Log In | Contact Us | View Cart (0 items)
Browse: Collections Digital Content Subjects Creators Record Groups

Inez Adams papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Biographical Material

Correspondence

Faculty Appointments

Field Notes

Financial Records

Writings by Inez Adams

Collected Publications



Contact us about this collection

Inez Adams papers, 1914-1966 | Amistad Research Center

By Beatrice Rodriguez Owsley, Philip S. MacLeod, and Gregory Fayard

Printer-friendly Printer-friendly | Email Us Contact Us About This Collection

Collection Overview

Title: Inez Adams papers, 1914-1966Add to your cart.

Creator: Adams, Inez (1904-1967)

Extent: 3.5 Linear Feet

Arrangement: Arrangement is primarily alphabetically by topic and chronologically within the file units.

Date Acquired: 01/01/1968

Languages: , English, French

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Inez Adams papers document Adams' career as a sociologist and anthropologist.  The collection consists of correspondence, financial documents, field notes, and collected publications, and the collection spans the years 1914 to 1966.  The papers have been arranged into seven series, which are arranged as follows:  Biographical material, correspondence, faculty appointments, field notes, financial records, writings by Inez Adams, and writings collected by Inez Adams.  Items of particular interest include field notes on the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the NAACP in Nashville.  

This collection was processed under a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Biographical Note

Inez Adams was an anthropologist whose work focused on the topic of race relations. Although she conducted fieldwork in the Caribbean and in Nigeria, the main focus of her work centered on school desegregation in the South.

Dorothy Inez Adams was born in 1904 in Santa Barbara, California.  She was the daughter of Dorothy and William Adams.  She graduated from Lindsay High School in Lindsay, California in 1922 and then attended the University of California at Berkeley, earning a Bachelor of Arts Degree with honors in Anthropology in December of 1926. She continued her education at Berkeley and received a Masters of Arts Degree in Anthropology in 1928.

During the 1930s and 1940s, Dr. Adams wrote poetry and literary prose, which has survived.  What she did professionally is not clear for these years until 1944 when she was attending Columbia University in New York City working on her Ph. D. in Anthropology. Her mentor during her time at Columbia was Dr. Ralph Linton who had left the Anthropology Department at Columbia for a position at Yale University’s Institute of Human Relations.  Her letters to Dr. Linton are very detailed with information on the progress of her thesis and gossip about the Anthropology Department at Columbia. She defended her thesis in May of 1949 and received her Ph.D. in Anthropology in 1950.

In November of 1949, Dr. Adams was offered a position at Fisk University and started teaching the spring term in the Department of Social Sciences. She enjoyed the work at Fisk and the emotional warmth of her African American students.  She was happy with the faculty in the department and became good friends with Dr. Bonita Valien. In 1951, Fisk University had to drop Anthropology from the curriculum due to budget constraints; however, the department wanted to keep Dr. Adams on staff and Dr. Preston Valien found a role in the department for her. She received a Carnegie Grant to study culture and race relations on the island of Trinidad and conducted fieldwork for the summer months of 1951.

From 1954 to 1958, she studied the process of school desegregation and civil rights in the southern United States.  She traveled during the summer months to conduct surveys and interviews to document the development of social change as it occurred during this time period.  She surveyed and interviewed in Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas and Georgia documenting local desegregation efforts. Her main focus was school desegregation and African American and Caucasian American educators, as well as southern reactions to integration.

Working at Fisk University raised her awareness of racism and segregation in the South.  She became a member of the NAACP and was a member of the local NAACP Committee on Education between 1955 and 1956.

In 1960, Dr. Adams became involved in a project sponsored by the Institute of Race Relations in London, England.  It was called the Tropical Africa Research Project.  She left for London in September of 1961 and conducted interviews of various individuals involved with the Institute in Nigeria.  She traveled to Nigeria to conduct fieldwork from January to April 1962.

From 1963 to 1967, she worked as a Professor of Anthropology at Brooklyn College in New York City.  During this time civil rights demonstrations and protests were occurring throughout the South.  Dr. Adams was interested in documenting the demonstrations and sit-ins in Nashville and their results in the local community.  She collected data from Nashville using correspondence and field notes to study these protests.  She was very interested in the results the Civil Rights Act would bring and implementation of its compliance locally in Nashville.

