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Lila May Barnett to Charles W. Chesnutt, 26 May 1924

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  Morgan College,1 Baltimore, Md., Mr Charles Waddell Chesnutt, 9719 Lamont Ave., Cleveland, Ohio My dear Mr Chesnutt,

I'm merely calling your attention to a letter of April 23, asking that you send me a picture of yourself, your biography and one or more of your best selections for a book I'm compiling—a History of American Negro Literature. Will you furnish me with these at your earliest date?2

Possibly the letter of April 23 went astray or you have been rather busy, but let me beg of you to kindly favor me with the above request.

Thanking you in advance, I am,

Yours truly, (Miss) L. M. Barnett



Correspondent: Lila May Barnett Mitchell (1885–1937) was a Black academic educated at Rust College, the Tuskegee Institute, Columbia University, and the University of Chicago. She taught high school in Little Rock, Arkansas, before moving to Morgan College (Maryland) in 1923 to teach chemistry and math. By 1928 she had become chair of the history department at Rust College (Mississippi), like Morgan a historically Black college (HBCU). She was briefly married (1929–1930), and after her husband's death seems to have returned to the Little Rock area. Although her planned book project on Black writers seems to have been abandoned, she did complete a master's thesis (unpublished) on "History Courses in Colored Colleges and Universities" at the University of Chicago in 1936.



1. Morgan College (now Morgan State University) is a historically Black college founded in 1867 in Baltimore, Maryland, initially as a Methodist Episcopal seminary, the Centenary Bible Institute. Renamed Morgan College in 1890, it expanded to include coeducational, secular training and received major support from Andrew Carnegie in the 1910s. Morgan College was a private institution until 1939. [back]

2. While Barnett apparently did not complete her project, the first textbook along those lines was published before Chesnutt's death, edited by scholars at Howard University: Readings from Negro Authors for Schools and Colleges, edited by Otelia Cromwell, Lorenzo Dow Turner, and Eva B. Dykes (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1931). With Chesnutt's permission, it included two of his short stories and a short biographical sketch; see Cromwell's letter to Chesnutt of February 9, 1931, as well as Chesnutt's February 16 response. [back]