A Collection in
Special Collections and Archives
Collection Number 1982-20
Johnston Memorial Library, Virginia State
University
Special Collections and Archives Johnston Memorial Library P.O. Box 9406 Virginia State University Petersburg, Virginia 23806 USA Phone: (804) 524-5582 Fax: (804) 524-6959 Email: refdesk@vsu.edu URL: https://library.vsu.edu/
Funding:
Funded in part by a grant from the National
Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by:
Risha L. Stebbins and Lucious Edwards, Jr.
Repository
Special Collections and Archives, Johnston
Memorial Library, Virginia State University
Collection number
1982-20
Title
Amaza Lee Meredith Papers,
1912,
1930-1938
Physical Characteristics
This collection
contains ca. 5,000 pieces.
Language
English
Abstract
The Amaza Lee Meredith papers
contain personal and business documents generated by Ms.
Meredith which reflect the activities of her lifetime.
Included are materials related to her career at Virginia State
University, her participation in the V.S.U. Alumni Association
the official records of the Azurest North Syndicate, and
personal correspondence with several prominent blueprints,
line drawings, and sketches of Ms. Meredith's designs which
demonstrates her pursuits in architecture.
The items in Box 29 are restricted; there are no other
restrictions in this collection.
Publication Rights
EDIT ME!
Preferred Citation
Amaza Lee Meredith Papers, 1912, 1930-1930, Accession
#1982-20, Special Collections Dept., Johnson Memorial
Library, Virginia State University, Petersburg, Va.
Acquisition Information
These papers were given to the V.S.U. Archives/ Special
Collections Department by decree of Ms. Meredith's Last
Will and Testament.
Amaza Lee Meredith was born in Lynchburg, Virginia on
August 14,1895. She was the daughter of Emma P. Kenny
(Meredith) and Samuel P. Meredith. She had two sisters and one
brother; the eldest child , Maude, maintained a life-long
closeness with Amaza. In 1915, Meredith completed here early
schooling in Lynchburg, where she graduated at the top of her
class.
Her First teaching job was at a rural ungraded school
called Indian Rock, located in Botetourt County, Virginia.
Here, Meredith organized the Indian Rock Parent- Teacher's
Association, which worked in conjunction with the Negro
Organization Society of Virginia to bring improvement to the
local school system. In 1918, she returned to Lynchburg, where
she taught elementary school. In 1922, she served as
Valedictorian for her class at the Virginia Normal and
Industrial Institute. This was followed by six years of
teaching mathematics at Dunbar High School in Lynchburg.
Ms. Meredith enrolled in the Teacher's College of Columbia
University, New York in 1928. It was there where she earned
both her Bachelor's and Master's Degrees in Fine Arts
Education.
Her career with Virginia State University began in 1930,
though she took a leave of absence from 1934-35 to complete
her Master's degree. In 1935, she advanced to the position of
Department Char, where she remained until her retirement in
1958. Amaza Meredith established the schools of Fine Arts
department.
Beyond her career at V. S. U., Meredith's life was also
rich in contributions. Her artistic self spilled over into
these other facets of her life. She exhibited her art at the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and in galleries in New York and
North Carolina. Some works were acquired by groups, such as
the Gillfield Baptist Church, where they are still displayed;
many others hang in the homes of area residents.
She also developed interior decorating and design skills.
In the field of business, she coordinated color schemes for
campus buildings. To provide for new shelving units, she
created blueprints, which proposed modifications in the art
department layouts.
This remarkable person also pursued architectural
interests. Though she had no known formal training, Amaza
Meredith fully designed her own home - both inside and out,
and im1939, it was built on Boisseau Street here in Ettrick.
She named it "Azurest South." In the ensuing decades, Meredith
laid out the blueprints for several homes, most notably in Sag
Harbor, Long Island, New York.
In the 1950's Sag Harbor flourished as resort area for
blacks. Amaza and her sister, Maude, worked together to buy,
create, and develop the subdivision later called "Azurest
North." They worked with others to establish the "Azurest
Syndicate, Inc." Syndicate lots were sold to individual
investors, who the built summer, or year-round cottages and
this land. Ms. Meredith designed at least two of these
residences: 1) Terry Cottage, summer home for her sister,
Maude Terry: and 2) Edendot, belonging to friends Ed and Dot
Spaulding.
