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

Lillian W. Voorhees papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Box 1

Box 2

Box 3

Box 4

Box 5

Box 6

Box 7

Box 8

Box 9

Box 10

Box 11

Box 12

Box 13

Box 14

Box 15

Box 16

Box 17

Box 18

Box 19

Box 20

Box 21

Box 22

Box 23

Box 24

Box 25

Box 26

Box 27

Box 28

Box 29

Box 30

Box 31

Box 32

Box 33

Box 34

Box 35

Box 36

Box 37

Box 38

Box 39

Box 40

Box 41

Box 42

Box 43

Box 44

Classwork: Assorted themes, term papers, notebooks, etc.

Box 46

Box 47

Box 48

Box 49

Box 50

Aluminum electrograph records



Contact us about this collection

Lillian W. Voorhees papers, 1892-1973 | Amistad Research Center

By G. M. H.

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

Collection Overview

Title: Lillian W. Voorhees papers, 1892-1973Add to your cart.

Creator: Voorhees, Lillian Welch (1896-1972)

Extent: 21.7 Linear Feet

Date Acquired: 01/01/1970. More info below under Accruals.

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Lillian Welch Voorhees papers consist of 21.7 linear feet of items typical of the life of a 20th century educator. The collection also reflects Voorhees's literary and theatrical interests with examples of her own writings, as well as those of her students.

Correspondence, 1900-1973 (ca. 8450 items), comprises the largest part of Voorhees's papers. Her literary efforts, 1907-71, are another large section. These include bibliographies; articles; a fragmentary autobiography and several curricula vitae; and two short biographies about actress Rose McClendon, published in Notable American Women, 1607-1950, and professor and Voorhees classmate Mildred Evelyn Bassett, published in Mount Holyoke Alumnae Quarterly [Spring, 1964?]. The papers also include Voorhees's book reviews; school and college term papers, themes, and notebooks; editorials and news items; plays; a few short stories; two of her many speeches; her dissertation (1925) and her thesis (1943), both for Columbia Teachers College; a few poems; and other material (1932-1935, 1969), such as advertising, correspondence, proof sheets, plays and poems, relating to The Brown Thrush: Anthology of Verse by Negro Students of which she was co-editor [1st ed., 1932; 2nd ed., 1935]. In addition, Voorhees collected other literary work by her students (1929-1972), which included articles, plays, short stories, and poems. Other papers include announcements, invitations, and programs; bills and receipts; constitutions, amendments, by-laws, and minutes; five volumes of diaries, all fragmentary; a few pamphlets, booklets, and periodicals; records of family, school, college, travel and honors conferred; reports; scrapbooks; photographs; news clippings; and phonograph records.

The papers of Voorhees contain information on the history and development of Tougaloo and Talladega Colleges and Fisk University, as well as collegiate drama and speech education. Other subjects of importance include educational theater; children's theater; the little theater movement, plays, actors and actresses (especially Rose McClendon, mentioned above, and Paul Robeson); professional speech and drama organizations (particularly the National Association of Dramatic and Speech Arts (1936-1970); the American Educational Theatre Association (1943-1963); and the American National Theatre and Academy (1947-1963)); the opening of new fields for employment and activity to Blacks (1942-70); black servicemen in the armed forces (1940-1964); student demonstrations (1960-1971); the American Missionary Association (1917-1960) and in lesser degrees, the American Friends Service Committee and the Young Men's Christian Association; graduate education (1925-1944); women professors (1917-1970); women's education at Mount Holyoke College (1913-1917); the role of and prejudices against women in the 1920s; and activities open to and /or chosen by retired persons (1930-1972).

Among members of Voorhees's family, a cousin, Helen McNair Voorhees (b. 1892) corresponded most frequently. Besides members of the family and several classmates of the Mount Holyoke College Class of 1917, principal correspondents are colleagues and students at Tougaloo and Talladega Colleges and Fisk University. Included are Roger Lee Askew, Eleanor H. Augur, Adam Daniel Beittel, Frederick Leslie Brownlee, Lyman Van Law Cady, Helen Cassilly Silsby Cross (Mrs. Robert C.), Gerald Lewis Davis, Hilda A. Davis, Gladys Inez Forde, Doris B. Garey, Martha Jane Gibson, Mrs. Fannie Ella Frazier Hicklin, the Gordon Henry Kitchen family (G. H. Kitchen, his wife, Dorothea Hughes Kitchen, and their daughters, Victoria Nan Kitchen Steele [Mrs. Warren B.] and Joy Adelyn Kitchen Ward [Mrs. Clinton, Jr.]), Ethel S. Miller (Mrs. Minuard B.), Willis Norman Pitts, Margaret Helen Scott, Anndell Sturgies (Mrs. Calvin), and Carolyn Reid Wallace (Mrs. Addison N.).

Biographical Note

Dr. Lillian Welch Voorhees was a civil rights activist and educator who taught at Tougaloo College in Tougaloo, Mississippi (1917-1927), Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama(1928-1943), and Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee (1943-1970). Voorhees had a particular interest in race relations, discrimination in accommodation, missionary work, and theater.

