Richard Beale Davis
BornJune 3, 1907
DiedMarch 30, 1981(1981-03-30) (aged 73)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationAcademic
AwardsNational Book Award (1979)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Virginia
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Tennessee
Notable worksIntellectual Life in the Colonial South, 1585–1763 (1978)
Military career
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1943–1946
RankLieutenant

Richard Beale Davis (June 3, 1907 – March 30, 1981) was an American academic who specialised in the history of the Southern United States, with a focus on its literature and intellectual history. His works included the 1978 book Intellectual Life in the Colonial South, which was awarded the National Book Award for history, as well as several other accolades. He taught at the University of Virginia, University of South Carolina, and University of Tennessee, among other places.

Davis was born in Accomac, Virginia, to a family with local religious and academic connections. He began teaching in the 1920s, receiving his master's degree from the University of Virginia in 1933 and his PhD in 1936. He joined the University of South Carolina as an associate professor of English in 1940, taking leave during the Second World War to teach for the United States Navy. Davis returned to South Carolina, then joined the faculty of the University of Tennessee. While there, he was involved with the James D. Hoskins Library and the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. He was made an Alumni Distinguished Service professor in 1962, and retired from teaching fifteen years later. During this time, he held several fellowships and was a member of the American Antiquarian Society.

Davis's most-celebrated work was his 1972 book Intellectual Life in the Colonial South, 1585–1763, a three-volume study of the history and culture of the American South. According to Jack P. Greene, it was the "single most comprehensive description ever undertaken of the cultural life of any segment of Britain's early modern American empire".[1] Davis's reputation as a scholar was solidified through his large body of work, with Leo Lemay referring to him as "the greatest modern authority on early Southern literature".[2]:173 Similar views were offered by Louis D. Rubin Jr., praising the way he "decisively chartered and explored the colonial southern literary scene".[3]:11

Early life and education

Richard Beale Davis was born in Accomac, Virginia, on June 3, 1907. His mother was Margaret Josephine (née Wills) and his father was Henry Woodhouse Davis,[2]:173 a Methodist minister across Virginia. He had two sisters, Virginia Holmes and Mary Eleanor. His paternal great-grandfather was William Thomas Davis, founding president of the Southern Female College in Petersburg, Virginia.[4]:242–243 The family's papers are held by the library at the University of Virginia.[5]

Davis received his undergraduate degree from Randolph–Macon College in 1927.[2]:173 His father had graduated from the same college in 1903.[4]:243 In 1933, Davis received a master's degree from the University of Virginia, and in 1936 they awarded him a PhD.[2]:173

Academic career

Following his undergraduate degree, Davis taught at McGuire's University School in Richmond, Virginia, until 1930.[2]:173 In a review of a book about the school, Davis spoke briefly of his time teaching there.[6] From 1930 until 1932, he taught at Randolph-Macon Academy. Following his MA, he taught at the University of Virginia until 1936. He then taught for four years at the Fredericksburg Teachers College (known as Mary Washington College from 1938),[2]:173 holding the position of associate professor of English.[7] In 1940, Davis joined the University of South Carolina as an associate professor in the English department.[2]:173

During the Second World War, he served in the United States Navy Reserve. In 1943, he held the rank of Lieutenant (junior grade) and was executive officer of the V-12 Navy College Training Program at Emory and Henry College.[8] He then served as commanding officer of the Navy Academic Refresher Unit (V-5) at the Northwestern State College of Louisiana.[9] In January 1946, the Naval Station at Northwestern was decommissioned, having trained around 4,000 Navy personnel in three years. Davis was discharged from the Navy at the same time with the rank of Lieutenant.[10] Following the war, he returned to the University of South Carolina, and was promoted to a full professorship in June 1946.[11]

In 1947, he joined the University of Tennessee and in 1962, he was made an Alumni Distinguished Service professor.[2]:173–4 While there, he was heavily involved with the James D. Hoskins Library, working with the acquisitions department to identify possible purchases. From 1949 until 1971, he served as chairman of the library's Committee on Special Documents. He was also a member of the Faculty Library Committee from 1958 to 1970.[12]

Davis held various other positions during his time at the University of Tennessee, serving a year as a Fulbright professor at the University of Oslo in 1955, and another year as a US State Department lecturer in India during 1957.[12][2]:174 In 1955, he was awarded a fellowship at the Folger Shakespeare Library and a Doctor of Letters by Randolph-Macon College.[2]:173–4 In 1946, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship for post-military service scholars.[13] He received a second Guggenheim Fellowship in 1959.[14]

In 1977, Davis retired from teaching. He received a Festschrift upon his retirement, titled Essays in Early Virginia Literature Honoring Richard Beale Davis.[2]:175

Group memberships

Davis was associated with several historical and literature-focused groups, representing his academic interests and those further afield.

