News and Events

Library awarded grant to digitize historic Patterson family letters

Archivist Natalia Gutierrez-Jones (right) and Aika Minja ’27, student archives assistant, are working this summer to digitize personal letters of the Patterson family.
July 17, 2025
Linda Blaser

Lake Forest College has received a $3,000 grant from the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board to digitize a significant part of its Special Collections—correspondence between Joseph Medill Patterson and his three daughters.

The one-year project, which began July 1, 2025, will expand access to this historic collection by making the digitized materials publicly available online.

The Patterson family papers are among the College’s most requested archival holdings, drawing researchers from across the country.

Joseph Medill Patterson, a successful businessman and newspaper publisher, was the grandson of Lake Forest College’s first president, Rev. Robert W. Patterson, and Joseph Medill, the influential editor and co-owner of the Chicago Tribune who also served as mayor of Chicago from 1871 to 1873.

This project is led by Natalia Gutierrez-Jones, who joined the College in December 2024 as Archivist and Librarian for Special Collections. Gutierrez-Jones applied for and secured the competitive grant through the Illinois State Archives’ Historical Records Grant Program, which supports archival repositories in making historically significant collections more accessible to the public through digitization and placing of digital content online.

“By making these materials fully accessible online, we’re not only preserving them, we’re inviting researchers to ask new questions and see Patterson not just as a publisher, but as a person.” — Archivist Natalia Gutierrez-Jones

“This digitization project is really about unlocking new dimensions of the Joseph Medill Patterson collection,” Gutierrez-Jones said. “While it’s often been used for its ties to the New York Daily News and the business world, there's a rich, more personal side that hasn’t been as widely explored—his relationships with his daughters, their roles in a media dynasty, and the family dynamics behind the headlines.”

“We congratulate our archivist and commend our library for receiving this grant from the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, which makes it possible to digitize the letters between Joseph Medill Patterson and his three daughters and make them available to researchers near and far,” said Provost and Dean of the Faculty Tara Natarajan. “Our college is proud to serve as an important intellectual resource to our community and beyond.”

The grant reflects Lake Forest College’s ongoing commitment to preserving and sharing the historical and cultural narratives that help define Illinois and the broader region. Once digitized, the Patterson family letters will offer scholars, students, and history enthusiasts an even deeper look into one of Illinois’s most prominent families and their lasting influence.

Student archivist helps connect past to present

Aika Minja ’27, student archives assistant, has been helping prepare the five boxes of Patterson family correspondence for digitization. She’s responsible for organizing letters chronologically within folders—a critical step in preserving both the order and context of the collection.

Reflecting on the experience, she shared: “It’s really interesting to see how we can preserve history in different ways—and how even the smallest things, like a postcard, can be meaningful when we study the past. As a humanities major, I’m fascinated by how history shows up in the present and can even help us understand the future.”

“Working on this collection gives me insight into the personal lives behind big historical names. You might think of someone like Joseph Medill Patterson as a larger-than-life figure, but reading his letters to his daughters—asking if they’ve recovered from the flu or how they’re doing—reminds you that they were real people with emotions and everyday concerns. It helps humanize these great figures and brings history closer to us.”

Joseph Medill Patterson

Joseph Medill Patterson (1879–1946) was a pioneering American journalist and publisher who founded the New York Daily News, the nation’s first successful tabloid newspaper. He came from a storied journalism family: his grandfather, Joseph Medill, co-owned the Chicago Tribune and served as mayor of Chicago, while his father and mother were also closely tied to the Tribune.

Patterson carried forward that legacy, reshaping American journalism. By the time of his death, the Daily News had the highest Sunday circulation in the country—4.5 million copies.

Alicia Patterson

Alicia Patterson (1906–1963) was a pioneering American journalist and founder of Newsday, one of the most influential newspapers of the 20th century.

She was born two years after her older sister Elinor (1904–1984), about whom little is known. Her younger sister was Josephine Medill Patterson Albright (1913–1996). The girls spent their early years on a family farm in Libertyville, Illinois—an upbringing that shaped her independent spirit and curiosity about the world.

Josephine Patterson

The youngest daughter, Josephine Medill Patterson Albright (1913–1996), was a journalist and columnist.

An adventurous spirit, she earned her pilot’s license at 16 and briefly worked as a commercial pilot before turning to journalism. She wrote for the Chicago Daily News and later contributed a popular column to Newsday about life raising four children.

In 1949, she helped establish the Alicia Patterson Foundation in memory of her sister, supporting investigative journalists—a legacy that continues today.

A living legacy: Patterson Lodge

The Patterson family legacy is also embedded in the campus landscape. Patterson Lodge—now home to the Office of Admissions—was one of the original buildings constructed during the College’s early years of degree-level instruction between 1876 and 1890.

Alongside North Hall and College Hall, it formed a distinctive crescent of yellow-brick buildings intended to realize the founders’ vision of a park-like campus setting.

Every student who has entered Lake Forest College has passed through its doors, linking generations of Foresters to the institution’s historic roots.