Voorhees, daughter of Emma Welch and Garrett Scott Voorhees, was born on February 6, 1896, in Bedminster, New Jersey. She was the older sister to Garrett Scott Voorhees, Jr. (1900-1921) who died in a railway accident while a Junior at Rutgers University. After her early education in the public schools of Basking Ridge, New Jersey, Voorhees attended Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts (1913-1917). After receiving her bachelor's degree, Voorhees started teaching at Tougaloo College in Tougaloo, Mississippi, as a missionary-teacher employed by the American Missionary Association in 1917. Voorhees originally intended to become a missionary in China; however, she was advised to acquire experience in the field home missions work first. From 1920-1924, Voorhees spent the summers studying at the Teacher's College of Columbia University in New York. After the death of her younger brother, Garrett, in 1921, Voorhees's parents moved from Basking Ridge to Tougaloo, and her father became the superintendent of the Tougaloo College farm (some 400 acres) while her mother worked as the director of the girls' dormitory and residences. During the summer of 1924, Voorhees assisted Olivia M. Hunter, a student and informally adopted sister, to live in New York City to study music. Hunter spent the summer at the Voorhees' farm in Basking Ridge, where she rested and studied organ with the local church organist. In collaboration with Hunter, Voorhees arranged "An' de Walls Came Tumbling Down: an Evening with Paul Laurence Dunbar," a dramatization with songs for 45 poems and two short stories. This would be her first play, which was produced at Tougaloo College in 1926 and 1927. In 1927, Voorhees left Tougaloo to accept a new position at Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama. Voorhees participated in an international summer theater tour (England and Germany) and was awarded a Drama League Scholarship to study at the Central School of Speech in London, England in 1932. In 1943, Voorhees received her doctorate in Speech Education from Teachers College at Columbia University. During this same year, Voorhees became a professor of Speech and Dramatics at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. At Fisk, she helped establish a drama major at the institution and was named the first chairperson of the new Department of Speech and Dramatics. She retired from this position in 1963. Voorhees associated herself with a predominately black church, the Union Church (Congregational) at Fisk University, where she served as treasurer (1944-1970), and to which she left a considerable sum upon her death. She also worked closely with the Eighteenth Avenue Community Center in Nashville (1955-1971), holding various administrative offices. She attempted to persuade the Children's Theatre of Nashville to accept an open policy of admission, and to reopen the Fisk University Social Center as a gathering place for neighborhood children. Voorhees was a member of numerous professional speech and drama organizations such as the American Educational Theatre Association (1943-1971), the American National Theatre and Academy (1947-1963), and the National Association of Dramatic and Speech Arts (1936-1971. In all cases, she sought to have conventions held in cities and hotels where accommodations were available to all and where everyone had access to meetings. Dr. Voorhees died in 1972.

Administrative Information

Accruals: An addition to the papers was received in 1973, which included the bulk of the materials Voorhees generated throughout her lifetime.

Access Restrictions: The Lillian W. Voorhees papers are open and available for use.

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.

Physical Access Note: The aluminum electrograph records within the collection are currently unavailable for research use. Please contact the reference services department for more information.

Acquisition Source: Ms. Lillian Welch Voorhees

Acquisition Method: Gift

Appraisal Information: This collection documents African American education in the United States, specifically in Alabama and Mississippi. The history and development of Toogaloo College (Mississippi), Talladega College (Alabama), and Fisk University (Tennessee), as well as collegiate drama activites, and professional theater organizations are the strenghts of this collection.

Related Materials: The records of the American Missionary Association and the papers of Fred L. Brownlee are closely related to the Voorhees papers.

Preferred Citation: Lillian W. Voorhees papers, Amistad Research Center, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Processing Information: This collection was processed in 1975.

Other Note: Correspondence Index attached as PDF.

Other URL: http://www.amistadresearchcenter.org/pdfs/Archon/Lillian_Voorhees_Papers_-_Correspondence_Index.pdf


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Box:

[Box 1],
[Box 2],
[Box 3],
[Box 4],
[Box 5],
[Box 6],
[Box 7],
[Box 8],
[Box 9],
[Box 10],
[Box 11],
[Box 12],
[Box 13],
[Box 14],
[Box 15],
[Box 16],
[Box 17],
[Box 18],
[Box 19],
[Box 20],
[Box 21],
[Box 22],
[Box 23],
[Box 24],
[Box 25],
[Box 26],
[Box 27],
[Box 28],
[Box 29],
[Box 30],
[Box 31],
[Box 32],
[Box 33],
[Box 34],
[Box 35],
[Box 36],
[Box 37],
[Box 38],
[Box 39],
[Box 40],
[Box 41],
[Box 42],
[Box 43],
[Box 44],
[Box 45: Classwork: Assorted themes, term papers, notebooks, etc., 1907-1938],
[Box 46],
[Box 47],
[Box 48],
[Box 49],
[Box 50],
[Box 51: Aluminum electrograph records, undated],
[All]

