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Encoded by Judy Ng, December 2005
Finding aid URL: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af005004
Series I: Manuscripts | |||||||||||||
Series II: Sound Recordings | |||||||||||||
| Discs | |||||||||||||
The collection is divided into two series, manuscripts and sound recordings. The manuscripts are broken down by sub-series and arranged alphabetically. These include the administrative file, correspondence, notes, recording logs, reports, and transcriptions of songs. The sound recordings are arranged and numbered chronologically by the date recorded, beginning with the first recordings made and ending with the last. Original disc dust jackets are housed separate from the collection.
Access to the collection is available through the Folklife Reading Room of the American Folklife Center. Recordings in the collection are available on reference tapes in the Reading Room. Duplication of collection materials may be governed by copyright and other restrictions. Please refer to the AFC web site for information on ordering copies of unpublished recordings (http://www.loc.gov/folklife/recordering.html). For specific questions, researchers should consult with the American Folklife Center reference staff.
Two interviews with Alice Gaston and Isom Mosely recorded in Gee's Bend on July 22, 1941 can also be found on the American Memory website Voices from the Days of Slavery, http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/voices/index.html.
Robert Sonkin donated the collection to the Archive of American Folk Song in 1941, which later became the Archive of Folk Culture at the American Folklife Center. The collection was formerly referred to as the "Gee's Bend Collection" until it was fully processed and a bibliographic record was added to the Library of Congress Online Catalog in 2005.
Robert Sonkin Alabama and New Jersey Collection, Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Charles L. Todd and Robert Sonkin Migrant Worker Collection , AFC 1985/001
Ethnographic field collection consisting of audio recordings, photographs, manuscript materials, publications, and ephemera, documenting the everyday life of residents of the FSA migrant worker camps in 1940 and 1941. See the American Memory website, Voices From the Dustbowl: The Charles L. Todd and Robert Sonkin Migrant Worker Collection 1940-1941: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/afctshtml/tshome.html.
The collection consists of documentation from Robert Sonkin's field recording trip to Shell Pile, near Port Norris, New Jersey, and from there to Gee's Bend and other locations in Alabama in June-July 1941. Sonkin recorded two discs of African American quartets performing gospel music in Shell Pile, June 25, 1941. His field notes also describe the African American community of Shell Pile, named for the oyster shucking industry established there near Port Norris, N.J. Forty-nine of the sixty-three discs were made in various locations in Gee's Bend and include prayer meetings, sermons, gospel music, spirituals, hymns, jubilee quartet singing, blues, children's songs, recitations and conversations. These discussions cover health and home remedies, the Gee's Bend school, and the Farm Security Administration's (FSA) Gee's Bend study. Sonkin also recorded ten discs in other areas in Alabama, including gospel quartet music in Bessemer, Alabama; interviews in Camden and Palmerdale, Alabama; and gospel music in Rehoboth and Greensboro, Alabama. Narratives by two former slaves, Isom Moseley and Alice Gaston, were recorded on July 22, 1941. Four sound discs were lost or used for test cuttings; therefore, there is a discrepancy in the number of recordings in the recording index and the number of sound discs in the catalog record for the collection.
In addition to the recordings, there are typescript copies of research materials about Gee's Bend, Alabama dating from 1937-1939, including a paper, "An exploratory study of the customs, attitudes and folkways of the people in the community of Gee's Bend," by Nathaniel S. Colley of the Tuskegee Institute. Other reports on farm production, construction of new housing and barns, home economics, and community health, which were issued by government agencies, are included in the collection.
Born in the Bronx, New York in 1911, Robert Sonkin was an educator, ethnographic researcher, and author. A graduate of the City College of New York and Columbia University, Sonkin taught at the Department of Public Speaking at City College from 1929 to 1976. In the late 1930s, he worked with Charles L. Todd, his colleague at the Department of Public Speaking, to document the experience of residents of the FSA migrant worker camps in California in 1940 and 1941. In the summer of 1941, using money granted by City College of New York to document Americana, Sonkin traveled to Shell Pile, New Jersey, and Gee's Bend, Alabama to record the religious music and personal reflections of African Americans living in those communities. In Gee's Bend, Sonkin also recorded conversations about the FSA projects that were being undertaken there. During World War II, he worked with the Archive of American Folk Song to document popular reactions to America's involvement in the war, and served in the Army Signal Corps. In the late 1970s, he again collaborated with Todd to produce the book Alexander Bryan Johnson: Philosophical Banker. He is also the author of The Voice and Speech Handbook. He died in New York in 1980.
| Quantity | Physical Extent (original) | Location | Item Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manuscript Materials | |||
| 7 | folders | AFC | Box 1 |
| Sound Recordings | |||
| 59 | 12-inch acetate-coated aluminum discs | M/B/RS | AFS 5035-AFS 5098 |
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