LUCK, CLARICE WHITE, 1894-1976

Biography:

Songwriter; teacher. Born– January 30, 1894, Columbiana. Parents– James Richmond and Willie (Roberts) White. Married– Paul O. Luck. Children– One. Collaborated with Mildred White Wallace, in song writing and teaching music and dramatics at the high schools in Shelby County; wrote monologues for school purposes.  Died April 6, 1976.

Source:

Files at Jacksonville State University.

Joint_Publication(s):

(Songs)

Alone With Thee. Dayton, Ohio; Lorenz.

Black Belt Lullabye. Boston; Boston Music Co.

Close of Day. Boston; Boston Music Co.

Since Your Path Crossed Mine. Cincinnati, Ohio; Willis Music Co.

Sometime, Somewhere, Somehow. New York; Sam Fox Music Co.

Trust Only in His Love. Dayton, Ohio; Lorenz.

(Unpublished songs)

Deep in My Heart

Dream Baby of Mine

Easter Dawn

He Will Give You Rest

I Think of You

Legacy

When Day Says ‘Good Night’

LUCKEY, CARL FREEMAN, 1914-2003

Biography:

Physican. Born– July 16, 1914, Jackson, Tenn. Parents– David William and Mabel Dent (Freeman) Luckey. Married– Althea Ann Colvin, December 31, 1938. Children– Two. Education– B.A., Union University, 1936; M.D., Vanderbilt University, 1941. Served in the U.S. Army, 1941-1945 (achieved rank of major); interned, John Gaston Hospital, Memphis, 1941-1942; practiced medicine, Franklin, Tenn., 1945-1947; resident, Vanderbilt University and V.A. Hospital, Nashville, 1947-1950; practiced medicine in Florence, Ala., 1950-1999. Member, Coffee and Colonial Manor Hospitals, Florence; board of directors, Colonial Manor Hospital; Chief of Staff, Eliza Coffee Memorial Hospital; Chief of Staff, Humana Hospital of Florence. Member, the American and the Alabama Medical Associations; member and president, the Lauderdale County Medical Society.  Died May 19, 2003.

Source:

Who’s Who in the South and Southwest, 1975; obituary, Florence Times-Daily.

Publication(s):

Collector Prints Old and New; an identification and value guide. Florence, Ala.; Books Americana, 1982.

Hummel Figurines; a Collector’s Identification and Value Guide. Florence, Ala.; Books Americana, 1978.

Norman Rockwell Art and Collectibles; an Identification and Value Guide. Florence, Ala.; Books Americana, 1981.

Official Guide to Collector Prints. Florence, Ala.; House of Collectibles, 1976.

Old Fishing Lures and Tackle; an Identification and Value Guide. Florence, Ala.; Books Americana, 1980.

Collecting Antique Bird Decoys; an Identification and Value Guide. Florence, Ala.; Books Americana, 1983.

Joint_Publication(s):

Midsouth Flowers and Landscaping; What’s It Called, Sun or Shade. Florence, Ala.; Piggy Press, 1985.

LUIS, EARLENE WOODS, 1929-1978

Biography:

Teacher, author. Born– October 21, 1929, Walker County, Ala. Parents– Paul A. and Odell (Robinson) Woods. Married– Reinaldo Luis, June 24, 1950. Children– Four. Education– Kings College, Bristol, TN, 1948-1950; B.S., University of Alabama, 1952. Employed as a teacher, Sunland Training Center, Gainesville, Fla., 1955-1958; social worker, Hillsboro County, Fla., 1960; elementary school teacher, 1960-1969; high school teacher, 1969-78. Received the Edith Busby Award from Dodd, Mead, 1966. Died August 11, 1978.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online

Publication(s):

Listen, Lissa! A Candy Striper Meets the Biggest Challenge. New York; Dodd, 1968.

Joint_Publication(s):

Wheels for Ginny’s Chariot. New York; Dodd, 1966.

LUSK, LEILA FEARN, 1863-1955

Biography:

Writer.  Born– August 29, 1863, Huntsville. Parents– Robert and Elizabeth Lee (Coles) Fearn, Jr. Married– John Alexander Lusk. Children– Five. Education– Huntsville Female Institute, Holly Springs (Mississippi) Institute. Served as president of the Alabama Writers Conclave and of the Alabama Branch of the League of American Pen Women. Member– Guntersville Literary Circle, Alabama Federation of Womens Clubs, United Daughters of the Confederacy, board of trustees, Kate Duncan Smith School. Died December 15, 1955.

Source:

Files at Birmingham Public Library and University Library at Jacksonville State University.

Publication(s):

Chatu-Huchi, and other Alabama Legends. Dallas, Tex.; Kaleidograph Press, s.d.

The History of the Presbyterian Church in Guntersville. S.l.; s.n., s.d.

Joint_Publication(s):

Historic Homes of Gardens of Alabama and Their Tradition. S.l.; s.n., s.d.

LUSKIN, JOHN, 1908-1988

Biography:

Reporter, educator. Born– January 23, 1908, Valley Falls, N.Y. Parents– Michael H. and Mary (McMahon) Luskin. Married– Alice Rea, September 12, 1932. Children–one.  Education– A.B., Union College, Schenectady, N.Y., 1929; A.M., Harvard, 1932. Employed as a reporter and news editor for the New Haven Register, New Haven, Conn., 1933-1938; professor of journalism, University of Alabama, 1938-. The John Luskin Endowed Scholarship, “to promote the study of journalism” was established in his honor by the College of Communication and Information Sciences at the University of Alabama. Died September 11, 1988.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online

Publication(s):

Lippman, Liberty and the Press. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1972.

LUTTRELL, CAROLYN LANE, 1896-1976

Biography:

Educator, genealogist. Born– September 6, 1896, Sylacauga. Parents– James H. and Nancy Virginia (Roberts) Lane. Married–Mynatt Winston Peace (died 1937). Married– John D. Luttrell, November 11, 1949. Education– B.A., Woman’s College of Alabama, 1917; M.A., Smith College, 1919; further study, University of Chicago. Employed as teacher, Woman’s College of Alabama (Huntington College); genealogist, historian. Member– Daughters of the American Revolution, Alabama Historical Society, Daughters of Colonial Wars, Daughters of 1812, Daughters of Colonial Dames. Died January 23, 1976.

Source:

Carolyn B. Goff and Janice Lane Callendar, B.B. Comer Memorial Library, Sylacauga.

Compiler:

Early Tombstone Records of Talladega County, Alabama. Wetumpka, Ala.; Fixico Press, 1973.

Joint_Publication(s):

Membership Rolls and Register of Ancestors, Alabama Society of the American Revolution. S.l.; Jordan Printing Co., 1949.

Tombstone Records and Biographical Notes; Sylacauga Cemetery, East Fort Williams, Sylacauga, Alabama. Sylacauga, Ala.; Sylacauga Beautification Council, 1975.

LuZANNE, CELINA (Pseudonym)

See:

Boozer, Celina Luzanne

LYLE, IDALEE M., 1907-2001

Biography:

Teacher. Born– December 17, 1907, Goodwater, Ala. Parents– Rev. John S. and Leila Ophelia (Strong) Martin. Married– Albert Homer Lyle, June 14, 1930. Children– One. Education– Florence State University. Employed by the Limestone County and Morgan County boards of education; U.S. Government Redstone Arsenal Rationing Office; American Bread Company, Huntsvillle; National Woodworks, Birmingham. Published poems and short Stories in Creative Expressions and Little People. Died October 9, 2001.

Source:

Idalee Lyle; ancestry.com

Publication(s):

Before Sunset. New York; Exposition Press, 1962.

Out of the Wilderness; a History of Antioch Methodist Church, Somerville, Alabama. S.l.; s.n., 1979.

