Scope and arrangement
The Jean Blackwell Hutson papers include materials relating to Hutson's personal life and family, library career at the Schomburg Center and the University of Ghana, and teaching, writing, and other activities.
The Jean Blackwell Hutson papers are arranged in five series:
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1902-1998
The personal files contain biographical material, including address books, diaries, ID cards, passports, and various biographies of and interviews with Hutson. There are also education files containing correspondence and newsletters from the alumni groups of Douglass High School and Barnard College, as well as class materials and notes from Hutson's time at Columbia's Teacher's College in the 1940s and oral history program in the 1980s. There is a significant amount of family papers and correspondence, particularly with Hutson's mother, Sarah Myers Blackwell, and daughter, Jean Frances Hutson. Finally, there are some financial papers, travel documents, and various certificates and plaques awarded to Hutson.
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1932-1994
The correspondence includes a mix of personal and professional content, from friends, colleagues, and acquaintances. Includes a large number of cards Hutson received upon her retirement from NYPL in 1984.
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1948-1993
This series documents Hutson's career at NYPL and the University of Ghana, as well as her other professional activities and the community and civic organizations to which she belonged and conferences and events she attended.
The NYPL files include memos, reports, and press clippings from Hutson's tenure at the Schomburg Center. (Extensive files on her activities there can also be found in the Schomburg Center institutional records.) Particular Schomburg personnel controversies, including the firing of archivist Laurore St. Juste, the hiring of white archivist Robert Morris, and Hutson's own clashes with NYPL administration and 1980 reassignment are all documented. Meeting minutes and memos detailing the fundraising and construction of the 1981 Schomburg Center building can be found in the Schomburg Corporation files.
This series also includes correspondence, memos, and travel documents relating to Hutson's year-long term at the University of Ghana; memos, lecture notes, and syllabi for the classes she taught at City College; and correspondence, meeting notes, and other materials relating to other organizations in which she was active, such as Delta Sigma Theta sorority, the Harlem Cultural Center, and the National Urban League.
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1945-1992
This series contains drafts and published versions of Hutson's articles, bibliographies, and biographical entries; as well as correspondence and materials relating to two books for which she served on advisory boards, Notable Black American Women and Who's Who Among Black Americans. There are also some writings by others, including a typescript of "Poems for a Mixed-Up World" by Hutson's first husband Andy Razaf.
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1938-1995
Contains invitations, programs, and press clippings.