231 containers; HUGFP 97.90tr] [Offsite Storage Accession #13976], Harvard University Archives. Detailed inventory available on paper in repository or electronically: http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.ARCH:hua09001 – JSM.
3. Murray, H. A. (1924–1963). Melville in the making: Biography of Herman Melville. [This is the potential title to which Professor Murray referred in 1973 (Robinson, 1992, p. 367). By 1938, the manuscript ran to over 1,000 pages. In 1939, Conrad Potter Aiken, 1889–1973, a Harvard alumnus and “friend” of Professor Murray, dealt a devastating blow at Thanksgiving by declaring that his reaction to the first two or three chapters of Murray’s biography was that he was “appalled” by what he had read since it was “inflated and overblown” (Robinson, 1992, p. 243.) Anderson’s version is that Conrad Aiken had told his “friend,” “throw it out and start over!” (emphasis added – JSM, Anderson, J.W., in preparation, p. 49). This had a lasting and traumatizing impact on Professor Murray, and he whittled his manuscript down to the existing 800 pages, and it has remained unpublished. Copies can be found in the Harvard University archives – see above; Forrest Glen Robinson also has copies, https:// forrestrobinson.sites.ucsc.edu/ – JSM.]
4. Murray, H. A. (1924–1975). Young Melville. [This is the title of an unpublished manuscript that attempted to limit the above citation to just one era in Herman Melville’s life story. James William Anderson, M.Div. (cum laude), Ph.D. refers to helping Professor Murray with this manuscript in the summer of 1975 – Anderson (in preparation, cited below, p. 51 of his own manuscript) was Professor Murray’s Research Assistant. Possibly included in the Papers of Henry A. Murray, see above – JSM.]
5. Murray, H. A., & Peabody, E. (1924). There is an exchange of letters between Dr. Murray and Endicott Peabody, 1857–1944, who was the Rector of the Groton School which Dr. Murray attended for 5 years. Murray (1919a) reveals a published critique of The Groton School. While there are many unpublished letters between the two (see Auchincloss, 1983), one exchange appeared in print in Peabody of Groton: A portrait by Frank D. Ashburn, alumnus of Groton. New York: Coward, McCann, 494 Pages, 242–247. This book is available online: https://www.questia.com/library/20038/peabody-of-groton-a-portrait