Lorenzo Dow Turner Papers
Object Details
- Biographical/Historical note
- Lorenzo Dow Turner was born in Elizabeth City, N.C. in 1895. He earned his B.A. in 1914 from Howard University; in 1917, he received an M.A. in English from Harvard University. He received his doctorate in English from the University of Chicago in 1926 while simultaneously serving as chairman and professor of the Department of English at Howard from 1917 to 1928. He held the same positions at Fisk University in Nashville from 1929 to 1946. In 1946 he accepted a professorship in the English department at Roosevelt University in Chicago, where he remained as professor of English and lecturer in African Cultures until his retirement in 1970. Turner was professor emeritus at Roosevelt until his death at age 77 in 1972. Turner's professional and academic interests encompassed both English and linguistics. A noted scholar of African languages and linguistics, he learned numerous West African languages, mastering five of them. He was a noted authority on Gullah, a Creole language spoken in the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina and Georgia.
- Date
- 1895 - 1972
- Extent
- 23.97 Linear feet (20 boxes)
- Citation
- Lorenzo Dow Turner papers,Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Smithsonian Institution, gift of Lois Turner Williams.
- Type
- Collection descriptions
- Archival materials
- Audiovisual materials
- Field recordings
- Photographs
- Photographic prints
- Maps
- Correspondence
- Topic
- Sea Islands Creole dialect
- African languages -- Study and teaching -- United States
- Linguistics -- Research -- United States
- Identifier
- ACMA.06-017
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EAD Collection Results
20 result(s) Skip to facets for narrowing search results- Fahari, February 1987
- Carrying a song back by Todd Richisson, 12 May 1997
- Writings, Miscellaneous
- Three years of work to remember–300 years of culture, 14 December 1999 by Rob Dewig
- When the Orishas whisper by Migene Gonzalez-Wippler, 1989
- Singing for my life–The African American tradition of song by Dee Dee Risher, July–August 1997 (Interview) Journey for a song–music links Georgians to Africa by Herb Frazier, March
- Journey for a song-music links Georgians to Africa by Herb Frazier, 16 March 1997
- National Responsibility for the Education of the Negro, by Kelly Miller, Reprinted from the Educational Review, Vol. 58, No. 1,June 1919
- Newspaper clippings, featuring L. D. Turner by Margaret Wade–Lewis
- Interest remains in '32 findings of Gullah researchers by Herb Frazier, 16 February 1997
- The impact pf the Turner/Herskovits connection on Anthropology and linguistics by Margaret Wade-Lewis, February 8, 1993 (Two copies), 1 December 1992 (Two copies)
- North Carolina researcher paved the way for discovery by Todd Richissin, undated
- Beryl Loftman Bailey: Africanist women linguist in New York State by Margaret Wade–Lewis
- Sisters in song by Herb Frazier, 9 May 1997
- African connection by Herb Frazier, May 1997
- Lorenzo Dow Turner: First African American linguist by Margaret Wade-Lewis, undated
- The contribution of Lorenzo Dow Turner to African linguistics by Margaret Wade-Lewis, Spring 1990
- The Negro family in Bahia, by E. Franklin Frazier, August 1942
- Examing the relevance of Black English by Joseph E. Holloway and Winifred K. Vas, 23 September 1993
- Satire of Ebonics misses the point by Salikoko S. Mufwene, undated