Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Anthology of Alabama Poetry 1928

The Alabama Writers' Conclave was founded in 1923 and is one of the oldest organizations for authors in the U.S. Today it's known as the Alabama Writers' Cooperative. The AWC chooses the state's Poet Laureate, a position created by the state legislature in 1931; the choice is certified by the governor. The current Laureate is Jennifer Horne. You can read about that program and see a list of all laureates here

Before the AWC was even a decade old, the group published The Anthology of Alabama Poetry 1928. I have included the table of contents and the biographical notes below since this book is not widely available. WorldCat.org lists only 57 libraries having it in their collections; several of those are in Alabama. Bookfinder.com, which aggregates the inventories of hundreds of used and rare book dealers, turns up no copies for sale. 

The collection was published by Ernest Hartsock of the Bozart Press in Atlanta. The forward was written by Frances R. Durham, President of the Conclave. See more on her below. Hartsock and his press were apparently significant in the South's literary world; a master's thesis "Ernest Hartsock and the Southern Literary Renaissance" was written by Monroe F. Swilley at Georgia State College in 1969.

This anthology is something of a snapshot of the poetry landscape in Alabama at the time of publication. Included is "A Biographical Dictionary of Alabama Poets" that offers brief entries on most of the men and women included. There are some 80 poets in this collection; the majority are women. Note how many of these individuals were also members of other national, regional and local writers' groups, art guilds, etc. 

I haven't reproduced any of the poems, but the titles will give you an idea of the sorts of things included. Lots of poems about the natural world and various emotions appear in these pages. Some are poems related to Alabama themes, such as Wallace M. Sloan's "Birmingham".  Many poems are pale, precious, sentimental things produced by writers untouched by the modernism gripping poetry and literature and the rest of the arts at the time. Some readers might add, "Untouched by talent, too" and so it goes.   

As far as I know, this anthology was the first of only three ever published of Alabama poets that attempted state-wide coverage. The other two are Louise Crenshaw Ray's Alabama Poetry (1945) and Ralph Hammond's Alabama Poets: A Contemporary Anthology (1990). 

On his massive web site "History of Birmingham Poetry" Craig Legg has much to say about the AWC and the contents of this anthology. 

I have added a few other author achievements and information below the directory images that follow.   








I have been unable to find any information about Funk, who created this Art Deco illustration. He is not included in the biographical directory. The work seems a bit racy for a 1928 publication related to Alabama poetry, but maybe  the easily offended didn't see it. 
























Emily Campbell Adams is described as the "Author of very clever and timely verses Plantation Prohibition", but I can find no information on a collection of that name.

The collection Flowers from the Foothills by Mary Chase Cornelius is a chapbook of 28 pages.





Francis R. Durham was President of the Conclave at the time of publication. 

Scottie McKenzie Frasier's Fagots of Fancy is a 1920 collection of some 60 pages with an introduction by Alabama novelist and playwright Helen S. Woodruff. You can read the collection here. The title page notes the poems are "In Free Verse." In 1922 her second collection Things That Are Mine appeared; read it here.

Kate Downing Ghent's 42-page chapbook A String of Pearls and Other Poems was published in 1925. I could not find information on Sips of Cheer.

Unfortunately, I found no information about or copy of Annie Shillito Howard's "The Vision of Bienville", a poem written for Mobile's bi-centennial celebrated in 1902. Perhaps it was published in a local newspaper. 







Lawrence Lee was born in Gadsden and graduated from Sidney Lanier High School in Montgomery. He attended the University of Virginia, graduating in 1924, then settled in New York for editorial work. This opportunity apparently led to his editorship of Sea Stories and Sport Story Magazine. Both publications were part of the Street and Smith empire, which published dime novels, pulp magazines and other materials between 1855 and 1959. 

The FictionMagsIndex shows several poems Lee published in magazines in the 1920's and later. Lee may have returned to Virginia; he published two poetry collections in the 1930's with connections to that state. The first was Summer Goes On in 1933 and then Monticello and Other Poems in 1937. Both were issued by Scribner's, a major New York imprint; they publish Hemingway, for instance. 



At the time of this anthology's publication, Maud Lindsay was one of its best known authors. A childhood friend of Helen Keller's, she founded in Florence the state's first free kindergarten in 1898. She wrote a number of books of stories and poems for children, much of it reflecting her own experiences. The Online Books Page has links to full texts of several of her books.