LYMAN, WILLIAM JOHNSTON, JR.,1921-1952

Biography:

Editor, reporter; military officer. Born July 30, 1921, Birmingham. Parents– William J. Lyman and Marguerite Getaz Lyman.  Education– Ramsey High School; Davidson College, 1943; the Officer’s Candidate School at Fort Benning, Ga.; University of North Carolina Graduate School. U.S.Army, 1951-52; served in Korea; killed in action, January 18, 1952.  Employed by Charlotte (N.C.) Observer, Charleston (S.C.) News and Courier; managing editor of Florence (S.C.) Morning News, 1951; vice president, South Carolina Press Association. Died January 18, 1952.

Source:

Files at Alabama Department of Archives and History; findagrave.com

Publication(s):

Curlew History, the Story of the First Battalion, 117th Infantry, 30th Division, in Europe During World War II. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Orange Printshop, 1948.

LYON, ANNE BOZEMAN, 1860-1936

Biography:

Writer. Born– Mobile, February 25, 1860. Parents– Thomas Temple Armstrong and Mary Morgan Coffee (Heard) Lyon. Education– New Orleans Locquet Institute; studied in Mobile under Professor Amos Towle. Wrote verse for the Louisville Courier-Journal and other newspapers and magazines before 1900. Edited “Feminine Fancies,” women’s section of Mobile publication “Saturday Review.” Member– League of American Pen Women, the London Poetry Society.  Died December 25, 1936.

Source:

Marquis who’s who online; findagrave.com

Publication(s):

“No Saint”; a Novel. Louisville; J. P. Morton, 1890.

(Booklet) Early Missions of the South.

(Booklet) Casimir Jacques, a Story of the Gulf Coast.

LYON, RALPH MUSE, 1902-1993

Biography:

University professor, administrator. Born– November 25, 1902, Abbeville, S.C.  Parents; Alfred and Annie Coral Muse Lyon. Married–Margaret Charters. Education– B.S., The Citadel (South Carolina Military College), 1923; M.A., University of North Carolina, 1926; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1936. Employed by the Citadel, 1926-1936; Furman, 1936-1942; served in U.S. Army, WWII (1942-46);  Georgia Southern, 1946-1948; Livingston University, 1948-77: dean, College of Arts and Sciences, 1967-1968; professor of social sciences, 1969-1972; acting president, 1972-1973; consultant, Delta State College, Marion Institute.  Awarded emeritus status on his retirement at Livingston, 1977.  Died August 27, 1993.

Source:

Leaders in Education, 1974.

Publication(s):

The Basis for Constructing Curricular Materials in Adult Education for Carolina Cotton Mill Workers. New York; Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1937.

A History of Livingston University, 1935-1963. Livingston, Ala.; Lyon, 1976.

Julia Tutwiler. Livingston, Ala.; s.n., 1976.

Principles of Education, a Workbook. Minneapolis; Burgess Pub. Co., 1953.

LYONS, HILARY HERBERT, JR., 1909-1980

Biography:

Journalist. Born–January 11, 1909, Mobile.  Parents; Herbert and Reba Mae Neville Lyons.  Employed by Mobile Press until 1938. Selected as one of the first class of Nieman Fellows at Harvard in 1939; editor Mediterreanean edition of Stars and Stripes and on staff of Yank, World War II; staff, New York Times; acting editor, book review section. Died May 18, 1980.

Source:

Files at Alabama Public Library Service.

Publication(s):

Other Lives to Live. New York; Dial Press, 1951.

The Rest They Need. New York; Dial Press, 1950.

LYTLE, ANDREW NELSON, 1902-1995

Biography:

Author, farmer, University professor; member of the Nashville Agrarian Movement. Born– Murfreesboro, Tenn., December 26, 1902. Parents– Robert Logan and Lillie Belle (Nelson) Lytle. Lived on a farm near Guntersville. Married– Edna Langdon Barker, June 30, 1938. Children– Three. Education– A.B., Vanderbilt University, 1925; Yale University, 1927-1928.  Taught at the University of the South, 1942-1973; taught, University of Iowa School of Writing, University of Florida (1949-61), Harvard, Vanderbilt, University of Kentucky; Guggenheim Fellow, three different years, between 1940 and 1961; Brown Fellow, University of the South; edited Sewanee Review, 1961-1973; member, Association of Little Magazines; Southern Academy of Letters, Arts and Sciences; Council of Literary Magazines; Phi Beta Kappa, Episcopal Church.  Awarded honorary Litt. D. by Kenyon College, the University of Florida, the University of the South; L.H.D., Hillsdale College, 1985. Died December 13, 1995.

Source:

Marquis Who’s Who and  files at Birmingham Public Library.

Publications;

Alchemy. Winston-Salem, N.C.; Paleomon, 1979.

At the Moon’s Inn. New York; Bobbs-Merrill, 1941.

Bedford Forrest and His Critter Company. New York; Minton, Balch and Co., 1931.

A Christian University and the World; an Address for the Founder’s Day 1964. Sewanee, Tenn.; The University of the South, 1964.

From Eden to Babylon; the Social and Political Essays of Andrew Nelson Lytle. Washington, D.C.; Regnery Gateway, 1990.

The Hero with the Private Parts; Essays. Baton Rouge, La.; Louisiana State University Press, 1966.

Kristin: A Reading. Columbia:  University of Missouri Press, 1992.

The Long Night. Indianapolis, Ind.; Bobbs-Merrill, 1936.

A Name for Evil; a Novel. Indianapolis, Ind.; Bobbs-Merrill, 1947.

A Novel, a Novella, and Four Stories. New York; McDowell, Oblensky, 1958.

Reflections of a Ghost; an Agrarian View After Fifty Years. Dallas, Tex.; New London Press, 1980.

V’ardshuset M’anen; ber’attelsen om Hermando de Soto’s Expedition till Florida. Stockholm; A. Sohlman, 1943.

A Wake for the Living; a Family Chronicle. New York; Crown, 1975.

The Velvet Horn. New York; McDowell, Oblensky, 1957.

Compiler:

Craft and Vision; the Best Fiction from the Sewanee Review. New York; Delacorte, 1971.

Papers;

A collection of the papers of Andrew Lytle is held by the library at Vanderbilt University.  Another collection of his papers is part of the Stuart Wright Collection at the Library of East Carolina University in Greenville, NC.

MACKIN, COOPER RICHERSON, 1933-

Biography:

Literary scholar; university professor; university administrator. Born– April 26, 1933, Selma. Parents– Thomas R. and Muriel (Green) Mackin.  Married– (1) Catherine Barragy, February 15, 1958 (deceased); Children– three;  (2) Mary Kathryn Ruetten, December 14, 1985.  U. S. Army, 1953-55.  Education–Troy State University, BA, 1956; Tulane, MA, 1958; Rice University, Ph. D., 1962. Taught English at Texas Southern University, 1958-1959; North Texas State University, 1962-1963; University of New Orleans, 1963-1970; dean, College of Liberal Arts, 1969-80; vice chancellor for academic affairs, acting chancellor, Chancellor, 1984-87.  Member Milton Society of America, South Central Modern Language Association, National Conference of Christians and Jews. Member of Board of Directors, University of New Orleans Foundation. The University created in his honor the Cooper Mackin Medallion, presented annually to a faculty member who makes an outstanding contribution to the mission of the University.  Awarded status of  Chancellor emeritus, 1987.

Source:

Who’s Who in America, 1982.

Marquis Who’s Who online.

Publication(s):

William Styron. Austin, Tex.; Steck-Vaughan, 1969.