In 1955, Davis was elected vice-president of the newly formed branch of the American Studies Association (ASA) for Kentucky and Tennessee.[15] In 1958, he was elected to the executive council of the nationwide ASA.[16] The same year, he served on the Regional Advisory Board for the Old Southwest Region of the Bibliographical Society of America.[17][18] In 1959, he was elected vice-chairman of the Southern Humanities Conference,[19] and served as its chairman in 1960.[20] In 1968, Davis began serving a two-year term on the executive council of the Society for the Study of Southern Literature.[21] He was elected its first president in the same year.[22]

In 1972, Davis was made an honorary member of the Virginia Historical Society, having contributed to the group's journal for several years.[23] He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society the following year, later receiving a certificate from them upon his retirement from teaching.[2]:175 He attended a single meeting of the elite group, in October 1974.[2]:175 In 1975, Davis was a founding member of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society.[24] He had taught courses on Hawthorne since the 1940s.[25]

In 1965, Davis served as president for the University of Tennessee's new Phi Beta Kappa chapter, Epsilon of Tennessee.[26] He began writing for the society's magazine The Key Reporter in 1967, reviewing books in American culture and history.[27]

Modern Language Association

In 1952, Davis served as secretary of the American Literature section of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA).[28] The following year, he served as chairman of the section.[29] He served on the executive committee of the SAMLA from 1963 until 1967, serving as vice-president in 1964 and president the following year.[30] During 1977, he served on its Fiftieth Anniversary Committee.[31]

Following the creation of the Modern Language Association's Early American Literature Group in the 1960s, Davis was elected to sit on its executive committee.[32] He later served as chairman of its nominating and advisory committee.[33]:74 In 1977, the group named him as an Honored Scholar.[2]:175

Davis served on the executive committee of the MLA-affiliated Center for Editions of American Authors.[34] He also served on the MLA's standing committee on copyright during the early 1970s.[35]

Writing career

In 1939, Davis published his first book, a biography titled Francis Walker Gilmer: Life and Learning in Jefferson's Virginia.[2]:173 Gilmer was a lawyer, and had been hired by Thomas Jefferson to secure European faculty members for the newly founded University of Virginia.[36]:423 Davis had previously written a PhD thesis on Gilmer with the title "The Life, Letters, and Essays of Francis Walker Gilmer: A Study in Virginia Literary Culture in the First Quarter of the Nineteenth Century".[37] The book was praised by Dumas Malone for being "the fullest and best account" of his life.[38]:617 G. Glenwood Clark praised its detailed index, but criticised the "gross carelessness in proof-reading, exasperating omission of words and phrases and frequent transpositions of whole sentences".[39]:327 In 1946, he published a further work on Gilmer titled Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson and Francis Walker Gilmer, 1814-1826. The work had been composed after the discovery of letters between the two men.[36]:422 Dumas Malone noted the benefit of having both sides of correspondence published in one place, praising its focus on both men and Gilmer's "poignant human story".[38]:616–618

In 1950, Davis worked with Fredson Bowers to edit a bibliography of the Elizabethan writer and traveller George Sandys.[40]:106 He went on to publish a biography of Sandys in 1955, titled George Sandys, Poet-Adventurer: A Study in Anglo-American Culture in the Seventeenth Century.[2]:174 Davis's reference works continued with the first published edition of Thomas Holley Chivers' Life of Poe (known as Chivers' Life of Poe) in 1952,[41] and a collection of historical writing by Augustus Foster in 1954.[42] In 1955, he published a monograph on José Correia da Serra.[2]:174 Following its publication, he donated 128 items of research material to the library of the American Philosophical Society.[43]

