Title: James Whitcomb Riley letters to James Newton Matthews, 1890

Administrative/Biographical History
James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916), a native of Greenfield, Indiana, was a newspaper editor before concentrating on his poetry. He began publishing poems in local newspapers during the mid-1870s and increased his fame by reciting his work on a traveling circuit in the 1880s. Riley, then based in Indianapolis, was one of the most famous writers in the United States by the 1890s. He is known for his use of local dialects and his depictions of life in Indiana.
James Newton Matthews (1852-1910) grew up in Greencastle, Indiana, and Mason, Illinois. In 1868, he became the first student to enroll at the Illinois Industrial University (now the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign); following his graduation in 1872, he earned medical degrees from Missouri Medical College (1878) and the renamed University of Illinois (1894). Matthews had a private practice in Mason, Illinois, and published two collections of poetry.
Sources
Manlove, Donald C. "Riley, James Whitcomb." American National Biography Online. Oxford University Press, 2000. doi: 16-01384
Weaver, George H. "Matthews, James Newton." American Medical Biographies, ed. Howard A. Kelly and Walter L. Burrage. Baltimore: The Norman, Remington Company, 1920. 768-769.