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Perry Mann Newspaper Opinion Articles

 Collection
Collection Number: A&M 4294

Scope and Contents

Typescript copies and clippings of opinion pieces authored by Perry Mann (1921-2016), a lawyer in Hinton, West Virginia. These pieces appeared in the Charleston Gazette-Mail. Box 1 includes an index listing his pieces chronologically with their titles for the period ca. 1992-2000; there is also biographical information.

Box 1; folder 1; Biographical information on Perry Mann; 2018
Box 1; folder 2; Article index of Perry Mann’s newspaper columns; 1992-2000
Box 1; folder 3; Letters written by Perry Mann; 1986-2013, undated
Box 1; folder 4; Letters to Perry Mann; 1992-2013, undated
Box 1; folder 5; Articles written by other columnists; 1990-1999, undated
Box 1; folder 6; Miscellaneous (3 items); 1990-2002
Box 1; unfoldered; Book, "Mann & Nature, A Collection of Essays" by Perry Mann; 2011
Box 1; unfoldered; Book, "Secular Mann" by Perry Mann; 2015
Box 2; folders 1-12; Typescripts of articles by Perry Mann (arranged by date); ca. 1993-1999, undated
Box 3; folders 1-2; Typescripts of articles by Perry Mann (arranged by date); 1999-2003, undated
Box 4; folders 1-8; Typescripts and newspaper clippings (arranged by date); 1992-2001
Box 5; folders 1-16; Typescripts and newspaper clippings (arranged by date); 2002-2016, undated
Box 5; folder 17; Typescripts, photocopies of newspaper articles, and early correspondence; 1951-1960s, 2002, undated
Box 6; Complete newspaper pages containing opinion pieces by Perry Mann; ca. 2005-2015

Dates

  • Creation: ca. 1980-2018

Creator

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access

No special access restriction applies.

Conditions Governing Use

Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. For more information, please see the Permissions and Copyright page on the West Virginia and Regional History Center website.

Biographical / Historical

Perry Mann, a lawyer and the Charleston Gazette-Mail’s long-time, occasional op-ed contributor, was born in 1921. He had barely graduated from high school when he volunteered for World War ll within a week of Pearl Harbor. He called it “that terrible war — but a necessary one” and it gave him a glimpse of the greater world. Thanks to the GI Bill, he seized the chance to achieve the education he doubted he could accomplish.

Washington and Lee University reluctantly admitted him, and he excelled. He went on for a master’s degree in education at the University of Virginia and taught school in Covington. When he publicly supported school integration in the 1950s, the school board fired him. He taught English at Hinton High School and Concord College. He returned to Washington and Lee for a law degree.

He said with a good wife he was proud to raise two fine children. Amy Mann serves in her father’s footsteps as Summers County prosecutor and her brother Jeff Mann is an English professor at Virginia Tech and prize-winning poet and essayist. Both inherited a love of food and knowledge of how to grow and prepare it, a talent that was displayed again at the birthday party.

His hundreds of op-eds celebrate Nature as the consummate model, doubted God and railed against fundamentalism while expressing his love of Jesus and vast knowledge of scripture. He embraced new social tolerances of race and sexuality but otherwise resisted most of modernity. He upheld rural communities with their basis in manual labor and he despised city life. He voted with his feet and gardened into his 90s.

Two books offer good selections of his writing. “Mann & Nature” put together by Ann Farrell Bowers emphasizes his reminiscences and earthy lifestyle. “Secular Mann” assembled by Julian Martin conveys his punch with a wide range of reflections. A free thinker who does not believe in free will, Perry Mann has always looked beyond the easy answers to life’s most persistent questions.

(This note is based on an article authored by Chris Chanlett that appeared in the Charleston Gazette on 3 April 2016.)

Extent

4.4 Linear Feet (4 ft. 4 1/2 in. (3 record cartons, 15 in. each); (3 document cases, 2 1/2 in. each))

Physical Location

West Virginia and Regional History Center / West Virginia University / 1549 University Avenue / P.O. Box 6069 / Morgantown, WV 26506-6069 / Phone: 304-293-3536 / Fax: 304-293-3981 / URL: https://wvrhc.lib.wvu.edu/

Title
Perry Mann Newspaper Opinion Articles
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the West Virginia and Regional History Center Repository

Contact:
1549 University Ave.
P.O. Box 6069
Morgantown WV 26506-6069 US
304-293-3536