In 1961, Davis published two books: a collection of lectures by Samuel Lorenzo Knapp, originally published as Lectures on American Literature in 1829, and a collection of essays dedicated to John Cunyus Hodges and Alwin Thaler. The books were edited with Ben Harris McClary and John Leon Lievsay respectively.[40]:106 In 1963, he edited a collection of letters and documents by William Fitzhugh.[2]:174 In the same year, he entered the American Association for State and Local History's first manuscript competition, winning first place and a publication deal with the University of North Carolina Press.[44] The manuscript was published under the title Intellectual Life in Jefferson's Virginia, 1790-1830 the following year, and is a study into the intellectual history of Virginia following the American Revolutionary War.[45]

Over the next few years, Davis edited several more reference works, including a monograph on colonial satire, a collection of poems by the clergyman Samuel Davies,[2]:174 and a bibliography titled American Literature Through Bryant, 1585-1830.[40]:106 He published three edited works in 1970: an edition of William Wirt's Letters of the British Spy, an edition of James Fenimore Cooper's The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish and a collection of Southern writing with C. Hugh Holman and Louis D. Rubin Jr.[40]:106 In 1973, a selection of his articles and essays were published under the title Literature and Society in Early Virginia, 1608–1840.[2]:174

Davis sat on the editorial board of the group publishing The Complete Works of Washington Irving.[46] The general editors of the group were Henry A. Pochmann, Herbert L. Kleinfeld and Richard D. Rust, and the books were published intermittently from 1969 until 1989.[47]:338

Intellectual Life in the Colonial South

In 1978, Davis published Intellectual Life in the Colonial South, 1585–1763, a three-volume study of the Southern United States, covering topics such as religion, politics, science and literature.[48] The research for the book took over two decades to complete.[49]:248 In 1974, Davis was awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for the project.[2]:175

In 1979, Intellectual Life in the Colonial South won the history category of the National Book Awards. The prize was judged by James H. Billington, Shelby Foote and Robin Winks.[49]:248 The citation for the award was as follows:

This ambitious and rewarding work rediscovers for modern Americans a vital regional culture, demonstrating the human richness of the Colonial South. The product of twenty-five years of exploration into neglected sources, this three-volume study will enlighten generations of readers. Not only does the book provide full information where little was previously available; it is also a work of high intellectual drama. This may be our most widely ranging inventory of a regional mind ever attempted in America. By reminding us of the validity and vitality of diverse American identities, it contributes to our understanding of ourselves. Good history must be interesting, it must be significant, and it must be true. The work of Richard Beale Davis shows all three of these qualities in abundance.[49]:248

Davis received further accolades for the book, being awarded honorary degrees from the College of William and Mary as well as Eastern Kentucky University.[2]:175 In 1980, he was awarded the Charles S. Sydnor Award from the Southern Historical Association.[50] He was also awarded the Outstanding Author of the Year Award from the Southeastern Library Association in 1980.[12][51]

Later works

In 1979, his Mercer University Lamar Memorial Lectures were published under the title A Colonial Southern Bookshelf: Reading in the Eighteenth Century.[2]:175

At the time of his death, Davis had been writing a book on "Intellectual Life in the Revolutionary South, 1763-1790".[2]:175 He had received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for the project in 1979.[52]

Davis had also been collaborating with Michael A. Lofaro and George M. Barringer on a bibliography of Southern manuscript sermons written before 1800.[53][2]:175 Work on the project had begun in 1946 as part of the research for Intellectual Life in the Colonial South.[54] In 2010, Lofaro published Southern Manuscript Sermons before 1800: A Bibliography, dedicating the work to Davis and noting him as one of four contributing editors.

Personal life

On August 25, 1936, Davis married Lois Camp Bullard.[2]:173 On March 30, 1981, he died in Knoxville.[2]:175

Awards and honours

Legacy

In 1981, the autumn edition of the Mississippi Quarterly journal was dedicated to Davis and the scholar C. Hugh Holman.[55] In 1986, J. Lasley Dameron and James W. Mathews edited a collection of essays dedicated to Davis, titled No Fairer Land: Studies in Southern Literature Before 1900.[56]:viii

In December 1983, the Modern Language Association began awarding the annual Richard Beale Davis Prize for the best article published within the journal Early American Literature.[57] Another award, the Richard Beale Davis Award for Distinguished Lifetime Service to Southern Letters, is awarded by the Society for the Study of Southern Literature every two years.[58]

Davis's papers are located in the Betsey B. Creekmore Special Collections and University Archives at the University of Tennessee.[59]