MACON, LEON MEERTIEF, 1908-1965

Biography:

Baptist clergyman. Born– October 25, 1908, Whatley, Clarke County, Ala. Parents– James William and Martha (Kelly) Macon. Married– Emily May Bodden. Education– A.B., Howard College, 1933; D.D., 1949; Th.M., Southern Baptist Seminary, 1938. Employed as minister, Bay Minette, Athens, Atmore, Bessemer, Ala., West Point, Ga. Member– Alabama Baptist Board, Radio and Television Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, Historical Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, and the executive committee for the Southern Baptist Encyclopedia; president, Alabama Baptist State Convention; editor and business manager, Alabama Baptist. Died November 15, 1965.

Source:

Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists, Vol. III.

Publication(s):

Salvation in a Scientific Age. Grand Rapids, Mich.; Zondervan, 1955.

The Seven Sayings on the Cross. Grand Rapids, Mich.; Baker Book House, 1964.

You Choose a Cross. Grand Rapids, Mich.; Baker Book House, 1966.

MADDOX, ALVA HUGH, 1930-

Biography:

Attorney, judge. Born– April 17, 1930, Covington County. Parents– Christopher Columbus and Audie L. (Freeman) Maddox. Married– Virginia Roberts, June 14, 1958. Children– Two. Education– A.B., University of Alabama, 1952; LL.B., 1957. Admitted to the Alabama Bar, 1957.  Employed as a journalist, Florala News, 1947; law clerk, Alabama Court of Appeals, 1957; field examiner, Veterans Administration, 1958; law clerk, U.S. District Court, 1959; attorney, Montgomery, 1959-1961; circuit judge, 15th Judicial Circuit, 1961-63; legal adviser to Governor George Wallace, 1965; Governor Lurleen Wallace, 1967; Governor Albert Brewer, 1968. Appointed associate justice on the Supreme Court of Alabama, 1969; served until his retirement as senior associate justice in 2001.  Wrote 1650 majority opinions during his 31 years on the court.  Member American and Alabama Bar Associations; YMCA, Kiwanis. Member and leader of the American Inns of Court Foundation, a legal mentoring organization;  awarded its A. Sherman Christensen Award in 2008. Awarded Judicial Award of Merit, Alabama Bar Association.

Source:

Who’s Who in Government, 1972.

Publication(s):

Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure.  5 editions: 1990, 1994 (Michie Company),1999,2004,2011 (lexis-Nexis).

Billy Boll Weevil; a Pest Becomes a Hero. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1976.

Joint_Editor:

Alabama Appellate Courts, 4th. ed. Montgomery, Ala.; Alabama Supreme Court Library, 1975.

MADRIGAL, JOSE A., 1945-

Biography:

University professor. Born– July 18, 1945, Ciego de Avila, Cuba. Parents– Antonio and Maria I. Madrigal. Married– Angelia, July 22, 1968. Children– Three. Education– B.A., Michigan State University, 1964; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1973. Employed as graduate teaching assistant, Michigan State University, 1966-1968; University of Kentucky, 1968-1970; taught Spanish at Auburn University, 1978-2008. Served as chair of the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, 1995-2001. Honors– National Endowment for the Humanities fellow, Duke University, 1975. Awarded emeritus status on his retirement at Auburn in 2008.

Source:

Jose A. Madrigal, Auburn, Ala.; Auburn University website.

Publication(s):

Bibliografia Sombre el Pundonor; Teatro del Siglo de Oro. Miami; Ediciones Universal, 1977.

El Salvaje y la Mitologia, el Arte y la Religion. Miami; Ediciones Universal, 1975.

Joint_Publication(s):

Critical Perspectives on Calderon de la Barca. Lincoln, Neb.; SSSAS, University of Nebraska, 1981.

Diez Cuentos Hispanicos. Miami; Spanish Textbook Corporation, 1976.

Estudios en Honor a Everett Hesse. Lincoln, Neb.; SSSAS, University of Nebraska, 1981.

Lazarillo de Tormes. (Clasicos Comentados Playor). Madrid; Playor, 1982.

Miguel de Cervantes Novelas Ejemplares. (Clasicos Comentados Playor). Madrid; Playor, 1982.

Studies in the Spanish Golden Age; Cervantes and Lope de Vega. Miami; Ediciones Universal, 1978.

MAEHL, WILLIAM HARVEY, 1915-

Biography:

University professor; historian. Born– May 28, 1915, Brooklyn, N.Y. Parents– William Henry and Antoinette (Salamone) Maehl. Married– Josephine Scholl McAllister, December 29, 1941. Children– Two. Education– B.S., M.A., Northwestern University, 1937-1939; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1946. Employed as instructor, St. Louis University (1942-43), Centenary College (1943-44); DePaul University, (1944-1950); U.S. Army military historian, European Headquarters, Karlsruhe and Frankfort, Germany; Fort Sill, Okla., (1951-1955); civilian war plans officer, Burtonwood Lance, England, 1955-1956; taught, Nebraska Wesleyan University, 1956-1962 and 1964-1968; University of Auckland, New Zealand, 1963-1964. Auburn University, Professor of European History, 1968-1981.  Professor emeritus, 1981.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online

Publication(s):

August Bebel; Shadow Emperor of the German Workers. Philadelphia; American Philosophical Society, 1980.

Bebel’s Fight Against the Schlactflotte; …. Philadelphia; American Philosophical Society, 1977.

German Militarism and Socialism. Lincoln, Neb.; Nebraska Wesleyan Press, 1963.

The German Socialist Party; Champion of the Republic, 1918-1933. Independence Square; American Philosophical Society, 1986.

Germany in Western Civilization. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1979.

World History Syllabus, Ancient and Medieval Times; …. Auburn, Ala.; s.n., 1970.

World History Syllabus; Early Modern Times. Winston-Salem, N.C.; Hunter Publishing Co., 1980.

World History Syllabus; Modern Times; …. Auburn, Ala.; Auburn University Press, 1977.

Contributor:

Some Twentieth Century Historians. Chicago; University of Chicago Press, 1961.

Historians of Modern Europe. Baton Rouge, La.; Louisiana State University Press, 1971.

Papers;

Papers of William Harvey Maehl are held by the Archives and Manuscripts Department of the Ralph Brown Draughon Library at Auburn University.

MALLON, JOHN H., JR., 1910-1976

Biography:

Harbor pilot; genealogist. Born– May 21, 1910, Mobile. Parents– John H. and Rachel Eldora (Previto) Mallon. Married– Lucille Simms. Children– Three. Employed by U.S. Corps of Engineers; master and pilot, Mobile Harbor, Mobile Towing Company, October 2, 1972.  Died August 1976.

Source:

Beverly Mallon Taylor, Mobile, Ala.

Joint_Compiler:

Bay and Bayou Burials, Vols. 1-2. Mrs. Lester E. Taylor, 1974-

Neshoba County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

Noxube County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

Winston County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

MALLON, LUCILLE SIMMS, 1917-1989

Biography:

Genealogist. Born– March 14, 1917, Pascagoula, Miss. Parents– Albert Joseph and Nannie Ruth (Eiland) Simms. Married– John H. Mallon, Jr. Children– Three. Married– John P. Connick, July 12, 1980. Founder and editor, The Deep South Genealogical Quarterly. Died September 23, 1989.

Source:

Beverly Mallon Taylor, Mobile, Ala.

Compiler:

1840 Index to Florida Census. Mobile, Ala.; Beverly M. Taylor, 1974.

Death and/or Burial Records, Mobile County, Alabama, 1871-1880.  Mobile; Connick 1987.

List of Ship’s Passengers, Mobile, Alabama.  2 vols.  Mobile, 1988-89.

Missing Files in Probate Court of Mobile County, Alabama; November 27, 1889. Mobile, Ala.; Beverly M. Taylor, 19–.

Mobile, Ala. Directory, 1837-1839. Mobile, Ala.; Beverly M. Taylor, 19-

Mobile, Ala. Directory, 1842. Mobile, Ala.; Beverly M. Taylor, 19–

Washington County, Alabama Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; Mrs. Lester E. Taylor, s.d.

