Contact Information
Hoskins Library
1401 Cumberland Avenue
Knoxville, TN 37996-4000
865-974-4480
e-mail: special@utk.edu
© The University of Tennessee Special Collections Library
Linear Feet: Collection contains
four pages in one folder.
Abstract: This collection contains
two typewritten drafts and a copy of each for page 7 of a Charlotte Wilder
biography by Evelyn Scott, with typewritten and handwritten notes. It discusses
Scott’s time during World War II and dealing with the bank for Miss
Wilder.
Administrative Information
Statement of Provenance: Collection
is property of the UT Special Collections Library.
Copyright Statement: Copyright
© 2005. The University of Tennessee Libraries. All Rights Reserved. Permission
to use, copy, modify, and distribute these materials for educational, research,
and not-for-profit purposes, without fee and without a signed licensing agreement,
is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph
appear in all copies, modifications, and distributions. For commercial license
to use contact, University of Tennessee Libraries, Office of the Dean, Permissions,
1015 Volunteer Boulevard, Knoxville, TN 37996-1000.
Biographical Note: Evelyn Scott
(1893-1963) was born Elsie Dunn in Clarksville, Tennessee. In 1913, Elsie
married Frederick Creighton Wellman, and they changed their names to Evelyn
Scott and Cyril Kay-Scott. The couple moved to Brazil, where they had one
son in 1914, Creighton "Jigg" Scott. After her divorce from Cyril in 1928,
Evelyn married novelist John Metcalfe in 1930. Between 1921 and 1941, she
wrote several books, including critically acclaimed The Wave and Eva
Gay. Her final book The Shadow of the Hawk failed in 1941. Scott
became paranoid about the intertwining of political events during the Second
World War and the productivity of artists. Evelyn Scott died in 1963, John
Metcalfe survived her until 1968.
Charlotte Elizabeth Wilder (1898-1980), novelist Thornton Wilder's oldest
sister, received a bachelor's in English from Mount Holyoke College in 1919
and a master's from Radcliffe. She taught at Wheaton College and Smith College.
In 1934, Charlotte moved to New York to devote all her time to writing. She
suffered a severe nervous breakdown in 1941 and essentially remained in institutions
the rest of her life.
Scope and Content: This collection
contains two typewritten drafts and a copy of each for page 7 of a Charlotte
Wilder biography by Evelyn Scott, with typewritten and handwritten notes.
It discusses Scott’s time during World War II and dealing with the bank
for Miss Wilder.
See also Evelyn Scott Collection in MS-2015
and The Evelyn Scott Letters, 1946-1949, in MS-2300.
The Peggy Bach Collection (mostly on Evelyn Scott) in MS-2047
and MS-2050.
Keywords
Evelyn Scott
Charlotte Wilder
Biographies
Tennessee author
Series/Container List
Folder 1
Item 1: Draft of “page 7 --- biography of Charlotte Wilder […] supplied
voluntarily by Evelyn Scott”; n.d.
Item 2: Copy of draft of “page 7 --- biography of Charlotte Wilder […]
supplied voluntarily by Evelyn Scott”; n.d.
Item 3: A different draft of “page 7 --- biography of Charlotte Wilder
[…] supplied voluntarily by Evelyn Scott”; n.d.
Item 4: Copy of draft of “page 7 --- biography of Charlotte Wilder […]
supplied voluntarily by Evelyn Scott”; n.d.