Box 42Add to your cart.
Folder 1Add to your cart.
Item 1: Bibliographies: articles published, 1924-1951Add to your cart.
Item 2: Bibliographies: writings, 1937-1947Add to your cart.
Item 3: Bibliographies: book reviews, undatedAdd to your cart.
Item 4: Bibliographies: copy of section of this container list showing writings filed in these papersAdd to your cart.
Folder 2Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Another of the Fine Arts: Make-up in Sepia", 1938 January-MarchAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "Another of the Fine Arts: Make-up in Sepia", 1941 JulyAdd to your cart.
Item 3: Articles: "Children's Cooperative Theatre," Arts in Childhood, 1948Add to your cart.
Folder 3Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Current Trends and Events in National Importance in Negro Education: A Program of Speech Education for Talladega College", 1946 WinterAdd to your cart.
Folder 4Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "The Drama in a College of Negroes," The Drama, 1926 MarchAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "The Laboratory Method in Dramatics or in a College for Negroes," The Journal of Expression, 1932 AprilAdd to your cart.
Folder 5Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Nashville Housing Woefully Inadequate," The Independent Chronicle, 1966 February 9Add to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "Old World Theatre Experiences, " The Talladegan, 1930 NovemberAdd to your cart.
Item 3: Articles: "Pioneering in the Little Theatre," The Arts Quarterly, 1937 April-JuneAdd to your cart.
Item 4: Articles: "Pirandello's Answer: Interpreting Pirandello's Art and Its Significance at the Present Time", 1960Add to your cart.
Submitted to essay contest for Abba Prize of Pirandello Society, received honorable mention
Folder 6Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Recordings for Use in Teaching Theatre," by L. W. Voorhees and Jacob Foster, 1949 OctoberAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "Records for Use in Teaching Dramatics," by L. W. Voorhees and Jacob Foster, 1946Add to your cart.
Folder 7Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Speaking the Speech," Encore (NADSA), 1954 SpringAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "Speech in Negro College," The Talladegan, 1940 MayAdd to your cart.
Item 3: Articles: "Student Activities at Tougaloo College," The American Missionary, 1925 MayAdd to your cart.
Folder 8Add to your cart.
Item 1: Articles: "Training in Perspective: an Educational Value of Dramatics," Mississippi Educational Journal, 1924 DecemberAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Articles: "What Prince Negro Drama?" The Southern Speech Journal, 1949 JanuaryAdd to your cart.
Folder 9Add to your cart.
Item 1: Autobiography: "Alumnae in the Theatre: Lillian W. Voorhees," Mount Holyoke Alumnae Quarterly, 1970 SpringAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Autobiography: untitled sketches, 1943, 1946, 1970Add to your cart.
Folder 10Add to your cart.
Item 1: Autobiography: "The Challenge, Tougaloo, Mississippi, 1917-1927"Add to your cart.
Folder 11Add to your cart.
Item 1: Biographies: "Mildred Evelyn Bassett (1896-1936)" in Mount Holyoke Alumnae QuarterlyAdd to your cart.
Item 2: Biographies: "Rose McClendon, Negro Actress (1884-1936) in Notable American Women, 1607-1950Add to your cart.
Folder 12Add to your cart.
Item 1: Book reviews: Broken Image by Virginia Ebert, 1951Add to your cart.
Item 2: Book reviews: Born to Be by Margaret Halsey, 1946 DecemberAdd to your cart.
Item 3: Book reviews: Color Blind by Margaret Halsey, 1946 DecemberAdd to your cart.
Item 4: Book reviews: Eight Plays by Moliere, 1958 MayAdd to your cart.
Item 5: Book reviews: Fritz Kreisler by Louis P. Lochner, 1951 FebruaryAdd to your cart.
Item 6: Book reviews: The Golden Goose and Other Plays by Fan Kessen, 1964 FebruaryAdd to your cart.
Item 7: Book reviews: A Guide to Effective Public Speaking by Lawrence Henry MouatAdd to your cart.
Item 8: Book reviews: The Hour Glass by David AlmanAdd to your cart.
Item 9: Book reviews: How God Fix Jonah by Lorenz Graham, 1947 MarchAdd to your cart.

Browse by Box:

[Box 1],
[Box 2],
[Box 3],
[Box 4],
[Box 5],
[Box 6],
[Box 7],
[Box 8],
[Box 9],
[Box 10],
[Box 11],
[Box 12],
[Box 13],
[Box 14],
[Box 15],
[Box 16],
[Box 17],
[Box 18],
[Box 19],
[Box 20],
[Box 21],
[Box 22],
[Box 23],
[Box 24],
[Box 25],
[Box 26],
[Box 27],
[Box 28],
[Box 29],
[Box 30],
[Box 31],
[Box 32],
[Box 33],
[Box 34],
[Box 35],
[Box 36],
[Box 37],
[Box 38],
[Box 39],
[Box 40],
[Box 41],
[Box 42],
[Box 43],
[Box 44],
[Box 45: Classwork: Assorted themes, term papers, notebooks, etc., 1907-1938],
[Box 46],
[Box 47],
[Box 48],
[Box 49],
[Box 50],
[Box 51: Aluminum electrograph records, undated],
[All]


Page Generated in: 0.541 seconds (using 207 queries).
Using 10.79MB of memory. (Peak of 11.59MB.)

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