The directory describes Mitylene Owen McDavid as a painter and the author of "numerous" published books. The only one I could find was Culinary Crinkles: Tested Recipes issued by the Woman's Guild of Birmingham's Church of the Advent in 1919. 

Kate Slaughter McKinney wrote at least two novels as well as poetry that appeared in her own collections and anthologies, much of it while living in her native Kentucky. She married a superintendent of the L&N railroad and was living in Montgomery at the time this anthology appeared.

John Trotwood Moore [1858-1929] was born in Marion, Alabama, but is more closely associated with Tennessee where he was state archivist and librarian for the last decade of his life. A Confederate veteran, Moore authored novels, short stories and poetry. He was a Lost Cause proponent; you can read his "A Ballad of Emma Sansom" here.





Charles J. Quirk [1889-1962] published several collections of poetry including the two mentioned, Sails on the Horizon [1926, 44pp] and Candles in the Wind [1931, 102pp].




Louise Crenshaw Ray [1890-1956] continued to write poetry and published four collections often with poems featuring Alabama themes and settings. She also edited the 1945 collection Alabama Poetry featuring work by members of the Poetry Society of Alabama, founded in Birmingham in 1929. You can find an extensive discussion of her life and poetry at Craig Legg's History of Birmingham Poetry





Eugenia Bragg Smith is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Montgomery. Her poem "The Coquette" in the form of a villanelle about a butterfly can be found here.The bio note here observes, "She is also a successful writer of Greeting Card Verse". Such poetry is often unsigned and a literary production so ephemeral most of its practitioners are unknown. 




Hudson Strode [1892-1976] was a legendary English professor and creative writing teacher at the University of Alabama beginning in 1916. He published a wide range of novels, non-fiction, and poetry. Strode also taught many student who went on to become writers such as Helen Norris and Lonnie Coleman.


Alicia Joel Towers wrote Psychology and Mechanics for Writing [Birmingham: A.H. Cather, 1924] and Piney Woods Poetry [1929, also Cather].






Clement R. Wood had a very prolific and very strange writing career that continued until his death in 1950. He graduated from law school at the University of Alabama, and by 1919 had published his first book. This one was followed by a steady stream of novels, poetry collections, biographical profiles, historical works and more. He also edited a number of books, including a popular rhyming and craft handbook for poets. Wood wrote or edited a number of the popular Little Blue Books, including the classic The Art of Kissing. You can read more about Wood here.  


Nena Wilson Wright's Birmingham and Other Poems appeared in 1926. The title poem "Birmingham" can be read here along with other poems about the city. 


Martha Young [1862-1941] was already well-known as a regional author by the time this anthology appeared. Between 1901 and 1921 she had published eight books of tales, fables, songs and stories based on her life as a girl growing up in Alabama. She was admired, at the time anyway, for her use of African-American dialect. You can read a typical title, When We Were Wee: Tales of the Ten Grandchildren published in 1912 here.







This history of the AWC's early years was published in 1993.



The Poetry Society of Alabama was founded on February 7, 1929, in Birmingham. I don't know how long it lasted, but it must have been in pretty good shape when this anthology was published in 1945. The Alabama State Poetry Society was founded in 1968, so I presume the earlier organization disappeared before then.   







Thursday, April 23, 2020

Louise Crenshaw Ray's "Alabama Poetry"

Since April is National Poetry Month, I'm posting a few items on this blog about Alabama poets and such. In this one let's take a trip through a 1945 collection of poems by 37 members of the Poetry Society of Alabama and the career of its editor, Louise Crenshaw Ray.

Louise Crenshaw was born in Butler County on May 17, 1890, one of seven children. Her father was Thaddeus Crenshaw, who served three terms in the Alabama legislature. An ancestor, Andrew Crenshaw, served on the state supreme court and is the namesake of Crenshaw County.

Louise attended what is now Huntingdon College in Montgomery and also received a B.A. from the University of Alabama. She married lawyer Benjamin Ray on January 23, 1918. They had two daughters, Anna and Mary. 

Ray published four collections of poetry during her lifetime. Color of Steel appeared in 1932, followed by Secret Shoes (1939), Strangers on the Stairs (1944) and Autumn Token (1957). Her poems were also included in various magazines and anthologies. In the early years she wrote about such topics as Alabama history and the natural beauty of the state. Later in life subjects like love, loss, and racial issues appeared. 

