Introduction
to the Collection:
The William D. Hull
collection at Hofstra University consists of the personal and professional
papers of Hull, who was a professor at Hofstra from 1946 until his death
in 1984.
The collection includes
personal and family correspondence, correspondence relating to his career
as a professor at Hofstra and other institutions, and as a Fullbright
scholar lecturing at universities in Sri Lanka and India; manuscripts
of essays and lectures, poems, verse dramas, and his ten-volume poetic
work Visions of Handy Hopper; magazines and books containing poems
and articles by Hull; audiotapes of Hull reading his works, photographs,
music manuscripts, drawings and sketches; personal items and artifacts.
William Doyle Hull II*, son of William Doyle Hull Sr. and Mayme (Miller)
Hull, was born in Westminster, South Carolina, in 1918. He received his
B.A. degree from Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, in 1938,
his M.A. in 1940, and his PhD. in 1941, from the University of Virginia. In
1941-1942, he taught at Howard College in Birmingham, Alabama. He joined
the U.S. Army in 1942, was trained in cryptography, and was stationed
in India for several years.
After returning to
civilian life, he taught briefly at North Carolina State College in Raleigh,
and in 1946, he received an appointment as instructor of English at Hofstra
College
(later, University) in Hempstead, NY. He was promoted to assistant professor in
1947, associate professor in 1950, and professor of English in 1963. He
was closely involved in the organization of Hofstra University’s
Faculty Senate, and served as chairman of the Senate Executive Committee
for several years. In 1965 he received the University’s Distinguished
Teaching Award. He had a lasting influence on many of his students, as
evidenced by the correspondence they maintained with him over the years.
Hull
received a Fullbright award to teach American Literature at the University
of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) 1955-1956. He received another Fullbright in
1959-1960 to teach at Patna University in India.
*When Hull used a suffix with his name, he usually used II rather than
Jr.
As a poet, Hull was
a prolific and ambitious writer. He wrote many short poems and contributed
to numerous literary reviews and “little magazines” from
the late 1930s through the 1950s. Publications in which
his poems appeared include Sewanee Review, The Poetry Book Magazine,
The Beloit Poetry Journal, Chicago Review, and Intro.
He wrote several verse dramas including The Journey of Alcestis
and Saul at Endor. The latter was given a dramatic reading at Town
Hall in New York City in 1952. The Catullus of William Hull, modern
translations of the Roman poet, was published in 1960. In his later years
he concentrated on longer works, including Dandy Brown and Visions
of Handy Hopper, which was published in 10 volumes between 1970 and
1979.
Hull died in 1984
at the age of 66.
For biographical information
on Hull, see:
- Contemporary
Authors, First Revision, Vols. 13-16, p. 114. Detroit: Gale Research
Company, 1975. (Included in this guide, p. 38)
- Contemporary
Authors, New Revision, Vol. 5, p. 274. Detroit: Gale Research Company,
1975. (Included in this guide, p. 39)
- International
Who’s Who in Poetry, 6th edition, p. 878. Cambridge, England:
International Biographical Centre, 1982. (Included in this guide, p.
40)
Note: Certain documents
in this collection are restricted. Consult with archivist about particular
items.
The William D. Hull
collection is arranged in 10 series:
- Biographical Information
- Personal Correspondence:
colleagues, friends, students. Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.
Each letter of the alphabet begins with one folder containing letters
from several correspondents represented by only one or two letters each.
Following this are folders for individual correspondents.
- Family Correspondence:
parents, sister and brother and their families.
- Professional Correspondence:
a:) Professional and business other than publications
b:) Publications: correspondence with editors and publishers. Arranged
alphabetically by name of publication or publisher.
c:) Publications: related materials
- Manuscript
a:) Essays and talks
b:) Poems and verse dramas: Long works and collections. Arranged by
title.
c:) Poems and verse dramas: Long works and collections. Arranged chronologically.
d:) Visions of Handy Hopper
e:) Writings by others
f:) Fragments
- Print Material
a:) Magazines, Journals and Offprints
b:) Books by William D. Hull
c:) Books by others
- Audiotapes
- Photographs
- Artwork and Music
- Personal Items,
Artifacts and Ephemera
Samples
from The William Hull Collection
(click to see full size)
A
letter to William Hull from friend in India. N.D. |
Letter
to William Hull, 1959 |
Watercolor by John Rembert, "Frogs for Willie", ca.
1947 |
William
Hull as a baby, c. 1918 |
Simbolica
publication of others, N.D. |
Visions
of Handy Hopper, a book by William Hull, published in 1978 |
Saul
at Endor, a book by William Hull |
The
Other Side of Silence, a book by William Hull |
Letter
to William Hull from John Cranford Adams, 1951 |
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