Collection Summary
Information for Researchers
Administrative Information
Biography
Chronology
Scope and Content
Collection Summary
Collection Title: Henry Nash Smith Papers
Date (inclusive): 1927-1986
Collection Number: BANC MSS
87/136 c
Collector:
Smith, Henry Nash
Extent:
Number of containers: 8 boxes, 4 cartons
Linear feet: 8.3
Repository: The Bancroft Library
Berkeley, California 94720-6000
Physical Location: For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the Library's online catalog.
Abstract: Collection primarily consists of correspondence &
research materials pertaining to Smith's published works, lectures and other
professional activities and interests. The correspondence files are particularly
extensive.
Languages Represented:
Collection materials are in English
Information for Researchers
Access
Collection is open for research.
Publication Rights
Materials in this collection may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). In addition, the reproduction
of some materials may be restricted by terms of University of California gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions,
privacy and publicity rights, licensing and trademarks. Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond
that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Works not in the public domain cannot be
commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owner. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
All requests to reproduce, publish, quote from, or otherwise use collection materials must be submitted in writing to the
Head of Public Services, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley 94720-6000. See:
http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/reference/permissions.html .
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Henry Nash Smith papers, BANC MSS 87/136 c, The
Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Indexing Terms
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.
Smith, Henry Nash--Pictorial works
Overland journeys to the Pacific--Pictorial works
Frontier and pioneer life--Photographs
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information
The principal body of the Henry Nash Smith papers was received as a gift to the
library from Smith's wife, Elinor Smith, in April 1987. Four additional card
files of note cards were received as a gift from Duke University in June
1988.
Biography
Henry Nash Smith was born in Dallas, Texas, in 1906. He took his
bachelor's degree in English at age 19 from Southern Methodist University
in Dallas, where he taught from 1927 to 1941, taking time out for his
M.A. in English (1929) and his Ph.D. in the History of American Civilization (1940),
both at Harvard. He subsequently taught in the English
departments of the University of Texas (until 1947) and the
University of Minnesota (until 1953), when he was invited
by Robert Gordon Sproul to join the English Department at
Berkeley—coinciding with his apppointment as the literary editor for the
Mark Twain Estate, succeeding Dixon Wecter.
In 1950, following a year as a Fellow of the Huntington Library
and Rockefeller Foundation, Smith published
Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and Myth, a
comprehensive revision of his Harvard dissertation.
Virgin
Land
was immediately recognized as a seminal book in the study of
American culture, and it established Smith's standing in the very first rank of the
academy. Ten years later, in 1960, Smith likewise transformed the study of
Mark Twain when he published the
Mark Twain—Howells Letters, in collaboration with
William M. Gibson and Frederick Anderson.
This edition was the first truly scholarly edition of Mark Twain letters
ever published, and it established a new standard of excellence for Mark Twain
scholarship as a whole. Two years later, Smith published
Mark Twain: The Development of a Writer, considered to be the single
most important critical examination of Mark Twain.
In 1964, Smith resigned as editor of the Mark Twain Papers at The Bancroft
Library, though he continued to play an absolutely crucial role in
the subsequent development of the Mark Twain editions and indeed of scholarly work
on American writers in general. During the late 1950's and early 1960's, Smith
served both on the Board of Directors of the American Council of Learned
Societies and on the Executive Council of the Modern
Language Association, both of which were intimately connected with
the creation of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)
and its program for comprehensive editions of American writers. He played a
prominent role in the resistance to the Loyalty Oath in 1967 and during the Free
Speech Movement at UC Berkeley.
Smith retired from teaching in 1974, but remained highly active writing critical
pieces and at the time of his death had at least two prepared for publication. Henry
Nash Smith died in an automobile accident near Elko, Nevada, on
May 30, 1986.
