Inventory of the Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor and Lawrence Arthur Taylor Papers, 1932-1999

Collection Number 5253

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Manuscripts Department, University Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Collection Information


Contact Information:
Manuscripts Department
CB#3926, Wilson Library
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890
Phone: 919/962-1345
Fax: 919/962-3594
Email: mss@email.unc.edu
URL: http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/

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Descriptive Summary

Repository
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.
Creator
Taylor, Sallie Blackwell Sharp, 1911-
Taylor, Lawrence Arthur, 1905-
Title
Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor and Lawrence Arthur Taylor Papers, 1932-1999 (bulk 1932-1934)
Call Number
5253
Language of Materials
Materials in English
Extent
Items: About 725
Linear Feet: 2.0
Abstract
Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor of Reidsville, N.C., was born on 21 December 1911, to James Merritt Sharp and Annie Britt Blackwell Sharp. She was one of seven children. Her sister Susie Marshall Sharp was elected chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court in 1974, becoming the first woman elected chief justice of a state supreme court in the United States. Sallie attended North Carolina College for Women (now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro), and upon graduating worked as a violin instructor at the North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf in Raleigh, N.C., where she lived and worked until her marriage in 1935. Lawrence Arthur Taylor (Arthur) was born on 17 February 1905. Upon graduation from the State College (now North Carolina State University) in Raleigh, N.C., Arthur worked at the Montgomery Ward store in Reidsville, N.C., where he met Sallie. In 1933, Sally and Arthur were separated by his work transfers. They married on 21 June 1935.
The collection consists largely of correspondence between Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor in North Carolina and Lawrence Arthur Taylor working for Montgomery Ward in Hammond, Ind., and Holland, Mich., during their courtship, 1932-1935. Letters describe their daily activities and work, relationships with family (including Susie Sharp), and friends, plans for their upcoming wedding, and their expectations about married life including a discussion of birth control. Letters, November 1932-May 1934, describe the daily life of a college student at the North Carolina College for Women in Greensboro, N.C., and letters, May 1934-May 1935, describe life and work as instructor of violin at the North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf in Raleigh, N.C. Other correspondents include Sallie's father, James Merritt Sharp; mother, Annie Britt Blackwell Sharp; and other family and friends. There are also a few letters, 1935-1999; clippings; programs from musical events Sallie attended; a partially completed bride book; and an award booklet commemorating Arthur's 25 years with Montgomery Ward.

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Administrative Information

Restrictions to Access
No restrictions.
Acquisitions Information
Received from Lawrence Arthur Taylor Jr. in January 2006 (Acc. 100309).
Processing Information
Processed by: Margaret Dickson, May 2006
Encoded by: Margaret Dickson, May 2006
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor and Lawrence Arthur Taylor Papers #5253, Southern Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Copyright Notice
Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
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Online Catalog Headings

These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online catalogs.

Birth control--United States.
Courtship--History--20th century.
Courtship--North Carolina--History--20th century.
Family--North Carolina--Social life and customs.
Hammond (Ind.)--History.
Holland (Mich.)--History.
Love-letters.
Montgomery Ward--History.
Music teachers--North Carolina--History--20th century.
North Carolina College for Women.
North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf.
Reidsville (N.C.)--History.
Reidsville (N.C.)--Social life and customs.
Sharp family.
Sharp, James Merritt, 1877-
Sharp, Susie.
Taylor, Lawrence Arthur, 1905-
Taylor, Sallie Blackwell Sharp, 1911-
University of North Carolina at Greensboro--History.
Weddings--North Carolina.
Weddings--Planning.
Women college students--North Carolina--History--20th century.
Women music teachers--North Carolina--History--20th century.
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Related Collections

Susie Sharp Papers (#4898)
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Biographical Note

Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor was born Sallie Blackwell Sharp on 21 December 1911 to James Merritt Sharp and Annie Britt Blackwell Sharp. She was one of seven children who survived to adulthood, including Susie Marshall, Annie Hill, Thomas Adolphus ("Tommy"), Louise Wortham, Florence Abigail, and James Vance ("Kits"). She was lived in Reidsville, N.C., until she left to attend the North Carolina College for Women (now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro). Sallie was an avid violinist, and a large part of her studies at the Women's College involved her musical training. Upon graduating from college in May 1933, Sallie took a position as instructor of violin at the North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf in Raleigh, N.C., where she lived and worked for one year.

