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Bernice Johnson Reagon Collection of African American Sacred Music

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Consultant
Richardson, Deborra
Collector
Reagon, Bernice Johnson, 1942-2024
Names
Chick Webb Orchestra
Hampton University Choir
Harmonizing Four
Jubilee Singers
Dett, Nathaniel
Dorsey, Thomas A.
Ellington, Duke, 1899-1974
Tharpe, Rosetta
Tindley, Charles
Topic
Gospel music
Provenance
Collection donated by Bernice Johnson Reagon.
Consultant
Richardson, Deborra
Collector
Reagon, Bernice Johnson, 1942-2024
See more items in
Bernice Johnson Reagon Collection of African American Sacred Music
Summary
The collection documents the customs and culture of black gospel song and its performance in 19th- and 20th-century America. Dr. Reagon collected photographs, sheet music, and other primary and secondary sources chronicling the development and legacy of this medium, from the Civil War to the Civil Rights movement, from blues to Gospel to classical to jazz. Among the subjects included in this collection are trailblazers such as Charles Tindley, Thomas A. Dorsey, Rosetta Tharpe, Duke Ellington, and Nathaniel Dett. Noted performers are the Fisk Jubilee Singers, the Harmonizing Four, the Hampton University Choir, and the Chick Webb Orchestra.
Biographical / Historical
Bernice Johnson Reagon, noted vocalist, musician, curator, historian, writer and civil rights activist, provided the impetus for the Smithsonian Institution's research into African American sacred song and music traditions from 1977 until ca. 1997. Dr. Reagon was born October 2, 1942 to a rural Georgia Baptist minister (Jesse Johnson) and his wife (Beatrice Wise) whose religious influence is evident in her research and performance style. She came of age during the 1960's Civil Rights era, and was a Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Freedom Singer. The SNCC Freedom Singers were an African American group whose vocal singing style was an integral element in the civil rights struggles. The Singers traveled throughout the country performing protest songs such as "We Shall Not Be Moved" and "This Little Light of Mine". Their songs reflected the Black church theology of the era, emphasizing freedom, long denied, but fervently sought by civil rights activists and the people they represented. At one march, Reagon was jailed along with hundreds of other demonstrators. This experience taught her the importance of music as a political act. Reagon reflected on this in the book We Who Believe in Freedom: Sweet Honey in the Rock... She founded Sweet Honey in the Rock, a highly regarded female a capella ensemble dedicated to performing traditional music of the African diaspora in 1973, started working full time at the Smithsonian Institution in 1974, and earned a Ph. D. from Howard University in 1975. Reagon's life has combined political activism with music and cultural history. She began directing the Smithsonian's Program in Black American Culture in 1976. In 1988 she became a curator at the National Museum of American History and after retirement in 1993 continued her work in African American songs of protest and sacred traditions as a curator emeritus at the Smithsonian and a distinguished professor at American University. Dr. Reagon has authored and edited numerous publications including, We'll Understand It Better By and By: African American Pioneering Gospel Composers, (Smithsonian Press, 1992) and We Who Believe in Freedom: Sweet Honey in the Rock...Still on the Journey (Anchor Books, 1993). She was principal scholar, producer and host of the National Public Radio series "Wade in the Water: African American Sacred Music Traditions (1994). Dr. Reagon has served as consultant composer and performer for several film and video projects including programs for PBS,"Eye on the Prize" (Blackside Productions) and "We Shall Overcome" (Ginger Productions), and has won a number of awards for her scholarship and pioneering work (MacArthur Fellowship, 1989; the Charles Frankel Prize,1995 and the Isadora Duncan award, 1996).
Extent
6.55 Cubic feet (17 boxes)
Date
circa 1822-1994
Custodial History
The collection was created as a resource database for research in gospel music history and the radio series and exhibit Wade In the Water: African American Sacred Song and Worship Traditions of the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries. It was transferred from the Division of Cultural History (now Division of Cultural and Community Life) to the Archives Center in June, 1998.
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.0653
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Processing Information
Collection processed by Ida Jones, June 23,1999; revised by Deborra Richardson, December 1999.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Scope and Contents
The Bernice Johnson Reagon Collection of the African American Sacred Music Tradition documents the music, and the society, history, and customs from which it emerged. The materials were collected by Dr. Reagon during her tenure as Director of the Program in Black American Culture, Curator, and Curator Emerita at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution (1977-1997). The records span the nineteenth century and greater part of the twentieth century. The collection is important because it allows an understanding of the interconnectivity of African American musical forms. Gospel, Jazz, and Protest Songs document the African experience in America through verse and melody. Dr. Reagon collected photographs, sheet music and other primary and secondary sources chronicling the development of African American sacred music tradition from its birth during the period of slavery through the creation of concert spiritual, gospel music, jazz and the performance of protest song in the century following Emancipation. The records, which measure approximately six linear feet, contain photographs, sheet music, and what Dr. Reagon calls "cultural files" pertaining to figures in, types of, and history of African American music. The cultural file material formats include book, news and magazine articles, programs, bio-sketches, and music. Information about personalities such as Marian Anderson, La Verne Baker, Dorothy Love Coates, Nathaniel Dett, Thomas Dorsey, Frederick Douglass, Duke Ellington, and the Golden Gate Quartet are contained among the collection materials. Also, there are items on gospel trailblazers such as Charles Tindley, Thomas A. Dorsey, and Rosetta Tharpe. In addition, the collection features materials connected to historians and other scholars who participated in a number of teams Reagon organized to carry out specific research initiatives in sacred music traditions and the larger African American experience. The collection, which was arranged by Dr. Reagon and staff, consists of four parts: a cultural file, a sheet music file, a photography file, and a negative file. The cultural file includes primary documents such as programs from historic performances, personal letters, press releases, and programs from scholarly conferences as well as secondary materials such as journal articles, excerpts from books, and biographical notes. The photography (and negative) files contain photographs of performers and scholars who have participated in the evolution of the African American sacred music tradition. The sheet music file encompasses songbooks and individual pieces of music. Series 1: Cultural Files, ca. 1836 - 1994: The bulk of materials date from the 1920's to the 1960's. Four document boxes of materials which relate to prominent personalities, groups and events that contributed to the popularization of African American sacred music. Also included in this series is information on slave songs, the Civil War, the Black Church, the Civil Rights Movement, and popular music culture. Series 2: Sheet Music, ca. 1901 - 1993: The bulk of materials date from the 1900's to the 1950's. Three document boxes of sacred music sheets and songbooks including concert, spiritual, and gospel arrangements. Also included are a few popular compositions, some written by classically trained musicians. Series 3: Negative Files, ca. 1880's - 1993: The bulk of the materials ranges from 1940 to 1965. Two boxes document boxes of photographic negatives depicting gospel music performers and performances. Included .are contact sheets and individual negatives of varying sizes. Series 4: Photographs and Illustrations, ca. 1822 - 1993: The bulk of materials range from the 1900's to the 1980's. Eight document boxes of photographs featuring gospel performers, performances, sacred rituals, sacred organizations, Civil Rights activity , and gospel music conferences (primarily black and white).
Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503510076437-1503510076453-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8bbe93fc4-7c52-4442-bc61-ecb16e21a0b2