Joint_Compiler:

Bay and Bayou Burials, Vols. 1-2. Mobile, Ala.; Mrs. Lester E. Taylor, 1974-

Neshoba County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

Noxube County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

Winston County, Mississippi Marriages. Mobile, Ala.; John H. and Lucile S. Mallon, 19–.

MALLON, RAYMOND PAUL, 1901-1950

Biography:

Journalist; columnist. Born– January 5, 1901, in Mattoon, Ill.(moved to Birmingham as a child).  Parents– John Bernard and Mary MacDonough Mallon. Married Viola Jane Wingreene, June 29, 1929. Education–University of  Louisville, 1918-19; University of Notre Dame, 1919-20.  Writer for Louisville Courier Journal, Brooklyn Eagle, Louisville Post, South Bend News-Herald. Political writer for President Calvin Coolidge. United Press, 1920-32. Wrote column, “News Behind the News,” syndicated in 300 newspapers, 1930-1947.   Honorary degrees from Marquette University, College of Holy Cross, Notre Dame (1946). Died July 30, 1950.

Source:

Files at Birmingham Public Library.

Marquis Who’s Who online

Publication(s):

The Ease Era; the Juvenile Oligarchy and the Educational Trust. Grand Rapids, Mich.; William B. Eerdmans, 1945.

Practical Idealism. Boston; B. Humphries, Inc., 1946.

MALLORY, KATHLEEN MOORE, 1879-1954

Biography:

Teacher; denominational executive. Born– January 24, 1879, Summerfield, Dallas County, Ala. Parents– Hugh Shepherd Darby and Jacqueline Louisa (Moore) Mallory. Education– A.B., Goucher College, 1902. Employed as teacher, Demopolis; superintendent, Women’s Missionary Union work, Selma Association, 1907; corresponding secretary of Alabama Woman’s Missionary Union, 1909-1912; corresponding secretary of the Woman’s Missionary Union, Southern Baptist Convention,  1912-1936; Executive Secretary, 1937-1948; in that capacity edited the WMU journal Royal Service and the annual yearbook of the WMU.  Honors– awarded honorary degrees by Selma University in Selma and Louisiana College in Pineville, LA.; the Baptist Convention named a hospital, Laichowfu, China, a chapel, Kokura, Japan, in her honor; Women’s Missionary Union Building, Birmingham, also named in her honor.  Inducted into Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame, 2000. Died June 17, 1954.

Source:

Marquis who’s who online; Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists, v. 2; Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame website.

Publication(s):

Manual of Woman’s Missionary Union Methods. S.l.; s.n., s.d.

Editor:

Woman’s Missionary Union Year Book. S.l; s.n., s.d.

MALONE, DAVID HENRY, 1919-2003

Biography:

Literary scholar; university professor, administrator. Born– August 9, 1919, Washington, D.C. Parents– Maurice Drummond and Clara (Hanna) Malone. Married– Alice Bond Wells, August 15, 1942. Children– Three. Education– A.B., 1940; Ph.D., 1948, University of North Carolina. Taught English at Auburn University, 1948-1962; University of Southern California, 1962-1983; (at USC served as chairman of the English Department and Dean of Humanities).  Fulbright Visiting Scholar at the University of Vienna, Austria, 1958-60. President of the Auburn City Board of Education, 1961-1962. Chairman, editorial board, University of Southern California Studies in Comparative Literature, 1968-1984. Member MLA, AAUP, American Comparative Literature Association.  Died June 8, 2003.

Sources:

Marquis Who’s Who online; Directory of American Scholars, 1982.

Joint_Publication(s):

Outline of Comparative Literature. Chapel Hill, N.C.; University of North Carolina Press, 1954.

Editor:

The Frontiers of Literary Criticism. Los Angeles; Hennessey & Ingalls, 1974.

MALONEY, SALLY WOODALL

See:

Woodall, Sally Lee

MANCILL, JULIAN DOSSY, 1904-1971

Biography:

Mathematician; university professor; inventor. Born January 21, 1904, Bradley Dam, Escambia County, Ala. Parents–Battle C. and Alice Clements Mancill. Married–Dora Mae Dalee, September 2, 1929.  Children–three. Education– B.A., University of Alabama, 1926; M.A., 1927; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1934. Employed by University of Alabama, 1927-1966; director, Redstone Arsenal Graduate Institute, Huntsville, 1951-1954; head, Mathematics Department, University of Alabama, 1955-66.  Recognized for his expository writing by the Mathematical Association of America. Died July 30, 1971.

Source:

Files at Alabama Public Library Service; obituary.

Publication(s):

Contemporary Mathematics. Boston; Allyn and Bacon, 1960.

Elementos de Mathematica Moderna. Buenos Aires; Kapelusz, 1969.

Introductory College Mathematics. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1958.

Joint_Publication(s):

Algebra Elemental Moderna. Habana; Editorial Selecta, 1955.

Basic College Algebra. Boston; Allyn and Bacon, 1962.

Modern Analytical Trigonometry. New York; Dodd Mead, 1960.

Modern College Algebra. Boston; Allyn and Bacon, 1960.

Editor:

Summer Institute for Teachers of Science and Mathematics; June 5-August 18, 1961 report. University, Ala.; The University, 1961.

MANLY, BASIL, JR., 1825-1892

Biography;

Clergyman; seminary professor; denominational leader.  Born December 19, 1825, Edgefield County, South Carolina.  Parents–Basil and Sarah Murray Rudulph Manly. Married– Charlotte Elizabeth Whitfield, April 28,1852 (died 1867) ; children–eleven.  Married Henrietta Summers Hair, June 19, 1869; children–six.  Education–  University of Alabama, B.A., 1844; Newton Theological Institute; Princeton Theological Seminary, B.D., 1847.  Ordained by First Baptist Church, Tuscaloosa, 1848.  Served various churches in Alabama, 1848-1850; pastor of First Baptist Church, Richmond, Va., 1850-1854; founder and president of Richmond Female Institute, 1854-59; founder and professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (then located in Greenville, S.C.), 1859-1871; president of Georgetown College, Kentucky, 1871-1877; professor of Old Testament at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (relocated to Louisville), 1877-1892. Led the founding and organization of the Southern Baptist Sunday School Board, first established in 1863.  Author of more than 20 hymns and anthems.  Died January 31, 1892.

Sources;

Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists, vol. 2.  Broadman Press, 1958; Marquis Who’s Who online.

Publications;

The Bible Doctrine of Inspiration.  1888.

Compiler;

Baptist Chorals.  Richmond, 1859.

Manly’s Choice, 1891,

Co-editor and compiler;

Baptist Psalmody.  Charleston, 1850.

Papers;

The papers of Basil Manly, Jr., including his diary and letterbooks, are held by the Special Collections Department of the James P. Boyce Centennial library at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY. Other relevant papers are included in the Manly Collections at the University of North Carolina, Furman University, and the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Libraries.

Created 10-28-2012

MANLY, JOHN MATTHEWS, 1865-1940

Biography:

Literary historian and scholar; University Professor of English literature. Born– Sumter County, Ala., September 2, 1865. Parents– Charles and Mary (Matthews) Manly. Education– Furman University, 1883; A.M., 1889; Harvard University, Ph. D., 1900. Military intelligence service, WWI, 1917-1919. Employed by Brown University, 1884-1898; University of Chicago, 1898-1933. Specialized in the study of early English literature; best known for his editing and scholarly research on Chaucer.  Exchange professor or visiting lecturer, University of Gottingen, Lowell Institute, British Academy, Royal Society of Literature; editor, 1908-1930.  Member and President Modern Language Association; member Mediaeval Academy, Modern Humanities Research Association, British Shakespeare Association.  Received five honorary doctorates during his lifetime.   Awarded the biennial Sir Israel Gollancz Prize in 1939 by the British Academy, for his edition of the Text of the Canterbury Tales. His colleagues and students at the University honored him with a feistschriften, The Manly Anniversary Studies in Language and Literature, in 1923. Died April 2, 1940.