Additionally, Meredith provided several sets of blueprints
for the proposed V. S. U. Alumni House in 1949. Once these
plans fell through, Amaza tried another approach: She willed
her half of Azurest South to the V. S. U. Alumni Association
in the hopes that the dream for which she had worked so long
would become a reality. Joint ownership of Azurest South was
held with Ms. Edna Colson, another retired faculty member of
V. S. U. In 1985, the Alumni Association purchased the
Colson's half of the house, and Azurest South is now the
official V. S. U. Alumni House.
Meredith was generally active in the Alumni Association.
She was an honorary member of the Gillfield Baptist Church.
While she participated in several other organizations and
committees, the extent of her involvement is not known.
The Amaza Lee Meredith Papers, 1912-1983, document a slice
of Virginia's history in the twentieth century. This founder
of the Fine Arts Department lived a life abundant in
contributions well beyond her career at Virginia State
University, while some materials relate directly to her work
as a faculty member. Her devotion to education spanned over
four decades; these papers reflect her efforts. Born in 1895,
Meredith was raised in a period which some consider the lowest
point in African-American history since the antebellum era. A
product of such adversity, she adjusted to work and achieve
during and after a time of legal segregation. This collection
speaks to her successes in overcoming the "obstacles" of both
race and gender.
Beginning in 1930, Meredith corresponded frequently with
family, most notably, her sister, Maude Terry. These letters
reveal the depth of love and loyalty the family cultivated and
nurtured for lifetime. They demonstrate the difference in
women's roles between the black and white interdependent
relationship with men; black women have received greater
support from their peers in the arena of independence. In this
vein, Meredith's family gave her nothing short of a full
endorsement for her outstanding achievements. It is likely
that such contributed to her ability to surmount societal
resistance.
Many of Meredith's peers were educators. Her papers include
correspondence with Helen Edmonds, Anne Crittendon Preston,
and Jean Murrell Capers (who later made her mark in politics).
The remaining correspondence comes from people of varied
backgrounds, also as viable research material.
Another group of personal correspondence related to
Stafford Evans, a prized students of Ms. Meredith. While there
is some continuation of correspondence into the 1980s, most of
these letters were written while Evans served in the navy from
1943-45. Included are copies of The Mananan, a WWII Black
sailors' March and December of 1945. This sub-series lends
expression to the ambiguity, which black soldiers felt while
in fighting for a democracy to which they themselves were not
privy.
Meredith's business records document the origins of the
Azurest Syndicate in 1953. Ms. Meredith worked with her
sister, Ms. Terry, to pioneer the development of a Black
summer resort area known as the Azurest North. The Syndicate
served to regulate the subdivision's lot sales. The unique
aspect of this venture are numerous: the development of a
black resort in this time period, the syndicate, and the
project's creation and development by two Black women - whose
careers were unrelated to such a field.
It appears that, from the 1950's through the 1970's some
homes in Azurest North were designed by Ms. Meredith. Though
she had no known formal architectural schooling, she created
countless line and ink drawings as well as blueprints, which
are also included in this collection. Several of these
projects succeeded in being built. For many more, the end
result is as yet undetermined.
Unquestionably, Meredith designed and built her own home,
known as Azurest South, which she truly reflects her artistic
gift. Blueprints, line drawings, and sketches of this home are
available for research.
Found in another series are the plans for the proposed V.
S. U. Alumni House. Beginning in 1949 and working through the
next decade, Meredith was active with the Alumni House
Committee in attempts to produce an Alumni House. She retained
general Alumni records from as early as 1936 and ending in
1969.
Lastly, she created more than a dozen scrapbooks, devoting
each to a different subject and/or person. They contain
documents, photos, letters, news clippings, and ephemera,
which combine to form a rich source of research on their
topics. The materials cut across all the other sub-series in
these collections.
Amaza Meredith maintained a life-long friendship with Edna
Colson, former head of the Education Department at V. S. U.