Sallie's sister, Susie Marshall Sharp, of Reidsville, N.C., was elected chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court in 1974, becoming the first woman elected chief justice of a state supreme court in the United States.

Lawrence Arthur Taylor, generally known as "Arthur", was born 17 February 1905. Taylor graduated from North Carolina State College (now North Carolina State University) in Raleigh, N.C. in the 1920s and worked for several years at the Montgomery Ward store in Reidsville, N.C., where he met Sallie Blackwell Sharp. He was later transferred to Hammond, Ind., and then to Holland, Mich., where he was the manager of the Montgomery Ward store.

Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor and Lawrence Arthur Taylor began dating in November of 1932. On 21 June 1935 they were married at the Sharp home in Reidsville, N.C.

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Collection Overview

The collection consists largely of correspondence between Sallie Blackwell Sharp Taylor of Reidsville, N.C., and Lawrence Arthur Taylor working for Montgomery Ward in Hammond, Ind., and Holland, Mich., during their courtship, 1932-1935. Letters describe their daily activities and work, relationships with family (including Susie Sharp) and friends, plans for their upcoming wedding, and their expectations about married life including a discussion of birth control. Letters, November 1932-May 1934, describe the daily life of a college student at the North Carolina College for Women in Greensboro, N.C., and letters, May 1934-May 1935, describe life and work as instructor of violin at the North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf in Raleigh, N.C. Other correspondents include Sallie's father, James Merritt Sharp; mother, Annie Britt Blackwell Sharp; and other family and friends. There are also a few letters, 1935-1999; clippings; programs from musical events Sallie attended; a partially completed bride book; and an award booklet commemorating Arthur's 25 years with Montgomery Ward.


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Detailed Description of the Collection

Papers, 1932-1999.
About 725 items.
Arrangement: by type of material, then chronological.
Predominantly correspondence, the bulk of which is between Sallie Blackwell Sharp and Lawrence Arthur Taylor during their courtship, November 1932-June 1935. Letters from Sallie describe her daily life, her work with the violin, and her relationships with her family and friends. Letters, November 1932-May 1934, describe the daily life of a college student at the North Carolina College for Women in Greensboro, N.C., and letters, May 1934-May 1935, describe life and work as instructor of violin at the North Carolina State School for the Blind and Deaf in Raleigh, N.C. Letters from Arthur describe his daily life and work at Montgomery Ward. 1934 letters describe plans the couple was making towards their eventual wedding in June 1935 and their expectations about married life.
As Sallie was in North Carolina and Arthur was in Indiana and Michigan for most of their courtship, letter writing was their primary means of communication and the collection comprehensively documents a courtship in the 1930s. The letters are notable for their frank discussions about birth control and the difficulties the couple experienced in trying to find information about it.
Other correspondents include family and friends and are mostly addressed to Sallie. One notable letter, 4 April 1933, is from Sallie's father, James Merritt Sharp, to Arthur Taylor, describing his and his wife's opposition to Arthur's proposal that he and Sallie marry in the summer of 1934, wishing for her to have more "experience" before tying herself to "any one man for life."
Folder 17 includes sparse correspondence from the years 1935, after Sallie and Arthur were married, to 1939, when their first son, Lawrence Arthur Taylor Jr., was born. One letter, August 1999, is from Sallie's brother, James Vance ("Kits"), to Lawrence Arthur Taylor Jr.
There are also clippings and programs of musical events that Sallie attended. Folder 18 contains a bride's book, which is for the most part incomplete but which does contain a list of wedding attendants and a marriage certificate. Folder 19 contains an award packet from Montgomery Ward commemorating Lawrence Arthur Taylor's 25 years with the company.
Folder 1-17
Correspondence:
Folder 1
November 1932-March 1933
Folder 2
April 1933
Folder 3
May 1933
Folder 4
June 1933
Folder 5
July 1933
Folder 6
August 1933
Folder 7
September 1933
Folder 8
October 1933
Folder 9
November 1933
Folder 10
December 1933
Folder 11
January 1934
Folder 12
February 1934
Folder 13
March 1934
Folder 14
April 1934
Folder 15
May 1934
Folder 16
June 1934
Folder 17
July 1934-August 1999
Folder 18
Bride's Book
Folder 19
Lawrence Arthur Taylor's Montgomery Ward Award Booklet

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