Source:

Marquis who’s who online;  The National Cyclopedia of Amerian Biography, Vol. 48; American National Biography online.

Publication(s):

Chaucer and the Rhetoricians. London; Oxford University Press, 1926.

Contemporary British Literature; Bibliographies and Study Outlines. New York; Harcourt, 1921.

English Poetry (1170-1892). Boston; Ginn, 1916.

Good Reading. New York; Scribner, 1926.

Junior High School English. Boston; D.C. Heath, 1916.

Marco Polo and the Squire’s Tale. Baltimore; Publication of the Modern Language Association, 1896.

The Piers Plowman Controversy …. London; Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 1910.

Piers the Plowman and Its Sequence, …. Cambridge; Cambridge University Press, 1908.

Some New Light on Chaucer. New York; Holt, 1926.

Joint_Publication(s):

The Bailey-Manly Spelling Book. Boston; Houghton, 1908.

Better Advertising; a Practical Manual of the Principles of Advertising. Chicago; F. J. Drake Co., 1921.

Better Business English; a Working Manual …. Chicago; J. F. Drake, 1921.

Contemporary American Authors; a Critical Survey and 219 Bio-bibliographies. New York; Harcourt, 1922.

Contemporary American Literature; Bibliographies and Study Outlines. New York; Harcourt, 1935.

Contemporary British Literature; a Critical Survey and 232 Author-bibliographies. New York; Harcourt, 1935.

Contemporary British Literature; Outlines for Study, Indexes, Bibliographies. New York; Harcourt, 1928.

Lessons in the Speaking and Writing of English …. Boston; D.C. Heath, 1912.

A Manual for Writers; Covering the Needs of Authors for Information on Rules of Writing and Practices in Printing. Chicago; University of Chicago, 1915.

The Writer’s Index of Good Form and Good English. New York; Holt, 1923.

The Writing of English. New York; Holt, 1919.

Editor:

Canterbury Tales. New York; Holt, 1928.

English Prose and Poetry (1137-1892). New York; Ginn, 1916.

The Poems and Plays of William Vaughn Moody. New York; Scribner, 1887.

… Shakespeare’s MacBeth. New York; Longmans, Green, 1896.

Specimens of the Pre-Shakespearean Drama…. Boston; Ginn, 1897.

Joint_Editor:

La Seinte Resureccion from the Paris and Canterbury mss. Oxford, Miss.; B. Blackwell, 1943.

The Text of the Canterbury Tales… . Chicago; University of Chicago Press, 1940.

Contributor:

Cambridge History of English Literature, Encyclopedia Britannica, 11 ed.

Papers; 

The papers of John Matthews Manly are held by the library at the University of Chicago.

Updated 2011-08-31

MANLY, LOUISE, 1857-1936

Biography:

Teacher; textbook author. Born– Richmond, Va., July 10, 1857. Parents– Basil Manly, Jr. and Charlotte (Whitfield) Manly. Education– United States and abroad. Employed as teacher in various parts of the South. Died January 2, 1936.

Source:

Biographical Dictionary of Southern Authors; Dictionary of North American Authors.

Publication(s):

A History of Alabama for Children. S.l.; s.n., s.d.

History of Judson College. Atlanta, Ga.; Foote & Davis, 1913.

Lee’s Advanced School History of the United States. Richmond; B.F. Johnson, 1897.

The Manly Family; an Account of the Descendants of Captain Basil Manly of the Revolution, and Related Families. Greenville, S.C.; Keys Printing Co., 1930.

A School History of the United States. Richmond; B.F. Johnson, 1895.

Editor_and_Compiler:

Southern Literature from 1479-1895; a Comprehensive Review, …. Richmond; B.F. Johnson, 1895.

Joint_Publication(s):

Fourth grade reader in Johnson’s First-Fifth Reader. Richmond; B. F. Johnson, 1899.

Joint_Editor:

English Poets. S.l.; s.n., s.d.

MANN, MALCENA CATHERINE CLEEK, 1921-1993.

Biography:

Genealogist; government employee. Born– May 1, 1921, Cleek’s Mill, Bath County, Va. Parents– George Washington and Seraphine Catherine (Ritenour) Cleek. Married– Robert Neville Mann, May 14, 1949. Children– One. Education– Mary Washington College; graduate work, American University. Employed by War Department, 1940-1949. Member– Daughters of the American Revolution, Huguenot Society of Tennessee.  Died August 2, 1993.

Source:

Catherine Cleek Mann, Cedar Bluff, Ala.

Compiler:

Marriage Record “A” Floyd County, Georgia, 1834-1848. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1970.

Marriage Record, 1834-1850, Benton County … Alabama. Gadsden, Ala.; Northeast Alabama Genealogical Society, 1976.

Marriages, 1836-1854, DeKalb County, Alabama. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1970.

Old Records of Estates and Administrations, Benton County. Gadsden, Ala.; Northeast Alabama Genealogical Society, 1976.

Joint_Publication(s):

Camp-Kemp Family History, Vols. I & II. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1967-1969.

Middlesex, Virginia Daniel Descendants. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1959.

Editor:

Cherokee County Heritage. 5 vols. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Cherokee County Historical Society, 1972-1978.

Northeast Alabama Settlers. Gadsden, Ala.; Northeast Alabama Genealogical Society.

MANN, ROBERT NEVILLE, 1904-1977

Biography:

Historian; military officer.  Born– November 3, 1904, Battelle, DeKalb County, Ala. Parents– Eugene Turner and Lola Josephine (Williamson) Mann. Married– Anna Barstow Nollen, July 14, 1931. Married– Malcena Catherine Cleek, May 14, 1949. Children– One. Education– B.S., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1926; graduate study, Columbia University. Employed by New York Telephone Company; lieutenant colonel, U.S. Army, World War II. Awards; Legion of Merit, 1945; New York State Conspicuous Service Cross, 1946. Member– Alabama Society of Colonial Wars, Georgia Society of Sons of the American Revolution, Alabama Society of the War of 1812.  Died December 5, 1977.

Source:

Catherine Cleek Mann, Cedar Bluff, Ala.

Joint_Publication(s):

Camp-Kemp Family History. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1967-1969.

Middlesex, Virginia Daniel Descendants. Cedar Bluff, Ala.; Mann, 1959.

MANTOOTH, JOHN, 1972-

Biography;   


Teacher; author. Born December 17, 1972, Georgia. Married Becky. Children–two. Education:  M.A. in creative writing, UAB; MLS, University of Alabama. English teacher, Calera Middle School. Published short stories in periodicals, anthologies, and websites.


Sources;


Contemporary Authors online.


Publications;


Broken Branch. New York: Berkly Books, 2013.
Shoebox Trainwreck. Toronto: Chizine Publishing, 2012.
Year of the Storm. New York: Berkly Books, 2013.

Using the pseudonym Hank Early:

Heaven’s Crooked Finger.  Crooked Lane Books, 2017.

In the Valley of the Devil.  Crooked Lane Books, 2018.


Contributor;
Haunted Legends. New York: Tor, 2010.

