Identitetselement
Referenskod
Namn och placering på arkivinstitutionen
Beskrivningsnivå
Titel
Datum
- 1966 January 2 (Skapande)
Omfång
3 page(s); Typed signed letter with holograph (handwritten) annotations.
Arkivbildare
Biografiska anmärkningar
John Beecher was a poet whose works often expressed social concerns such as civil rights, non-violence, and workers' rights. During the 1960's, his work on the publication «Ramparts» got him dubbed a "Communist" by Governor George Wallace of Alabama, which Beecher claimed was an "honor". He would return to Alabama, where he claimed the KKK wanted him dead, in 1966 to serve as a visiting professor at Miles College, a traditionally black institution. He and his wife Barbara were received back to the Catholic Church in 1965, and he describes the changes in the Church in Birmingham since his boyhood days there. He and Barbara were also art printers, and Merton approached them to do specialty additions of some of his work.
Innehåll och strukturelement
Omfattning och innehåll
First lines: "Why I address you thus instead of as Dear Tom you will understand when I reveal to you that Barbara"... Contents index: John and Barbara's return to the Catholic Church / writer's block from U.S. racial problems and Vietnam War / resignation from Santa Clara University professorship / Selma-Montgomery March / called Communist by Governor Wallace on TV / Ku Klux Klan / killer of Jonathan Daniels trials / Cuernavaca - Ernesto Cardenal.
Uppordningssystem
Element för villkor för tillgång och användning
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Teknisk åtkomst
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Materialets språk
- engelska