In the Collection

Pages

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  • How About You?, composed by Thomas A. Dorsey

  • Only Believe, composed by Paul Rader

  • Wandering Travelers - Windy City Four Quartet

  • Martin, Sallie - Mills Brothers

  • There Wasn't No Room in the Inn (2 c.)

  • United House of Prayer: Black Gospel Music Series Program

  • Funk, Ray

  • (Roberta) Martin and the Roberta Martin Singers: The Legacy and the Music

  • I Heard Jerusalem When She Moaned (4 c.), composed by Beatrice Brown

  • Praise Ye the Lord (5 c.), composed by Lucie E. Campbell

  • God Specializes (3 c.), composed by Gloria Griffin

  • Campbell, Lucie E.

  • Burleigh, Harry T.

  • Slaves, Music: Literature Pertaining to Music of Slaves 1 of 2

  • Lord, I'm Out Here on Your Word, composed by American Folk Song

  • Jesus, I Love You, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • How Many Members Gone?, composed by Negro Spiritual

  • I Can Put My Trust in Jesus, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • Spelman-Morehouse Quartet

  • Hawkins, Tramaine - Heavenly Gospel Singers

  • Just Think of His Goodness (2 c.), composed by Virginia Davis

  • Church, n. d.

  • Martha Reeves and the Vandellas

  • Smith, Mamie

  • Church-People and Activities

  • It May be the Best for Me, composed by C.A. Tindley

  • Puckrein, Gary

  • You've Got the River Jordan to Cross (2 c.), composed by A.B. Windom

  • Carter, Wynona - Cheeks, Julius and Four Gospel Knights, ca.