MARCH, WILLIAM (Pseudonym)

See:

Campbell, William Edward March

MARKS, HENRY SEYMOUR, 1933-2005

Biography:

Historian; college professor. Born– May 26, 1933, Greensboro, N.C. Parents– Benjamin and Florence (Hirsh) Marks. Married– Marsha Kass, June 8, 1965. Children– One. Education– B.A., University of Miami (Florida), 1955; M.A., University of Alabama, 1956; postgraduate work, University of Alabama, 1960-1964. Employed as teacher, University of Miami, Jacksonville State University, University of Alabama, Florida State University, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Alabama A & M University.  Contributed articles to professional journals and reference books. Member– President, Southern Region Popular Culture Association of the South; Florida, Alabama, Southern and American History Associations, Organization of American Historians, Hakluyt Society and American Society of Public Administration. Died April 25, 2005.

Source:

Who’s Who in the South and Southwest, 1980, and Alabama’s Distinguished; obituary, Alabama Jewish Times, July 7, 2005.

Publication(s):

The Failure of the United States to Maintain the Independence of Korea and the Effect of the Failure Upon the Koreans. Florence, Ala.; Florence State College, 1962.

Sketches of the Tennessee Valley in Antebellum Days; People, Places, Things. Huntsville, Ala.; Southern Press, 1976.

Who Was Who in Alabama. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1972.

Who Was Who in Florida. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1973.

Joint_Publication(s):

Alabama Past Leaders.  Huntsville: Strode, 1982.

Rivers of Florida. Atlanta; Southern Press, 1974.

MARKS, MARSHA KASS, 1935-

Biography:

Historian; College instructor. Born– May 6, 1935, New York City. Parents– Aaron Z. and Edith (Malkin) Kass. Married– Henry Seymour Marks, June 8, 1965. Children– One. Education– B.A., Hunter College, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957, postgraduate work, 1957-1959. Employed as teacher, Georgia State College, 1960-1965, Calhoun Junior College, 1965-1967, Alabama A & M University, 1967. Published articles in historical journals. Member– Huntsville, Alabama, Florida, Southern, and American Historical Associations; Hakluyt Society, American Studies Association, Popular Culture Association, and Phi Beta Kappa.

Source:

Who’s Who in the South and Southwest, 1980.

Joint_Publication(s):

Alabama Past Leaders. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1982.

MAROUAN, MAHA, 1975-

Biography:

Race and gender scholar; university professor. Born and grew up in Morocco.  Education; University of Kent, UK, M.A.; University of Nottingham, Ph.D. Taught at University of Alabama, 2005-2014 ; University of Pennsylvania, Director of the African American Studies Program and Associate Professor of African-American Studies and Women’s Studies, 2014-. Member American Academy of Religion; National Women’s Studies Association;

Publications;

Witches, Goddesses, and Angry Spirits:  The Politics of Spiritual Liberation in African Diaspora Women’s Fiction. Columbus: Ohio University Press, 2013.

Joint_Editor;

Race and Displacement;  Nation, Migration, and Identity in the Twenty-First Century.  University of Alabama Press, 2013.

 

MARSHALL, BENNETT DAVIS, 1919-1969

Biography:

Sportswriter. Born– November 6, 1919, Vincent, Ala. Parents– Raymond and Nannie Davis. Married– Ruth Tucker. Children– Four. Education– Howard College (now Samford University).  Sportswriter and columnist for The Birmingham News and the Birmingham Age-Herald.  Honors– Alumnus of the Year for Journalism, Samford University, 1964; Alabama Sports Writer of the Year (11 times); Alabama Associated Press Sportworthy Award (11 times). Inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, 1982. Died September 25, 1969.

Source:

Birmingham News, Sept. 26, 1969; Alabama Sports Hall of Fame website.

Publication(s):

Twenty Grand. Nashville; Parthenon Press, 1968.

Winning Isn’t Everything, But It Beats Anything That Comes in Second. Nashville; Parthenon Press, 1965.

Joint_Publication;

All-Time Greatest Alabama Sports Stories:  Benny Marshall and Friends.  University of Alabama Press, 2003.

MARSHALL, BENNY

See MARSHALL, BENNETT DAVIS

MARSHALL, JAMES WILLIAMS, 1882-1964

Biography:

Presbyterian clergyman. Born– Perdue Hill, Ala., May 29, 1882. Married– Marion Cannon. Education– B.A., B.D., M.A., Southwestern Presbyterian University; McCormick Seminary, Chicago. Ordained by the East Alabama Presbytery, October 1907. Employed as pastor of churches, Scotland, Junction City, Mt. Holly, and Camden, Ark.; Tuskegee and Montgomery, Florida, Chattahoochee, Panama City; superintendent of home missions, Mobile Presbytery, 1921-1929. Died May 29,1964.

Source:

The Presbyterian Church in Alabama.

Publication(s):

The Presbyterian Church in Alabama; a record of the growth of the Presbyterian Church from its beginning in 1811 in the Eastern portion of Mississippi Territory to the centennial of the Synod of Alabama in 1936. Montgomery, Ala.; Presbyterian Historical Society of Alabama, 1977.

MARSHALL, WALLACE, 1904-1982

Biography:

Physician. Born– Appleton, Wis., July 19, 1904. Parents– Victor F. and Fanny (Levy) Marshall. Married– Lucy Cohen, January 12, 1929. Children–one. Married–Louise Marjorie Clayton, August 14, 1953.  Education– B.A., University of Wisconsin, 1930; B.M., 1932; M.D., 1933, Northwestern University. Employed as an intern, Cook County Hospital, 1932-1933; psychiatric fellow, LSU Medical School, Charity Hospital, New Orleans, 1936-1937; taught, University of Alabama School of Medicine, 1936-1937, Spring Hill College, 1947; Norbert College, 1953; practiced medicine, Two Rivers, Wis.; Watertown, Wis.; Central State Hospital, Pineville, La.; Heflin and Anniston, Ala. Discovered and produced Kutapressin, a microcirculatory constrictor; co-discoverer of the Marshall-White syndrome; and originated the theory of psychoallergy.  Died August 14, 1982.

Source:

Who’s Who in the South and Southwest, 1971-1972 and  Immunologic Psychology and Psychiatry.

Publication(s):

Essentials of Medical Research. New York; Vantage Press, 1953.

Immunologic Psychology and Psychiatry. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1977.

Noise of Great Water. S.l.; s.n, (lst prize American Physicians Literary Guild), 1947.

MARTIN, BESSIE, 1891-1959

Biography:

Historian; college professor; librarian. Born– 1891. Parents– Robert Lavaga and Minnie Gordon Cunninghame Martin. Education– Judson College, A.B. 1911; University of Alabama, A.B.; Columbia University, M.A., Ph.D. Taught at Judson College, 1913-1940; librarian, Thomasville (Ala.) High School, 1940-1959. Honored with an endowment in her name by Judson Alumnae; history section of Judson’s Bowling Library was named the Bessie Martin Memorial Collection in her honor.

Source:

Staff of Bowling Library, Judson College.

Publication(s):

Desertion of Alabama Troops from the Confederate Army; a Study in Sectionalism. New York; Columbia University Press, 1932.

A Rich Man’s War, A Poor Man’s Fight; Desertion of Alabama Troops from the Confederate Army.  University of Alabama Press, 2003.

MARTIN, CARTER WILLIAMS, 1933-

Biography:

Literary scholar; university professor. Born–Clover, S.C.,  Jan. 13, 1933. Parents– Carter H. and Martha (Williams) Martin.  Married– Jane Douglas, York, S.C., August 25, 1955 (died 1982).  Children– Two. Married Linda Burnett, March 7, 1987. Education– A.B., Presbyterian College, 1955; Vanderbilt University; M.A., 1958; Ph.D., 1967. Employed as professor of English, North Carolina State University, 1958-1965; University of Alabama, Huntsville, 1965-1994. Served as department chair, 1981-85; 1991-93. Member Modern Language Association; South Atlantic Modern Language Association. Awarded emeritus status on his retirement at UAH in 1994.