Dr. Adams died on December 15, 1967, in Washington, D.C.

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions: This collection is open for research.

Use Restrictions: Copyright to these papers has not been assigned to the Amistad Research Center. It is the responsibility of an author to secure permission for publication from the holder of the copyright to any material contained in this collection.

Acquisition Source: Mrs. Preston Valien

Acquisition Method: Gift

Appraisal Information: Collection documents the life and academic career of Inez Adams, most notably including fieldwork on the United States civil rights movement and school desegregation.

Related Materials:

Valien, Preston & Bonita papers

Race Relations Department of the United Church Board for Homeland Ministries archives

Preferred Citation: Inez Adams papers, Amistad Research Center at Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana

Processing Information: Processed by Beatrice Rodriguez Owsley, Philip S. MacLeod, and Gregory Fayard in December 2000.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series 1: Biographical Material, 1922-1962],
[Series 2: Correspondence, 1942-1962],
[Series 3: Faculty Appointments, 1949-1965],
[Series 4: Field Notes, 1950-1965],
[Series 5: Financial Records, 1943-1966],
[Series 6: Writings by Inez Adams, 1914-1957],
[Series 7: Collected Publications, 1953-1966],
[All]

Series 2: Correspondence, 1942-1962Add to your cart.
This series contains personal and business correspondence.  Included are letters related to general matters and her finances and a series of personal communication between Dr. Adams and Ralph Linton, a friend and mentor who had left the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University. Correspondence between Dr. Adams and Dr. Linton make up the bulk of the materials in this series. Correspondence to Dr. Linton focuses on the politics of the anthropology department at Columbia and touches on a communist element within the anthropological community in New York City during the late 1940s. Correspondence concerning school desegregation following the United States Supreme Court decision in Brown vs. the Board of Education in 1954 can be located in folder 16.
Box 1Add to your cart.
Folder 7: Business correspondence, 1962, 1964, 1966-1967Add to your cart.
Pertaining to taxes, subscriptions, etc.
Folder 8: General correspondence, 1942, 1944, 1947, 1949, 1951-1955, 1958-1959Add to your cart.
Relating to poetry submissions, issues of discrimination in interstate travel, Fisk University, personal, etc.
Folder 9: General correspondence, 1960, 1962Add to your cart.
Pertains to Adams' role in Race Relations Department and her sabbatical term in Nigeria.  Notable correspondents include Arna Bontemps, in his role as Fisk librarian.
Folder 10: General correspondence, 1963-1965Add to your cart.
Topics include sit-in protests by student groups in Nashville and other civil rights issues.  Correspondence includes communication with groups the Tennessee Council on Human Relations, Mothers for Moral America, and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.  Items of interest include a carbon and draft of a letter Adams sent to President Kennedy in the aftermath of the bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham.
Folder 11: Correspondence: Ralph Linton, 1946-1947Add to your cart.
Folder 12: Correspondence:  Ralph Linton, 1948Add to your cart.
Folder 13: Correspondence:  Ralph Linton, 1949Add to your cart.
Folder 14: Correspondence:  Ralph Linton, 1950Add to your cart.
Folder 15: Correspondence:  Ralph Linton, 1951-1954Add to your cart.
Includes photos and obituaries of Linton.
Folder 16: Correspondence:  School desegregation, 1954-1955Add to your cart.
Relevant states are Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas.

Browse by Series:

[Series 1: Biographical Material, 1922-1962],
[Series 2: Correspondence, 1942-1962],
[Series 3: Faculty Appointments, 1949-1965],
[Series 4: Field Notes, 1950-1965],
[Series 5: Financial Records, 1943-1966],
[Series 6: Writings by Inez Adams, 1914-1957],
[Series 7: Collected Publications, 1953-1966],
[All]


Page Generated in: 0.3 seconds (using 210 queries).
Using 10.14MB of memory. (Peak of 10.39MB.)

Powered by Archon Version 3.13 rev-1
Copyright ©2010 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign