George
A. Towns Collection
1851-1963
5.5 linear feet
NOTE: A paper copy of the finding aid, with container
list, is available at the Atlanta University
CenterArchives for in-house consultation and
may be obtained for a fee.
George
Alexander Towns (b.
1870 d. 1960) was
an educator, author,
and community activist.
For most of his life,
Towns was affiliated
with Atlanta University
(AU), first as a
student, then professor
and finally as an
active alumnus. One
of his most notable
contributions is
as founder and editor
of the Crimson and
Gray, the AU Alumni
Association monthly
newsletter. He was
a member of the class
of 1894 which also
included his close
friend James Weldon
Johnson with whom
he corresponded until
Johnson's death.
In 1929 when Atlanta
University shifted
its curriculum to
only graduate level
courses, Towns retired.
He went to Fort Valley
Normal and Industrial
School (now Fort
Valley State University,
Georgia) where he
was assistant to
the principal and
later acting principal
until 1938. He was
active in the community
as a member of the
Atlanta branch of
the NAACP, the Citizen's
League, the Boulé of
Atlanta (Sigma Pi
Phi), and the Community
Chest. A member of
the Harvard University
Class of 1900, he
was also active in
the Harvard University
Alumni Association
and in the 1920's
used his class connections
to raise funds for
Atlanta University.
His lifelong passion
for writing is evidenced
in the many odes
he authored on special
occasions and his
poems, some of which
were published.
This collection
consists of the papers
of George Alexander
Towns from 1851 to
1963. It includes
correspondence, literary
works, diaries, photographs,
and publications.
The bulk of the materials
pertain to Town's
association with
Atlanta University
(AU) both as a student
and faculty member.
The earliest materials
concern Lucy Elizabeth
(Merriam) Case, a
favorite teacher
of Towns at AU, and
include her biography
which tells of the
beginning of the
school and a few
of its students.
Correspondence from
Horace Bumstead (AU's
second president)
describes Town's
fundraising and public
relations work, his
support of William
Monroe Trotter's
attack on Booker
T. Washington, and
Town's subsequent
censure by AU's Board
of Trustees. Correspondence
from AU classmate
James Weldon Johnson
traces Johnson's
literary career and
their involvement
with the struggle
of African American
men. Correspondence
between Towns and
Harvard Classmate
William N. Seaver
discusses national
and local politics,
World War II, and
the Civil Rights
Movement. Other major
correspondents include
Myron W. Adams, Rufus
E. Clement, William
Henry Crogman, W.E.B.
DuBois, and Edward
Twichell Ware. The
collection also contains
materials pertaining
to Town's career
at Fort Valley; drafts
of poems, prose,
and class lecture
notes; and his essays
and notes from when
he was a student. |