Source:

Marquis Who’s who online

Publication(s):

The True Country; Themes in the Fiction of Flannery O’Connor. Nashville; Vanderbilt University Press, 1969.

Editor:

The Presence of Grace, and Other Book Reviews by Flannery O’Connor.  Athens, Ga.; University of Georgia Press, 1983.

MARTIN, DAVID LINCOLN, 1947-

Biography:

Political scientist; university professor. Born– May 6, 1947, Los Angeles. Parents–Albert A. and Cornelia A. Martin. Married–Catherine R. Perricone, June 6, 1975. Education– B.A., Redlands University, 1968; M.A., Claremont Graduate School, 1969; Ph.D., 1973. U.S. Army, Vietnam, 1969-71.  Employed as a Public Administration Analyst, University of California, Los Angeles, 1972-73; taught political science at Auburn University, 1973-1997. Consultant, Alabama Law Enforcement Planning Agency, Alabama Development Office, Alabama Public Television Network, National Science Foundation, and Houghton Mifflin Publishing Company. Member Alabama Political Science Association, American Political Science Association, American Society of Public Administration.

Source:

Marquis who’s who online

Publication(s):

Alabama County Debt. Montgomery, Ala.; State Planning Division, Alabama Development Office, 1977.

Alabama’s State and Local Governments. Dubuque, Iowa; Kendall/Hunt, 1975.

Capitol, Courthouse, and City Hall; Readings in American State and Local Politics and Government. Boston; Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1981.

A Guide to Selected Planning Powers of Alabama Counties, Land Use, Housing, and Economic Development. Montgomery, Ala.; Office of Public Service and Research, Auburn University, 1977.

Home Rule for Local Governments. Auburn, Ala.; Office of Public Service and Research, School of Arts and Sciences, Auburn University, 1978.

Running City Hall; Municipal Administration in America. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1982.

Joint_Publication(s):

Revenue Sharing; Improving Local Government Reporting. Auburn, Ala.; Office of Public Service and Research, School of Arts and Sciences, Auburn University, 1977.

Papers:

The Papers of David Lincoln Martin are held by the Special Collections and Archives department of the Ralph Brown Draughon Library at Auburn University.

MARTIN, EMILY, 1944-

Biography:

Anthropologist; professor of anthropology. Born– November 7, 1944, Birmingham. Parents– Henry M. and Zoe (Martin) Godschalk. Married– Dennis Ahern, May 11, 1966. Education– University of Michigan, B.A., 1966; Cornell University, Ph.D., 1971. Assistant professor of anthropology, Yale University, 1972-74; Johns Hopkins 1974-1994; Princeton, 1994-2001; currently a professor of socio-anthropology at New York University. Founding editor of the journal Anthropology Now. Author of many professional articles and presentations; member of the American Anthropological Association, the American Ethnological Association, the Royal Anthropological Institute, and the Association for Feminist Anthropology.  Winner of the 2009 Diana Forsythe Prize for the best book of feminist anthropology, for Bipolar Expeditions.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online; NYU website.

Publication(s);

Bipolar Expeditions:  Mania and depression in American Culture.  Princeton University Press, 2007.

Chinese Ritual and Politics. New York; Cambridge University Press, 1981. {Books written before 1984 were  published under the name “Ahern, Emily Martin.”}

The Cult of the Dead in a Chinese Village. Stanford; Stanford University Press, 1973.

Flexible Bodies; Tracking Immunity in American Culture from the Days of Polio to the Age of AIDS.  Boston; Beacon Press, 1994.

Religion and Ritual in Chinese Society. Stanford; Stanford University Press, 1974.

The Woman in the Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction.  Boston:  Beacon Press, 1987.

Women in the Chinese Society. Stanford; Stanford University Press, 1975.

Contributor;

Imagining Illness;  Public Health and Visual Culture.  University of Minnesota Press, 2010.

Studies in Chinese Society. Stanford, 1978.

Editor:

The Anthropology of Taiwanese Society. Stanford; Stanford University Press, 1981.

MARTIN, HERBERT WOODWARD, 1933-

Biography:

Poet and dramatist; university professor. Born– October 4, 1933, Birmingham, Ala. Parents– David Nathaniel and Willie Mae (Woodward) Martin. Married–Sue Aultman.  Children–two. Education– B.A., University of Toledo, 1964; M.A., State University of New York, Buffalo, 1967; M. Litt., Middlebury College, M. Litt., 1972; Carnegie-Mellon University, D.A., 1979.   Taught at the State University of New York, Buffalo, 1966; Aquinas College, Grand Rapids, Mich., 1967-70; University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, 1970-1996 ; visiting distinguished professor of poetry, Central Michigan University, 1973.  Associated with the Writer’s Workshop at Antioch Writer’s Conference, 1993; with the Ohio Arts Council Writer’s Workshop, 1995; consultant for the contemporary Black writers’ collection, University of Toledo, 1974.  Published libretti, one-act operas, and poems in many journals and anthologies. Awarded emeritus status on his retirement at the University of Dayton, 1996. Received the Mellen Poetry Prize, 1999; Ohio Governor’s Award, 2002; Mark Twain Award (from the Society for Midwestern Literature) 2002.  Awarded honorary degrees by Wright State University, 2010, and Central Michigan University, 2011.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online; University of Dayton website

Publication(s):

The Forms of Silence. Detroit; Lotus, 1980.

Galileo’s Suns.  Bottom Dog Press, 1999.

Inscribe My Name.  Kent State University Press, 2007.

The Log of the Vigilante.  Mellen Poetry Press, 2000.

New York, the Nine Million and other poems. S.l.; Abracadabra, 1969.

On the Flyleaf: Poems.  Bottom Dog Press, 2013.

Paul Laurence Dunbar, a Singer of Songs. Columbus, Ohio; State Library of Ohio, 1979.

The Persistence of the Flesh. Detroit; Lotus, 1976.

The Shit-Storm Poems. Grand Rapids, Mich.; Pilot Press, 1973.

Three Black Writers–Plus; Catalogue of an exhibition at the Ward M. Canaday Center, March 28-June 30. Toledo, Ohio; William S. Carlson Library, University of Toledo, 1980.

Editor;

Collected Novels of Paul Laurence Dunbar. Ohio University Press, 2009.

In his own Voice:  The Uncollected Works of Paul Laurence Dunbar.  Ohio University Press, 2002.

Paul Laurence Dunbar:  Selected Poems. Penguin Poems, 2004.

Papers;

A collection of the papers of Herbert Woodward Martin is held by the Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections at the University of Dayton.

MARTIN, ROSCOE COLEMAN, 1903-1972

Biography:

Political scientist; university professor. Born– November 18, 1903, Silsbee, Tex. Parents– Benjamin Wiley and Clara Lee (Mayo) Martin. Married– Mildred Ellis, September 2, 1926. Children– One. Education– B.A., University of Texas, 1924; M.A., 1925; University of Chicago, Ph.D., 1932. Taught at the University of Texas, Austin, 1926-1937; professor and chairman, Department of Political Science, University of Alabama, 1937-1949; Syracuse University, 1949-66.  A pioneer in the academic discipline of public administration.  Founded and directed the Bureau of Public Administration at the University of Alabama; created cooperative links between the University and state and local government, as well as with the TVA. Published many articles and studies in journals and anthologies. Member– U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, 1948-54;  and United Nations Public Administration Mission to Brazil, 1951-52; ; U.S. Department of State Specialist in nine foreign countries; and consultant to the Tennessee Valley Authority, Federal Civil Defense Administration, Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, and Ford Foundation; Social Science Council Research professor during 1959-1960. Member many professional associations including the American Political Science Association; National Municipal League; Southern Political Science Association and American Society for Public Administration. Died May 12, 1972.

