Mary McHenry
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Mary McHenry | |
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Mary McHenry |
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| Born | January 23, 1933 Washington DC |
| Occupation | Academic |
| Nationality | United States |
| Genres | African American literature |
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Influenced
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Mary Williamson McHenry (23 January 1933 - ) is "credited with bringing African American literature to Mount Holyoke College," where she is Emeritus Professor of English[1]. McHenry also introduced her then - student (the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Suzan-Lori Parks) to Five Colleges faculty member James Baldwin during the 1980s.[2] Parks would later credit McHenry with her success.[3]
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[edit] Background
McHenry was born Mary Elizabeth Williamson Murphy in Washington DC to Alphonso Williamson (who worked with the Library of Congress) and Elizabeth Bennett Williamson (a teacher). She graduated from Oakwood School in Poughkeepsie, New York in 1950, received her B.A. in English literature from Mount Holyoke College in 1954, her M.A. from Columbia University in 1960, and continued further graduate work at George Washington University from 1961-1964.[4]
[edit] Career
McHenry taught at Howard University (1960-1963), George Washington University (1964-1969), and Federal City College (1969-1974). McHenry then taught at Mount Holyoke from 1974 until her retirement in 1998 "and was also a member of the American Studies and the Black (later African-American) Studies departments."[4]
The Mary McHenry Papers (1933-1996) are being exhibited from October 29 - November 26, 2007 at Mount Holyoke College.[5][6]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Lecture to Explore Lost History of African American Literary Societies
- ^ Suzan-Lori Parks Interview. Academy of Achievement (June 22, 2007).
- ^ In the News: Traditions and communications. College Street Journal (May 24, 1996).
- ^ a b Biographical Note
- ^ A Woman of Color at Mount Holyoke: Mary McHenry, Class of 1954
- ^ Mary McHenry Papers 1933-1996 (bulk 1946-1954, 1972-1993)
[edit] External links
- Biography
- Mary McHenry Papers
- Lecture to Explore Lost History of African American Literary Societies (2001)
- MHC lectures traces literary circle history (2001)

