Temples for Tomorrow
An Online Project in African American Literature


We build our temples for tomorrow, as strong as we know how and we stand on the top of the mountain, free within ourselves.
--Langston Hughes

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Ann Petry
If I were a maker of perfumes, I would make one and call it "Spring,” and it would smell like this cool, sweet, early-morning air.
                                                                                                                                    -Ann Lane Petry
 
Biography-Criticism
Ann Lane Petry authored of one of the first novels to address black women's experiences in terms of race, class, and gender. Petry's novel, The Street, published in 1946, was the first book by an African-American woman to sell over one million copies
 
Petry was born on October 12, 1908 in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. She was the second daughter of Peter C. Lane and Bertha James Lane. She grew up middle class in a predominantly white community. Her parents both had a professional status in the community. Her father owned the local drugstore and worked as a pharmacist. Her mother was a licensed chiropodist, and worked also in many other occupations such as a hairdresser, a barber, a manufacturer, and an entrepreneur.
 
Petry first encountered racial prejudice when she was on a Sunday school outing at the age of seven. This, along with other experiences of racial prejudice and oppression, brought about a feeling of outrage, which remained with her for many years. In contrast, her parents created an environment that enabled her to survive against the effects of bigotry and isolation.
 
Petry first began writing while in high school. She started out with creating a slogan for a perfume company. From this she went on to writing one-act plays and short stories. When she graduated from Old Saybrook High School in 1929, she had not yet chosen writing as a career. Instead, she went on to graduate from Connecticut College of Pharmacy in 1931 with a Ph.D. With this she returned home to work in the family drugstore for a period of five years. Then for two years she managed the family drugstore in Old Lyme. During her time as a pharmacist she observed the customers who she later included in her writing.
 
Petry left her career in pharmacy to marry George D. Petry, a New York mystery writer, in 1938. They moved to New York where she decided that she wanted to pursue a career in writing. She started out working for the Amsterdam News selling ad space until 1941. On August 19, 1939, her first story, "Marie of the Cabin Club," was published in the Afro-American under the pseudonym Arnold Petry. She had decided to save her own name for her more "serious" work.

In 1941, she began working as a reporter for the People's Voice. She credited her five years as a journalist, working in almost every aspect of the newspaper business, as the most influential on her writing. She then shifted her objective from observation to direct interaction with the people of Harlem by founding Negro Women, Inc., and then in 1944 becoming a recreational specialist at P.S. 10, a Harlem elementary school. Here she designed programs for problem children. She also took up an active civic and social life. She studied painting, took piano lessons, acted in Striver's Row, an American Negro Theater production, and taught a business letter-writing course at the Harlem Branch of the NAACP. She published The Steet in 1946 and the reissue of The Street in the mid 1980s triggered another round of critical acclaim by a new generation of readers and renewed attention by academics.
 
In the early 1990's there was a flurry of activity around Petry's work. She was given a Connecticut Arts Award in 1992 and a symposium on her writings was held at Trinity College in 1992. Petry was appointed a visiting professor of English at the University of Hawaii (1944-45), and she lectured widely throughout the United States. Her contribution to literature has been acknowledged by membership in the Author's Guild and American P.E.N.; Association of Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists, and Novelists; and by honorary doctorates from several colleges and universities. When Mrs. Petry died in 1997 in Old Saybrook, a short distance from the James Pharmacy, which still bears her aunt's name. She was widely regarded as a pioneering figure in the twentieth-century African-American writing.
 
Selected Bibliography
Works by the author
The Street (1946)
Country Place (1947)
The Drugstore Cat (1949)
The Narrows (1953)
Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad (1955)
A Girl Called Moses: The Story of Harriet Tubman (1960)
The Common Ground (1964)
Tituba of Salem Village (1964)
Legends of the Saints (1970)
Miss Muriel and Other Stories (1971)
 
Works about the author
Bone, Robert A. The Negro Novel in America. New Haven: Yale U P,1965.   
Davis, Arthur P. From the Dark Tower: Afro-American Writers from 1900 to 1960. Washington: Howard UP, 1974.
De Montreville, Doris, and Hill, Donna ed. Third Book of Junior Authors. Bronx: Wilson,1972.
Gillespie, John, and Lembo, Diana. Juniorplots: A Book Talk Manual for Teachers and Librarians. Ann Arbor: Bowker, 1967
Littlejohn, David, Black on White: A Critical Survey of Writing by American Negroes.     New York: Viking, 1966.  
 
  
Related Links
http://www.galent.galgroup.com
 
http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/397/Novelist_Ann_Petry_wrote_for_all_ages                                                                                             
-Picture and Biography of Ann Petry.
 
http://www.cwhf.orghttp://www.cwhf.org/hall/petry/petry.htm                                                           
-Women’s Connecticut Hall of Fame; Ann Petry a Survivor and a Gambler. 
 
http://www.bridgew.edu http://authors.aalbc.com/annpetry.htm                                                               
Pictures of Ann Petry when she was young and when she has aged.
 
www.upress.state.ms.us/catalog/fall2005/can_anything_beat_white.html   
-Picture of Ann Petry’s ancestors.
 
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r105:S09MY7-115:                                   
-Gives information about Ann Petry’s home.
 
This page was researched and submitted by Lurshawn Williams.  Please contact the editor with any questions or suggestions.


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