Source:

Contemporary Authors online: marquis who’s who online

Publication(s):

A Budget Manual for Texas Cities. Austin, Tex.; University of Texas Press, 1934.

The Cities and the Federal System. New York; Atherton Press, 1965.

The Defendant and Criminal Justice. Austin, Tex.; Texas University, 1934.

From Forest to Front Page …. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1956.

Government and the Suburban School. Syracuse, N.Y.; Syracuse University Press, 1962.

Grass Roots; Essays. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1957.

The Growth of State Administration in Alabama. University, Ala.; Bureau of Public Adminsistration, University of Alabama,1942.

Metropolis in Transition.  Housing and Home Finance Agency, 1963.

The People’s Party in Texas. Austin, Tex.; University of Texas, Bureau of Research in the Social Sciences, 1933.

TVA; the First Twenty Years. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1956.

Urban Local Government in Texas. Austin, Tex.; University of Texas, 1936.

Water for New York; a Study in State Administration of Water Resources. Syracuse, N.Y.; Syracuse University Press, 1960.

Joint_Publication(s):

Decisions in Syracuse. Bloomington, Ind.; Indiana University Press, 1961.

The Metropolis and Its Problems; …. Syracuse, N.Y.; Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, 1960.

River Basin Administration and the Delaware. Syracuse, N.Y.; Syracuse University Press, 1960.

Editor:

Public Administration and Democracy; Essays in Honor of Paul H. Appleby. Syracuse, N.Y.; Syracuse University Press, 1965.

MARTIN, THOMAS WESLEY, 1881-1964

Biography:

Attorney; businessman; president of Alabama Power Company and the Southern Company; civic leader. Born– Scottsboro, Ala., August 13, 1881. Parents– William Logan and Margaret (Ledbetter) Martin. Married– Mary Evelyn Tyson, June 4, 1919. Education– Starke University School, Montgomery; law student, University of Alabama, 1898-1900. Admitted to the Alabama Bar, 1901. Employed as an attorney and junior partner, Martin and Martin, 1901-1907; Assistant Attorney General, State of Alabama, 1903-1911; general counsel, Alabama Power Company, 1911-1964; vice president, 1915; president, 1920-1949; chairman of the board, 1949-64.  Founded Mississippi Power, Georgia Power, South Carolina Power, and Gulf States Power, in the holding company Southeastern (later Southern) Power.  Led in the building of dams in Alabama, beginning with the Lay Dam in 1913, bringing electricity to the state.  Helped to found The Southern Research Institute and the Alabama State Chamber of Commerce.  Led in the movement to found the Horseshoe Bend National Military Park. Member Newcomen Society; Rotary; served on boards of many corporations and institutions.  Elected to Officier d’Academie (France) and Order of the White Rose (Finland). Honors– South’s “Man of the Year,” 1946, Forbes Magazine’s fifty foremost business leaders; “Humanitarian of the Year,” 1964. Lake Martin on the Tallapoosa River is named in his honor.  Died December 8, 1964.

Source:

Owen’s Story of Alabama;  Marquis Who’s Who online

Publication(s):

Doctor William Crawford Gorgas of Alabama and the Panama Canal. New York; The Newcomen Society of England, American Branch, 1947.

French Military Adventurers in Alabama, 1818-1828. Princeton, N.J.; Princeton University Press, 1937.

Forty Years of Alabama Power Company, 1911-1951. New York; Newcomen Society in North America, 1952.

The Story of Electricity in Alabama Since the Turn of the Century, 1900-1952. Birmingham, Ala.; s.n., 1952.

The Story of Horseshoe Bend National Military Park. New York; Newcomen Society in North America, 1960.

MARTIN, WILL IRVIN, 1871-1954

Biography:

Reporter, editor, newspaper columnist. Born– October 5, 1871, Peek’s Hill, Calhoun County, Ala. Parents– John T. and Emma C. (Finch) Martin. Education– University of Alabama, 1892. Employed by Gadsden Leader, 1892-95;  Gadsden Times, 1895; cast iron soil pipe company, Gadsden for two years, Chattanooga for one year; insurance company, Atlanta; managing editor, Gadsden Evening Journal, 1920-1924; one of the founders of  the Gadsden Evening Star, 1925; combined with Times, 1927; remained with the Times until his death 1954. Member Masons; Shriners; Rotary Club.  Died November 3, 1954.

Source:

Foreword of If Memory Serves; Obituary, from Find A Grave website.

Publication(s):

If Memory Serves. Cleveland, Tenn.; Banner Print, 1953.

MASON, AUGUST HOWARD, 1895-1980

Biography:

College Professor; poet. Born– Columbus Grove, Okla., August 4, 1895. Parents– Franklin R. and Anna L. Campbell. Married– Bennie Hope Spinks, July 11, 1927. Children– One. Education– A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1919; Ph.D., Universite de Paris, 1924. Flying cadet, WWI. Employed by Williamsport-Dickinson Seminary, Wilbraham Academy, Syracuse University, Howard College, 1925-35; University of Alabama, 1935-1966. Member College English Association; AAUP. Died August 26, 1980.

Source:

Marquis who’s who online

Publication(s):

Rockport, Ohio; About the Year 1906. Blacksburg, Va.; White Rhinoceros Press, 1977.

Winter Balance. University; Ala.; University of Alabama, 1946.

Editor:

A Poetry Miscellany. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Publishing Co., 1938.

Second Poetry Miscellany. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; University Supply Store, 1939.

These Unmusical Days; a Book of Poems. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1951.

MASON, DAVID PIERCE, 1919-1994

Biography:

Historian; teacher;university professor. Born– November 19, 1919, Stockton, Baldwin County, Ala. Parents–Isaac Pierce Mason and Annie Serena Crosby Mason. Married– Nancy Higgins, March 8, 1943. Children–three.  Education– graduated from McCallie School, Chattanooga;  B.A., University of Alabama, 1941; graduate work, Vanderbilt University; M.Ed., Emory, 1950; Ed.D., University of Georgia, 1957.  Served in U.S. Army, WWII and Korean Conflict. Teacher; principal, Stockton School, 1946-1956; taught at University of Georgia, 1956-1962; Tift College, 1962-1967; University of South Alabama, 1967. Member Sons of the American Revolution (served as state president); charter member of Fort Mims Restoration Association. Died January 7, 1994.

Source:

Leaders in Education, 1974 and  Five Dollars a Scalp.

Publication(s):

Five Dollars a Scalp; the Last Mighty War Whoop of the Creek Indians. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode Publishers, 1975.

The Oaks of Fort Mims. Mobile, Ala.; University of South Alabama, 1974.

MASON, SARA ELIZABETH, 1911-1993

Biography:

Librarian; novelist. Born– Demopolis, September 2, 1911.  Parents– Edwin Bolton and Fenton Brasfield Mason. Education– Agnes Scott College, two years; B.A., University of Alabama; M.A., University of Chicago; M.A., Library Science, Peabody College. Employed as a teacher, Gadsden High School; and in U.S.government school, Frankfort, Germany; assistant director, Gadsden Public Library; cataloger, University of Alabama; Head of Catalog Department,  Birmingham Public Library, 1931; map curator, Rucker Agee Cartographical Collection, Birmingham Public Library.  Published several detective novels in the 1940’s. Member– Etowah County Historical Society. Died August 15, 1993.

Source:

Files at Alabama Public Library Service; Encyclopedia of Alabama

Publication(s):

The Crimson Feather. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1945.

Glovers of Marengo County, Ala. Linden, Ala.? 1960?

The House that Hate Built. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1944.

A List of Nineteenth Century Maps of the State of Alabama. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Public Library, 1973.

Murder Rents a Room. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1943.

The Whip. New York; W. Morrow, 1948.

Compiler:

Confederate Imprints in the University of Alabama Library. University, Ala. s.n., 1961.