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Jean Bell Thomas

Jean Bell Thomas (November 14, 1881 – December 7, 1982) was an American photographer and folk festival promoter, who specialized in the music, crafts, and language patterns of the Appalachian region of the United States.

Early life edit

She was born Jeannette Bell in 1881[1] to William George Bell and Catherine S. Bell, a retired engineer and a schoolteacher, respectively, in Ashland, Kentucky.[1][2] She earned the nickname "Traipsin' Woman" when, as a teenager in the 1890s, she defied convention to attend business school, learn stenography, and become a court reporter, traveling by jolt wagon to courts in the mountains of eastern Kentucky. Her travels from county to county were said to involve "considerable spells of traipsin'".[3] Her exposure to the musical traditions, dialect, folkways, and costumes of the mountain people she encountered in her native Eastern Kentucky, combined with her later work in "show business," led to her avocation as a popularizer of mountain music and as proprietress of the American Folk Song Festival, staged in and near Ashland, Kentucky, from 1930 to 1972. In 1900, she lived at home with her parents; her occupation was stenographer.[2]

Career edit

Using money saved from her court reporter wages, Bell moved to New York City, where she took writing classes and continued to work as a stenographer.

She married accountant Albert Thomas in 1913 and moved to Logan, West Virginia, but was divorced within a year.[citation needed] She then held a variety of jobs, including work as a script girl for Cecil B. de Mille's film The Ten Commandments, as secretary to the owner of the Columbus Senators baseball team, and as press agent for Texas Guinan, an entertainer and owner of prohibition-era speakeasies.

During her years working in eastern Kentucky, and on subsequent visits, Thomas often carried her camera and photographed the musicians and other mountain people with whom she came in contact. She used her portable typewriter to document lyrics and tunes to ballads. In 1926, she met James William Day, a blind fiddler from Rowan County. Using the skills she had acquired as a press agent, she changed his name to Jilson Setters, secured recording contracts, and booked him (as the "Singin' Fiddler from Lost Hope Hollow") in theaters. As Jilson Setters, Day eventually played in London's Royal Albert Hall at the Festival of the English Folk Song and Dance Society, for Thomas subscribed to the belief, also held by many of her contemporaries, that in Appalachia, "the speech, song, and traditions of old England still survived" (Thomas 1940, pg. 88).

Day/Setters was the subject of Thomas' first book, Devil's Ditties, published in 1931; subsequent books included the semi-autobiographical The Traipsin' Woman (1933) and The Sun Shines Bright (1940).

Beginning of the American Folk Song Festival edit

Inspired by a traditional mountain "Singin' Gatherin'" (wherein musicians got together to perform old songs) she had witnessed, Jean Thomas staged a small folk festival for a group of invited guests at her home in September 1930. Featured performers included Setters and Dorothy Gordon, a singer from New York. Thomas incorporated the American Folk Song Society the following year to plan for an annual festival near her hometown of Ashland, Kentucky. The second American Folk Song Festival was held in 1932 on Four Mile Fork of Garner, just off the Mayo Trail, and featured eighteen acts, all of whom had learned by oral tradition, per Thomas' stipulation. The stage included a rented log cabin, because "It was my purpose to recreate as accurately as possible the original scene of the Singin' Gatherin'. That had been presented in front of a windowless cabin. But this rented cabin did have a glass window in front; so I covered it with an American flag" (Thomas 1940, pg. 198).