  • He'll Make a Way (2 c.), composed by Anna B. White

  • Beautiful Walking with the Lord (2 c.), composed by Joe Washington

  • Harmonizing Four, The

  • Rain-Song, composed by None indicated

  • Great Day (2 c.), composed by Sallie Martin

  • "Come Sunday," Duke Ellington

  • Gonzalez, Jerry and the Fort Apache Band

  • He Has a Way That's Mighty Sweet (2 c.), composed by W. Herbert Brewster

  • Climbing Up High Mountains

  • Favorites Through the Years, composed by Various

  • Dig a Little Deeper in God's Love, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • On to Glory, composed by Samuel A. Davis

  • Wings Over Jordan

  • Williams-Jones, Pearl

  • O, Holy Lord!, composed by J. Rosamond Johnson

  • He Is a Friend to Me (2c.), composed by Joe Strawther

  • You Better Put Your House in Order (2 c.), composed by Virginia Davis

  • Dorothy Norwood Singers

  • If I Can Just Make It In, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • Winans Family

  • Heaven is Mine, composed by Virginia Davis

  • Go Shepherd and Feed My Sheep (2 c.), composed by Roberta Martin and Theo sic Frye

  • I'll Let Nothing Separate Me From His Love, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • They That Wait Upon the Lord, composed by Lucie E. Campbell

  • Classic Gospel Song: Bradford, Alex Program: "Too Close to Heaven" The Music of Professor Alex Bradford

  • Touch Somebody's Life, composed by Raymond Raspberry

  • Bassey, Shirley

  • Robinson, Cleophus - Scott A. White Family, The

  • I'm So Glad Jesus Is All (2 c.), composed by None indicated

  • Johnson, Hall - Jordan River Boys

  • Tindley, Rev. C.A.

  • These Are They, composed by Rev. W. Herbert Brewster

  • Douglass, Frederick - Evangelist Singers

  • Voices of the Civil Rights Movement Recording - Ward, Clara

  • How I Got Over (4 c.), composed by Clara Ward

  • Congress Herald, composed by Various

  • Dorsey, Thomas

  • Golden Gate Quartet

  • Baker, Houston - Ballard, Rev. Marion

  • Earth Has No Sorrow That Heav'n Cannot Heal, composed by Samuel Webb

  • I Call Him Jesus My Rock (2 c.), composed by Virginia Davis

  • Florence B. Price Scores

  • Women in Blue Program

  • Move Up a Little Higher (4 c.), composed by Rev. W. Herbert Brewster

  • Truth, Sojourner - Violinaires

  • Jesus Paid It All (2 c.), composed by Elvina M. Hall

  • Walking Up the King's Highway, composed by Mary Gardner and Thomas A. Dorsey

  • Everybody Will Be Happy Over There (3 c.), composed by E.M. Bartlett

  • Tindley Conference - Violinaires

  • Take My Hand, Previous Lord (2 c.), composed by Thomas A. Dorsey

  • Rev. Charles Tindley: A Musical Tribute and Colloquium Program

  • I Was Glad When They Said to Me (2 c.), composed by Kenneth Woods, Jr.

  • Spirit of Memphis Quartet - Starlight Spiritual Singers

  • Troubled in Mind, composed by Negro Spiritual

  • Have Faith in God (3 c.), composed by Dr. W. Herbert Brewster

  • (Eva) Jessye Choir, The

  • The Love I Have for Jesus, composed by Harold Smith

  • I'm Climbing Higher and Higher (2 c.), composed by W. Herbert Brewster

  • Jesus, I Love You, composed by Kenneth Morris

  • He Knows the Depth of My Soul (2 c.), composed by Virginia Davis

  • Jesus Is the Searchlight (2 c.), composed by Samuel A. Lewis

  • Swing Low, Sweet Chariot (2 c.), composed by Spiritual

  • I'm Goin' To Hold On Till Jesus Comes For Me (5 c.), composed by Thomas Dorsey

  • Foot-Prints of Jesus (5 c.), composed by Lucie E. Campbell

  • Ebonaires

  • I Must Tell Jesus(2 c.), composed by Virginia Davis

  • Surely God Is Able (4 c.), composed by Rev. W. Herbert Brewster

  • Just Keep Still, composed by Willie Mae Ford Smith

  • Rays, The

  • Bradford, Alex - Brewster, Gospel Drama

  • Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child, composed by H.T. Burleigh

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Wade in the Water Publicity
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