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Size | About 1200 items |
Abstract | John Skally Terry, a white professor and friend of Thomas Wolfe, entered the University of North Carolina in 1914. As an undergraduate, he was active in student publications and became a friend of Thomas Wolfe. While living in New York in the early 1920s, Terry renewed his friendship with Wolfe, joining Wolfe as a member of the English faculty at New York University in 1925. After Wolfe's death in 1938, Terry became a close friend of Wolfe's mother, Julia E. Wolfe, and worked with her on Thomas Wolfe's Letters to His Mother (Scribner's, 1943). Selected by Maxwell Perkins and the Wolfe family to write a biography of Thomas Wolfe, Terry compiled a great deal of material about Wolfe. There was, however, no manuscript of the biography found among Terry's papers after his death in 1953. The collection chiefly contains material compiled by John Skally Terry during the years he was working on a biography of Thomas Wolfe. Original correspondence is primarily between Terry and Wolfe's friends, relatives, and acquaintances from whom Terry solicited anecdotes and reminiscences. There are a few postcards from Thomas Wolfe to Terry and one autograph letter written from London in 1935 from Wolfe to Terry. On a trip to the western United States in 1940, Terry interviewed doctors who had cared for Wolfe in 1938, and Terry reported on those interviews in letters to his sister. Also included are typed copies and photocopies of letters to and from Thomas Wolfe and of correspondence among other members of the Wolfe family; 15 typed responses by Maxwell Perkins to Terry's questions about Wolfe and his work; a few notes by Julia E. Wolfe and some notes about her; and audio recordings and related transcripts of Terry's interviews with Julia E. Wolfe, which were recorded on a dictaphone machine. Terry founded the Thomas Wolfe Biography Club of New York University, and minutes of the Club's meetings are included here. Minutes mention Kathleen and Clayton Hoagland, Belinda Jelliffe, Melville Cane, John Hall Wheelock, Murdoch Dooher, and Madeleine Boyd, among others. Terry also had his New York University students search out and interview Wolfe's former students, and correspondence and interviews with these students are in the collection. There are also materials relating to Wolfe's student days at the University of North Carolina; scholarly works about Wolfe; note cards Terry kept for the Wolfe biography; clippings; and other items. |
Creator | Terry, John Skally, 1894-1953. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. North Carolina Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Frances Weaver, A. Hope Shull, Nicholas Graham, 1998
Encoded by: Benjamin Bromley, January 2009
Updated by: Anne Wells and Andrew Crook, September 2019
Finding aid updated by Dawne Howard Lucas in April 2020 to change the collection number from CW1 to 70004.
Since August 2017, we have added ethnic and racial identities for individuals and families represented in collections. To determine identity, we rely on self-identification; other information supplied to the repository by collection creators or sources; public records, press accounts, and secondary sources; and contextual information in the collection materials. Omissions of ethnic and racial identities in finding aids created or updated after August 2017 are an indication of insufficient information to make an educated guess or an individual's preference for identity information to be excluded from description. When we have misidentified, please let us know at wilsonlibrary@unc.edu.
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
John Skally Terry was born in Rockingham, N.C., on 19 November 1894, the son of E. Burton and Jennie Skally Terry. He attended Rockingham schools and entered the University of North Carolina in 1914. As an undergraduate, he was active in student publications and became a friend of Thomas Wolfe. He was graduated from the University in 1918 and entered its two-year medical program. In 1920, he transferred back to the study of humanities, and, in 1921, he entered Columbia University. He received a master's degree in English from Columbia in 1922. While living in New York in the early 1920s, Terry renewed his friendship with Thomas Wolfe.
In 1925, Terry joined Wolfe as a member of the English faculty at New York University, a position Terry would hold for the rest of his career. Terry lived in Brooklyn Heights, and when Wolfe moved there in 1931, the two apparently became close friends. After Wolfe's death in 1938, Terry became a close friend of Wolfe's mother, Julia E. Wolfe, and worked with her on Thomas Wolfe's Letters to His Mother (Scribner's, 1943). Terry was selected by Maxwell Perkins and the Wolfe family to write a biography of Thomas Wolfe. Terry compiled a great deal of material about Wolfe, primarily typed and photocopied copies of his letters. There was, however, no manuscript of the biography found among Terry's papers after his death on 30 June 1953.
Back to TopThe John Skally Terry papers contain material compiled by Terry during the years he was working on a biography of Thomas Wolfe. Original correspondence is primarily between Terry and friends, relatives, and acquaintances of Thomas Wolfe from whom Terry solicited anecdotes and reminiscences in preparation for writing his biography of Wolfe. There are a few postcards from Wolfe to Terry and one autograph letter to Terry from Wolfe, written from London in 1935. There are letters to and from members of the Wolfe family and some letters from Terry to his sister, Josephine Terry, written when he was traveling the western United States in the summer of 1940. On that trip, Terry interviewed doctors who had cared for Wolfe in 1938 and reported on those interviews in letters to his sister.