With the exception of the years 1943–1947, the American Folk Song Festival was held annually until failing health forced Thomas to retire in 1972. From 1934 to 1949, thanks to a benefactor's gift of land and a windowless log cabin, the festival took place at a site eighteen miles south of Ashland. Beginning in 1950, the festival was held in Thomas' yard in Ashland, moving to a state park in Prestonsburg in 1964, and to the Carter Caves State Park in 1966. The festival followed an unwavering script for many years, intended to show "authentic sequences in America's musical history" (Thomas 1940, pg. 262). Volna Fraley [who?] or, later, his nephew, would signal the start of the performances by blowing a fox horn that had belonged to "Devil Anse" Hatfield (patriarch of the legendary feuding family of the Kentucky-West Virginia border). Next, a man, woman, and two children would arrive at the stage by covered wagon to be greeted by a woman dressed as a Cherokee Indian, as a representation of the Anglo-American settlement of the Appalachian Mountains. Traditions carried over from the British Isles would then be demonstrated by a dozen children performing an old English country dance accompanied by a piper. A woman in the role of "Narrator" (often played by Thomas herself), attended by "Ladies-in-Waiting" dressed in long black Elizabethan gowns, would read a historical prologue connecting Appalachian customs and music to Elizabethan England. The prologue would conclude with a description of the wedding of a young pioneer couple named Ephraim and Drusilla; the ensuing musical performances were set in the narrative context of their wedding reception, or "Infare".[4]

Musicians would play traditional stringed instruments such as dulcimer, fiddle, guitar, banjo, and accordion, plus recorder and mouth harp. Homemade varieties, such as fiddles constructed out of corn stalks, and banjos made from gourds, appeared alongside later models. Nostalgic for the 19th century, Thomas costumed festival performers in homespun garments evoking that era: girls wore bonnets and calico dresses; women dressed in linsey-woolsey and wrapped shawls around their shoulders; and men and boys often wore overalls. Characters bore names of people she had met long before ("Emmaline," "Little Chad," and "Little Babe"), or were invented to sound folksy. Props such as hickory chairs and egg baskets, brooms, and drinking gourds were used in photographing performers.[5]

Last years edit

She donated manuscript materials and her photographs to the University of Louisville in 1968. The remainder of her papers came to University of Louisville's Dwight Anderson Music Library in 1990, and are described online. Jean Bell Thomas died in Greenup, Kentucky on December 7, 1982, aged 101 years old.[6]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Wolfe, Charles K. (January 13, 2015). Kentucky Country: Folk and Country Music of Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813149608. Retrieved August 4, 2017 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b Bell, Jean. "1900 Census for Boyd County, Kentucky". Family Search org. Retrieved January 10, 2015.(subscription required)
  3. ^ Federal Writers' Project (1996). The WPA Guide to Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky. p. 236. ISBN 0813108659. Retrieved November 24, 2013.
  4. ^ University of Louisville's Institutional Institutional Repository. Accessed April 11, 2022.
  5. ^ "Bluegrass Messengers - Jilson Setters: The Last Minstrel- Thomas 1928". bluegrassmessengers.com. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  6. ^ Jean Thomas in the Kentucky, U.S., Death Index, 1911-2000; accessed April 11, 2022.

References edit

 
Cover of Blue Ridge Country by Thomas
  • Davis, Stephen F. "Jilson Setters: The man of many names." The Devil's Box (Journal of the Tennessee Valley Old Time Fiddlers Association) 12, no. 1 (March 1978): 42–45.
  • Moore, Anne. "Gift of mountain lore is presented to UofL." Courier-Journal, May 28, 1969.
  • "Music of the Southern Appalachians lives on in Kentucky's American Folk Song Festival." Thirty-ninth Annual American Folk Song Festival program. Carter Caves State Park, Olive Hill, Carter County, Kentucky (June 7–8, 1969).
  • Nixon, Bruce. "Down from the Mountains." Louisville Eccentric Observer (LEO) 13, no. 23 (April 9, 2003): 14–16.
  • Portnoy, Marshall A. Jean Thomas' American Folk Song Festival: British Balladry in Eastern Kentucky. Louisville, KY: University of Louisville M.A., 1978.
  • "Singin' Gatherin'." Time (June 20, 1938).
  • "Singin' Gatherin'." Time (June 22, 1942).
  • Thomas, Jean. The Sun Shines Bright. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1940.
  • Thomas, Jean. The Traipsin' Woman. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1933.
  • "Traipsin' Woman." Time (June 18, 1934).
  • University of Louisville Dwight Anderson Music Library. "Finding Aid to the Jean Thomas Collection."
  • The West-Virginia Hillbilly (August 8, 1965).
  • Wolfe, Charles K. Kentucky Country: Folk and Country Music of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky, 1996.