Ray died October 23, 1956, in Birmingham. 

Craig Legg's magnificent history of Birmingham poetry project has some more details. Here are Legg's first two paragraphs about Ray:


 In 1933 the talented and dedicated Louise Crenshaw Ray was named Society president, the latest in a line of talented and dedicated literary club women to lead the organization. All Poetry Society officers were poets themselves, likewise gifted with organizational skills and leadership qualities. Along with Ray, the most active were Mary Pollard Tynes, Anne Southern Tardy and Martha Lyman Shillito. All published widely in the newspapers and magazines of the day, and served as officers in a number of clubs, including The Poetry Society, Birmingham Writer’s Club, The Quill Club and the Birmingham branch of the National League of American  Pen Women.
     In my own humble opinion, in the actual writing of poetry, Louise Crenshaw Ray stood head and shoulders above her peers. Born to a proud Old South family in the Alabama Black Belt, she moved to Birmingham as a young woman, taught school, and married lawyer Ben Ray. In 1932 she published her first volume of collected poems, titled Color of Steel, a fully realized, mature book of poetry and perhaps the best that I have yet come across by a Birmingham-related poet. It got mostly good reviews- and perhaps more important- received a flood of publicity, generating many newspaper articles about both book and poet. At the age of forty-two, Mrs. Ray was well past the age of ‘starlet,’ but, like James Saxon Childers at Birmingham-Southern, more often than not she seemed to command center-stage on the active Poetry Society ‘scene.’

Then he proceeds to an in depth discussion of the poems in Ray's book Color of Steel.

Below is more information about Ray and some of the other poets in this collection. Many of these individuals were also active in the Alabama Writers' Conclave [now Cooperative] and various local writers groups. The Poetry Society of Alabama was founded in Birmingham on February 7, 1929, and apparently disappeared at some point after publication of this anthology. Ray served as President in 1933. The Alabama State Poetry Society was founded in 1968. 

Some of these poets, such as Ray, were included in the Anthology of Alabama Poetry which the Conclave had published in 1928. I expect to post an item about that book this month. 

















Bert Henderson was the third poet laureate of Alabama,  serving from 1959 until 1971.






Martha Lyman Shillito was the seventh President of the Alabama Writers' Conclave [now Cooperative], serving in 1929-1930. 





Mary B. Ward was Alabama Poet Laureate 1954-1958 just prior to Henderson. She was an original member of the Alabama Writers' Conclave [now Cooperative] and helped organize the 50th anniversary celebration in 1973. She was a feature writer for the Birmingham News and published poems in such places as The Saturday Evening PostSaturday Review of LiteratureSewanee QuarterlyThe New York Times, and The Washington Star.








Craig Legg's "History of Birmingham Poetry" Chapter 4, the 1930's blog post  has an extensive discussion of Ray's life and her collection Color of Steel published by the University of North Carolina Press in 1932. 





Source: eBay




The three poems below are taken from the 1945 anthology Ray edited and include the name of the journals that originally published them.











Thursday, April 16, 2020

Langston Hughes' Alabama Poems

Langston Hughes [1901-1967] was an American writer born in Joplin, Missouri. During his career he wrote novels, poetry, plays and non-fiction works including articles and columns for magazines and newspapers. He was an important figure in the Harlem Renaissance and a civil rights activist. Hughes' bibliography of published works is extensive. 

Among his many poems are several related in some way to Alabama. As might be expected, they address racial turmoil in the state. The earliest one is "Christ in Alabama", published in the Contempo magazine issue of December 1, 1931. In March of that year two white women accused nine young black men of rape; all had been riding in a train that stopped near Paint Rock in Jackson County. The blacks, dubbed the Scottsboro Boys, were quickly arrested and tried in early April before several all-white juries. The guilty verdicts were appealed and retried for years in the courts despite one of the victims recanting and other exonerating evidence. The case became infamous around the world. 

That first poem Hughes wrote about the case can be read below; it imitates the call and response of so much African-American music and its sources in sub-Saharan Africa. "Christ in Alabama" is a brief, blistering cry against this particular injustice and so many others. In the wake of the Scottsboro case 5000 copies of that Contempo issue were printed. A revised version of the poem appeared in 1967. Several commentaries can be found here. Jon Woodson places the poem in context in his essay "Anti-Lynching Poems in the 1930s."