Publications

Books

Title Time of first publication First edition publisher/publication Unique identifier Notes
Francis Walker Gilmer: Life and Learning in Jefferson's Virginia 1939 Richmond, Virginia: Dietz Press OCLC 1847322 Biography of Francis Walker Gilmer.
Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson and Francis Walker Gilmer, 1814-1826 1946 Columbia: University of South Carolina Press OCLC 727833 Edited with introduction by Davis.
George Sandys: A Bibliographical Catalogue of Printed Editions in England to 1700 1950 New York: New York Public Library OCLC 581229 With Fredson Bowers.
Chivers' Life of Poe 1952 New York: E. P. Dutton OCLC 775268 Written by Thomas Holley Chivers; edited with introduction by Davis.
Jeffersonian America: Notes on the United States of America Collected in the Years 1805–6–7 and 11–12 by Sir Augustus John Foster, Bart. 1954 San Marino, California: The Huntington Library OCLC 326952 Written by Augustus Foster; edited with introduction by Davis.
George Sandys, Poet-Adventurer: A Study in Anglo-American Culture in the Seventeenth Century 1955 New York: Columbia University Press OCLC 351687
American Cultural History, 1607-1829: A Facsimile reproduction of "Lectures on American Literature" (1829) by Samuel Lorenzo Knapp 1961 Gainesville, Florida: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints OCLC 4028564 Edited with introduction by Davis and Ben Harris McClary.
Studies in Honor of John C. Hodges and Alwin Thaler 1961 Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press OCLC 312082 Edited with introduction by Davis and John Leon Lievsay.
William Fitzhugh and His Chesapeake World, 1676-1701 1963 Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press OCLC 1154134 Edited with introduction by Davis.
Intellectual Life in Jefferson's Virginia, 1790-1830 1964 Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press OCLC 6787161
Collected Poems of Samuel Davies, 1723-1761 1968 Gainesville, Florida: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints OCLC 1104677842 Edited with introduction by Davis.
American Literature through Bryant, 1585-1830 1969 New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts OCLC 64097
The Letters of the British Spy by William Wirt, Esq. 1970 Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press OCLC 1199631842 Edited with introduction by Davis.
The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish by James Fenimore Cooper 1970 Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill OCLC 100559 Edited with introduction by Davis.
Southern Writing, 1585-1920 1970 New York: Odyssey Press OCLC 118246 Edited by Davis, C. Hugh Holman and Louis D. Rubin Jr..
Literature and Society in Early Virginia, 1608–1840 1973 Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press OCLC 668137 Collection of articles and essays by Davis.
Intellectual Life in the Colonial South, 1585–1763 1978 Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press OCLC 2798780 Published in three volumes.
A Colonial Southern Bookshelf: Reading in the Eighteenth Century 1979 Athens: University of Georgia Press OCLC 1267411152
Southern Manuscript Sermons before 1800: A Bibliography 2010 Knoxville: Newfound Press OCLC 654845439 Written by Michael A. Lofaro; Davis noted as contributing editor (posthumous).

Selected articles and essays

Title Time of publication Journal Volume (Issue) Page range Unique identifier Notes
"Forgotten Scientists in Old Virginia" 1938 The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 46 (2) 97–111 JSTOR 4244852
"Literary Tastes in Virginia Before Poe" 1939 The William and Mary Quarterly 19 (1) 55–68 JSTOR 1923042
"Forgotten Scientists in Georgia and South Carolina" 1943 The Georgia Historical Quarterly 27 (3) 271–284 JSTOR 40576887
"A Postscript on Thomas Jefferson and His University Professors" 1946 The Journal of Southern History 12 (3) 422–432 JSTOR 2198224
"The Abbé Correa in America, 1812-1820: The Contributions of the Diplomat and Natural Philosopher to the Foundations of Our National Life" 1955 Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 45 (2) 87–197 JSTOR 1005770 Monograph on José Correia da Serra.
"The Devil in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century" 1957 The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 65 (2) 131–149 JSTOR 4246295
"Chesapeake Pattern and Pole-Star: William Fitzhugh in His Plantation World, 1676-1701" 1961 Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 105 (6) 525–529 JSTOR 985162
"The Colonial Virginia Satirist: Mid-Eighteenth-Century Commentaries on Politics, Religion, and Society" 1967 Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 57 (1) 1–74 JSTOR 1006008 Monograph; edited with introduction by Davis.
Review: Of Two Virginia Gentlemen and Their McGuire's University School: Richmond, Virginia, 1865-1942 1972 The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 80 (4) 501–503 JSTOR 4247761

References

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