External links edit

  • Works by Jean Thomas at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Jean Bell Thomas at Internet Archive
  • Works by Jean Bell Thomas at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Jean Thomas, The Traipsin' Woman, Collection, University of Louisville Photograph Archives

jean, bell, thomas, british, academic, jean, thomas, biochemist, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, march, 2022, . For the British academic see Jean Thomas biochemist This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Jean Bell Thomas November 14 1881 December 7 1982 was an American photographer and folk festival promoter who specialized in the music crafts and language patterns of the Appalachian region of the United States Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Beginning of the American Folk Song Festival 4 Last years 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editShe was born Jeannette Bell in 1881 1 to William George Bell and Catherine S Bell a retired engineer and a schoolteacher respectively in Ashland Kentucky 1 2 She earned the nickname Traipsin Woman when as a teenager in the 1890s she defied convention to attend business school learn stenography and become a court reporter traveling by jolt wagon to courts in the mountains of eastern Kentucky Her travels from county to county were said to involve considerable spells of traipsin 3 Her exposure to the musical traditions dialect folkways and costumes of the mountain people she encountered in her native Eastern Kentucky combined with her later work in show business led to her avocation as a popularizer of mountain music and as proprietress of the American Folk Song Festival staged in and near Ashland Kentucky from 1930 to 1972 In 1900 she lived at home with her parents her occupation was stenographer 2 Career editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Using money saved from her court reporter wages Bell moved to New York City where she took writing classes and continued to work as a stenographer She married accountant Albert Thomas in 1913 and moved to Logan West Virginia but was divorced within a year citation needed She then held a variety of jobs including work as a script girl for Cecil B de Mille s film The Ten Commandments as secretary to the owner of the Columbus Senators baseball team and as press agent for Texas Guinan an entertainer and owner of prohibition era speakeasies During her years working in eastern Kentucky and on subsequent visits Thomas often carried her camera and photographed the musicians and other mountain people with whom she came in contact She used her portable typewriter to document lyrics and tunes to ballads In 1926 she met James William Day a blind fiddler from Rowan County Using the skills she had acquired as a press agent she changed his name to Jilson Setters secured recording contracts and booked him as the Singin Fiddler from Lost Hope Hollow in theaters As Jilson Setters Day eventually played in London s Royal Albert Hall at the Festival of the English Folk Song and Dance Society for Thomas subscribed to the belief also held by many of her contemporaries that in Appalachia the speech song and traditions of old England still survived Thomas 1940 pg 88 Day Setters was the subject of Thomas first book Devil s Ditties published in 1931 subsequent books included the semi autobiographical The Traipsin Woman 1933 and The Sun Shines Bright 1940 Beginning of the American Folk Song Festival editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jean Bell Thomas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Inspired by a traditional mountain Singin Gatherin wherein musicians got together to perform old songs she had witnessed Jean Thomas staged a small folk festival for a group of invited guests at her home in September 1930 Featured performers included Setters and Dorothy Gordon a singer from New York Thomas incorporated the American Folk Song Society the following year to plan for an annual festival near her hometown of Ashland Kentucky The second American Folk Song Festival was held in 1932 on Four Mile Fork of Garner just off the Mayo Trail and featured eighteen acts all of whom had learned by oral tradition per Thomas stipulation The stage included a rented log cabin because It was my purpose to recreate as accurately as possible the original scene of the Singin Gatherin That had been presented in front of a windowless cabin But this rented cabin did have a glass window in front so I covered it with an American flag Thomas 1940 pg 198 With the exception of the years 1943 1947 the American Folk Song Festival was held annually until failing health forced Thomas to retire in 1972 From 1934 to 1949 thanks to a benefactor s gift of land and a windowless log cabin the festival took place at a site eighteen miles south