There are typed and photocopied copies of letters to and from Thomas Wolfe. There are also typed and photocopied copies of correspondence of other members of the Wolfe family.
Other material compiled by Terry includes reminiscences and anecdotes written by other people. At Terry's request, Maxwell Perkins wrote 15 typed responses to questions about Wolfe and his work. Perkins also supplied Terry with typed copies of excerpts from Wolfe's letters to his former teacher, Margaret Roberts, and 67 pages of typed copies of reviews, excerpts from letters, and other references to Thomas Wolfe. There are a few notes by Julia E. Wolfe and some notes about her. There are also audio recordings and related transcripts of John Terry's interviews with Julia E. Wolfe, which were recorded on a dictaphone machine. The original cylinders are included in the collection.
Terry founded the Thomas Wolfe Biography Club of New York University, and minutes of the meetings of the Club are included here. Friends and acquaintances of Thomas Wolfe whose appearances are recorded in the minutes include Kathleen and Clayton Hoagland, Belinda Jelliffe, Melville Cane, John Hall Wheelock, Murdoch Dooher, and Madeleine Boyd. Terry also used the students in his classes at New York University to search out and interview Wolfe's former students. Correspondence and interviews of these students are included here. There is also some material relating to Wolfe's student days at the University of North Carolina.
Terry also collected other reminiscences, personal anecdotes, and scholarly works about Wolfe. In addition, there are many unsorted note cards on which Terry kept notes for the Wolfe biography, clippings, and one box of material that does not relate to Thomas Wolfe.
The Terry family gift included John Terry's personal library of about 4,000 volumes. These volumes were accessioned into the general collection of the library of the University of North Carolina. There is an identifying bookplate in each book.
Back to TopProcessing information: Titles and descriptions compiled from original containers and The Wax Cylinders: Julia Wolfe Interviews by John Skally Terry (2008, Thomas Wolfe Society). Please note that some of the recordings are blank.
John Skally Terry's interviews with Thomas Wolfe's mother, Julia E. Wolfe. Together they worked on Thomas Wolfe's Letters to His Mother (Scribner's, 1943). Original audio recordings are on phonographic cylinders. Related trancripts and loose memos found with recordings reside in box 10.
Cylinder CY-70004/1 |
Westall Family InformationPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/2 |
Early Life of JuliaPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/3 |
Tom as a ChildPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/4 |
Tom's Antics as a BabyPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/5 |
The House on Woodfin Street; How Effie Set it on FirePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/6 |
Julia's Early Married Life with a Drunken W.O.Phonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/7 |
Drunk, W. O. Threatens the Family (Prior to Tom's Birth)Phonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/8 |
W. O. Tries to Commit Suicide in a Drunken FitPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/9 |
How the Cure for Alcoholism Made W.O. an AlcoholicPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/10 |
Julia's Love Affair with Mark LancePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/11 |
How Julia Bought the House on Spruce StreetPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/12 |
Tom and His WomenPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/13 |
Asheville's Opinion of "Look Homeward, Angel"Phonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/14 |
Tom's College EducationPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/15 |
The Death of Julia's Sister SallyPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/16 |
Julia's Sister Sally Takes Julia on a Visit to HeavenPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/17 |
Aline Bernstein; Tom's Last Visit to AshevillePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/18 |
Early Days of Tom's IllnessPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/19 |
Tom's Last Visit Home and Frank's Behavior at the TimePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/20 |
Fred Visits Tom in Seattle, 8 February 1940Phonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/21 |
Tom's Last Days at Johns Hopkins HospitalPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/22 |
Tom at Johns Hopkins; His Second Operations; His DeathPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/23 |
The Train Trip from Seattle to Johns Hopkins HospitalPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/24 |
W. O.'s Family; His Job at Sisson Marble Works in BaltimorePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/25 |
W. O. Leaves Sisson to Work in Columbia then RaleighPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/26 |
W. O. and Julia's Other ChildrenPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/27 |
Tom's Reading and PlayingPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/28 |
Tom's Eagerness to Go to School; Tom's EducationPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/29 |
Tom's Travels with Julia; His Playmates and HobbiesPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/30 |
Tom's Height; His Talking; The Family "Nighthawks"Phonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/31 |
Tom and Santa Claus; What Tom Liked to EatPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/32 |
Tom's Favorite Books; His Views on NaturePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/33 |
Tom's Health as a Child; His Relationships with Frank and Mabel; His Views on ReligionPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/34 |
Tom's Maternal AncestorsPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/35 |
Mabel Visits Tom; His Doctors Recommend Johns HopkinsPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/36 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/37 |
Wilson's Inauguration and the Suffragettes; Other TravelsPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/38 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/39 |
The Death of Mark Lance and its Prenatal Effects on TomPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/40 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/41 |
Tom's Smoking; His Dislike of Real Estate; His AppearancePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/42 |
Reception of "Look Homeward, Angel" in AshevillePhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/43 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/44 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/45 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/46 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/47 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |
Cylinder CY-70004/48 |
Blank CylinderPhonographic Cylinder |