They also shared a residence and had mutual friends. Clearly,
in order to research either person in- depth, it will be
necessary to study the other. Some further correspondence
exists in Colson/Hill the sub-series of MS. Colson's personal
correspondence dating from 1905-79. This includes information
of the trip to Europe made by Colson and Meredith. Some
materials, however are restricted (Box 29).
Scrapbook- Scrapbook - Report on Unrest at
Kent State by Iris Richards
n.d.
Box-folder
14:225
Scrapbook - Meredith Historiography
1915 & A. S.
1940
Box 15
Scrapbook entitled
"Photograph"
7.5 x 11.5 inches
This is a collection of cards and programs.
Included in this scrapbook is one of several
telegrams.
Box 15
Untitled scrapbook
n.d.
6.5 x 10 inches
This is a photographic record of Azurest South
during its construction and as the home shared by
Amaza Meredith and Edna Colson.
Box 15
Scrapbook #1: Untitled
n.d.
12.5 x 10 inches
Correspondence, number of letters concerning
Amamza Meredith teaching career in Lynchburg, and her
being recruited to come to Virginia State by John M.
Gandy. The other letters are mainly from friends
concerning a variety of subjects. Included in the
scrapbook is numerous of news-clippings, programs,
tickets and other items collected by her long
life.
Box 15
Scrapbook #2: Art
n.d.
10.5 x 11.5 inches
Some correspondence, most of the materials consist
of several programs, which were designed by Miss
Meredith. Included in this book are also a number of
speeches most concerning the teaching of or about
art.
Box 15
Scrapbook #3: Photographs
n.d.
11 x 12 inches
A collection of photographs covering a wide
area.
Box 15
Scrapbook #4: Poems
n.d.
10 x 11.5 inches
This scrapbook includes a number of poems and
letters written by Amaza Lee Meredith. The Evening
song and Alma Mater of Virginia State is embodied in
this scrapbook. Other letters and poems written or
given to Miss Meredith can also be found. There are
newspaper-clippings of poems written by Miss Amaza
and also others that she collected.
Box 15
Scrapbook #5: My Children
n.d.
10.5 x 11.5 inches
Correspondence, photo's and newspaper-clippings
from some of her former students. Included in this
scrapbook are: James Gault Chander Flymn, Roderick
Taylor, Freddrick F. Kersy, Reyenea Perry, Mildred
Fountain, Huedillard Fitzgerald. Stanford Evens and
others. There is addition some material about
Lynchberg Virginia.
Box 15
Scrapbook # 6: A L
1895-19
-
11.5 x 11 inches
Some correspondence, news-clipping, programs most
of which document the establishment of the Meredith
Art at Virginia State in 1972 Gallery.
Box 15
Scrapbook #7: "Miss Anne"
n.d.
9.5 x 11.5
This scrapbook contains some correspondence,
programs and printed articles about Anne Spencer of
Lynchburg. Mrs. Spencer was a poet of the Harlem
Renaissance Period. One of Miss Meredith sisters was
married to Miss Spencer sons.
Box 15
Scrapbook #8: Letters
1941-1976
A Scrapbook of letters from a wide group of people
dating from 1941 through 1976.
Box 15
Scrapbook #9: Dr. I and Fred III
1980-1982
Some correspondence photographs and cards of
sympathy about the death of Iris Terry Richards. Dr.
Richards was Miss Meredith niece.
Box 15
Scrapbook #10: Untitled
n.d.
10.5 x 11.5 inches
News-clippings, newsletters and other material
mostly about Art.
Box 15
Scrapbook #11: Honors
n.d.
10 x 11.5 inches
A combination of items includes Miss Meredith's
High School grades and diploma. There are letters of
recognition and certificates.
Box 15
Scrapbook #12: Cards
n.d.
10.5 x 11.5 inches
Most of the material document Miss Meredith
involvement with the Gillfield Baptist Church in
Petersburg, Va.
Box 15
Scrapbook # 13: Amaza Lee Meredith
September 1,
1958
This scrapbook document Miss Meredith retirement
from Virginia State University in 1958. There are
cards, programs, letters and photographs.