of Ashland Beginning in 1950 the festival was held in Thomas yard in Ashland moving to a state park in Prestonsburg in 1964 and to the Carter Caves State Park in 1966 The festival followed an unwavering script for many years intended to show authentic sequences in America s musical history Thomas 1940 pg 262 Volna Fraley who or later his nephew would signal the start of the performances by blowing a fox horn that had belonged to Devil Anse Hatfield patriarch of the legendary feuding family of the Kentucky West Virginia border Next a man woman and two children would arrive at the stage by covered wagon to be greeted by a woman dressed as a Cherokee Indian as a representation of the Anglo American settlement of the Appalachian Mountains Traditions carried over from the British Isles would then be demonstrated by a dozen children performing an old English country dance accompanied by a piper A woman in the role of Narrator often played by Thomas herself attended by Ladies in Waiting dressed in long black Elizabethan gowns would read a historical prologue connecting Appalachian customs and music to Elizabethan England The prologue would conclude with a description of the wedding of a young pioneer couple named Ephraim and Drusilla the ensuing musical performances were set in the narrative context of their wedding reception or Infare 4 Musicians would play traditional stringed instruments such as dulcimer fiddle guitar banjo and accordion plus recorder and mouth harp Homemade varieties such as fiddles constructed out of corn stalks and banjos made from gourds appeared alongside later models Nostalgic for the 19th century Thomas costumed festival performers in homespun garments evoking that era girls wore bonnets and calico dresses women dressed in linsey woolsey and wrapped shawls around their shoulders and men and boys often wore overalls Characters bore names of people she had met long before Emmaline Little Chad and Little Babe or were invented to sound folksy Props such as hickory chairs and egg baskets brooms and drinking gourds were used in photographing performers 5 Last years editShe donated manuscript materials and her photographs to the University of Louisville in 1968 The remainder of her papers came to University of Louisville s Dwight Anderson Music Library in 1990 and are described online Jean Bell Thomas died in Greenup Kentucky on December 7 1982 aged 101 years old 6 Notes edit a b Wolfe Charles K January 13 2015 Kentucky Country Folk and Country Music of Kentucky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813149608 Retrieved August 4 2017 via Google Books a b Bell Jean 1900 Census for Boyd County Kentucky Family Search org Retrieved January 10 2015 subscription required Federal Writers Project 1996 The WPA Guide to Kentucky University Press of Kentucky p 236 ISBN 0813108659 Retrieved November 24 2013 University of Louisville s Institutional Institutional Repository Accessed April 11 2022 Bluegrass Messengers Jilson Setters The Last Minstrel Thomas 1928 bluegrassmessengers com Retrieved April 4 2022 Jean Thomas in the Kentucky U S Death Index 1911 2000 accessed April 11 2022 References edit nbsp Cover of Blue Ridge Country by Thomas Davis Stephen F Jilson Setters The man of many names The Devil s Box Journal of the Tennessee Valley Old Time Fiddlers Association 12 no 1 March 1978 42 45 Moore Anne Gift of mountain lore is presented to UofL Courier Journal May 28 1969 Music of the Southern Appalachians lives on in Kentucky s American Folk Song Festival Thirty ninth Annual American Folk Song Festival program Carter Caves State Park Olive Hill Carter County Kentucky June 7 8 1969 Nixon Bruce Down from the Mountains Louisville Eccentric Observer LEO 13 no 23 April 9 2003 14 16 Portnoy Marshall A Jean Thomas American Folk Song Festival British Balladry in Eastern Kentucky Louisville KY University of Louisville M A 1978 Singin Gatherin Time June 20 1938 Singin Gatherin Time June 22 1942 Thomas Jean The Sun Shines Bright New York Prentice Hall 1940 Thomas Jean The Traipsin Woman New York E P Dutton amp Co 1933 Traipsin Woman Time June 18 1934 University of Louisville Dwight Anderson Music Library Finding Aid to the Jean Thomas Collection The West Virginia Hillbilly August 8 1965 Wolfe Charles K Kentucky Country Folk and Country Music of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky 1996 External links editWorks by Jean Thomas at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jean Bell Thomas at Internet Archive Works by Jean Bell Thomas at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Jean Thomas The Traipsin Woman Collection University of Louisville Photograph Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Bell Thomas amp oldid 1204948693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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