In 1932 Hughes published a twenty page pamphlet titled Scottsboro Limited that included "Christ in Alabama" and three more poems, a verse play and striking illustrations by Prentiss Taylor. You can read some of the poems here; "The Town of Scottsboro" is brief but especially touching. 

In that same year Hughes undertook a poetry reading tour of seventeen states that included some in the South. The tour began about the time the Contempo issue appeared. According to Woodson's essay linked above, Hughes read his poetry to the Scottsboro Boys in Kilby Prison.

"For Selma" was included in the collection Ebony Rhythm: An Anthology of Contemporary Negro Verse edited by Beatrice M. Murphy and published in 1947. I'm not sure why he used Selma rather than some other small town, since the voting rights marches did not begin there until 1965. Perhaps he became aware of Selma when he was in the state in 1931. Although he lived in many locations around the country, Hughes did spend 1947 teaching at Atlanta University.

"Birmingham Sunday" is much easier to place, since it explicitly deals with the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing on Sunday, September 15, 1963. That event inspired another African-American poet; see Dudley Randall's "Ballad of Birmingham"   

"Alabama Earth" and "Daybreak in Alabama" are different in offering Hughes' hopes that race relations might one day improve "When I get to be a colored composer", even in a place like Alabama. "Alabama Earth" is set "At Booker Washington's grave" which is located on the Tuskegee University campus. 









Daybreak in Alabama


When I get to be a colored composer
I'm gonna write me some music about
Daybreak in Alabama
And I'm gonna put the purtiest songs in it
Rising out of the ground like a swamp mist
And falling out of heaven like soft dew
I'm gonna put some tall tall trees in it
And the scent of pine needles
And the smell of red clay after rain
And long red necks
And poppy colored faces
And big brown arms
And the field daisy eyes
Of black and white black white black people
And I'm gonna put white hands
And black hands and brown and yellow hands
And red clay earth hands in it
Touching everybody with kind fingers
Touching each other natural as dew
In that dawn of music when I
Get to be a colored composer
And write about daybreak
In Alabama.


Alabama Earth

(At Booker Washington’s grave)

Deep in Alabama earth
His buried body lies-
But higher than the singing pines
And taller than the skies
And out of Alabama earth
To all the world there goes
The truth a simple heart has held
And the strength a strong hand knows,
While over Alabama earth
These words are gently spoken:
Serve-and hate will die unborn.
Love-and chains are broken.

To flung my arms wide
In some place of the sun,
To whirl and to dance
Till the white day is done.
Then rest at cool evening
Beneath a tall tree
While night comes on gently,
   Dark like me-
That is my dream!

To fling my arms wide
In the face of the sun,
Dance! Whirl! Whirl!
Till the quick day is done.
Rest at pale evening…
A tall, slim tree…
Night coming tenderly
   Black like me.


For Selma

In places like
Selma, Alabama,
Kids say,
In places like
Chicago and New York...
In places like
Chicago and New York
Kids say,
In places like
London and Paris...
In places like
London and Paris
Kids say,
In places like
Chicago and New York...


Birmingham Sunday

(September 15, 1963)
Four little girls
Who went to Sunday School that day
And never came back home at all--
But left instead
Their blood upon the wall
With spattered flesh
And bloodied Sunday dresses
Scorched by dynamite that
China made aeons ago
Did not know what China made
Before China was ever Red at all
Would ever redden with their blood
This Birmingham-on-Sunday wall.
Four tiny little girls
Who left their blood upon that wall,
In little graves today await:
The dynamite that might ignite
The ancient fuse of Dragon Kings
Whose tomorrow sings a hymn
The missionaries never taught
In Christian Sunday School
To implement the Golden Rule.
Four little girls
Might be awakened someday soon
By songs upon the breeze
As yet unfelt among
Magnolia trees.


Christ in Alabama

Christ is a nigger,
Beaten and black:
Oh, bare your back!

Mary is His mother:
Mammy of the South,
Silence your mouth.

God is His father:
White Master above
Grant Him your love.

Most holy bastard
Of the bleeding mouth,
Nigger Christ
On the cross
Of the South.







This Decembr 1, 1931, Contempo issue published not only Hughes poem but his essay about the Scottsboro boys case. 

Source: Flashpoint




Source: Flashpoint