(Excerpted, in part, from a memorial to Henry
Nash Smith by Robert H. Hirst,
CU News,
Vol. 41:22, 5 June 1986)
Chronology
| 1906 |
Born in Dallas, Texas
|
| 1936 |
Married Elinor Lucas
|
| 1986 |
Died May 30 in an automobile accident near Elko,
Nevada
|
Education:
| 1925 |
B.A., Southern Methodist University in
English
|
| 1929 |
M.A., Harvard in English |
| 1940 |
Ph.D., Harvard in History of American
Civilization
|
Academic Honors:
| 1946-47 |
Fellow, Huntington Library and Rockefeller
Foundation
|
| 1950 |
Bancroft Prize in American History (Columbia
University) for
Virgin
Land
|
| 1951 |
John H. Dunning Prize (American Historical
Association)
|
| 1959-69 |
Member Board of Editors, John Harvard Library
|
| 1960-61 |
Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral
Sciences
|
| 1960 |
Special Award for Distinction in the Humanities (American
Council of Learned Societies)
|
| 1962-67 |
Board of Directors, American Council of Learned
Societies
|
| 1959-69 |
Executive Council, Modern Language Association
|
| 1965 |
Fulbright lectureship, Italy
|
| |
Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
|
| |
Litt.D., S.M.U.
|
| 1969 |
President of MLA |
| 1970 |
LL.D., Colorado State University
|
| 1974 |
Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars
|
| |
Guggenheim Fellow |
| 1976 |
Jay B. Hubbell Award, American Literature Section, MLA |
| 1981 |
Member, American Philosophical Society
|
| 1984 |
Litt.D., University of Nebraska
|
Professional Experience:
| 1927-41 |
Instructor to Associate Professor, S.M.U.
|
| 1941-47 |
Professor of English and of American History, University of
Texas
|
| 1947-53 |
Professor of English, University of Minnesota
|
| 1953-64 |
Literary Editor of Mark Twain Estate, UC Berkeley
|
| 1953-84 |
Professor of English, University of California,
Berkeley (Emeritus, 1974)
|
| 1974 |
Hurst Professor, Washington University
|
| 1984 |
Retired from University of California |
Publications: Author
| 1950 |
Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and
Myth
|
| 1962 |
Mark Twain: The Development of a Writer
|
| 1964 |
Mark Twain's Fable of Progress
|
| 1978 |
Democracy and the Novel: Popular Resistance to
Classic American Writers
|
Publications: Editor
| 1950 |
James Fenimore Cooper, The Prairie
|
| 1957 |
Mark Twain of the "Enterprise"
|
| 1958 |
Mark Twain, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
|
| 1959 |
Mark Twain, Roughing It
|
| 1960 |
Mark Twain-Howells Letters (with William
M. Gibson)
|
| 1967 |
Popular Culture and Industrialism, 1865-90
|
Articles in:
-
American Heritage
-
American Quarterly
-
Harvard Library Bulletin
-
Huntington Library Quarterly
-
Massachussetts Review
-
Mississippi Valley Historical Review
-
New England Quarterly
-
PMLA
-
Southwest Review
-
University of Texas Studies in English
-
Western American Literature
-
Yale Review
Scope and Content
The Henry Nash Smith Papers came to The Bancroft Library after his death in 1986. For
the most part, the present arrangement reflects the original order of the materials
as received.
The Papers primarily contain correspondence, personal papers, and research materials
pertaining to Smith's published works, as well as his lectures, conference papers,
and book reviews. The correspondence files provide a rich resource on the
development of Smith's thought and his contributions to the evolving field of
American Studies. They contain letters from many prominent writers, including
J. Frank Dobie,
Jessica Mitford,
Alfred Kazin,
Wallace Stegner and Robert Penn Warren;
from publishing agents; and from such noted American scholars as Leo Marx,
Perry Miller,
Henry May,
Richard Hofstadter,
John William Ward,
C. Vann Woodward, and John Chapman.
Smith's personal papers consist of biographical information, including memorials.
There also are watercolor drawings and pen and ink sketches done by Smith, as well
as
New Yorker editorial cartoons depicting the impact
of technology on American society in the 1950s.
In the research and publications series, there are files on several of Smith's major
publications. However, these files contain relatively little in the way of early or
heavily revised drafts of Smith's works. The series also includes college papers,
copies of lectures delivered by Smith, conference materials, reviews by Smith and
about his works, and papers by others on topics of interest to Smith. His notes
include reference cards and notebooks, one of which contains notes for Smith's
doctoral thesis, the basis for
Virgin Land. There also
are files of correspondence directly relating to materials in this series.