Evelyn Scott was born in Clarksville, Tennessee, on January 17, 1893, as Elsie Dunn, the only child of Maude Thomas and Seely Dunn. Maude Thomas, Elsie's mother, was from a respected and prosperous southern family of Clarksville. Seely Dunn, Elsie's father, though born and raised in New Orleans, had Yankee parents and a more northern outlook. By the time Elsie was fourteen, Seely had made some unwise investments and the family moved to New Orleans to be near the financial support of his parents. As she was growing up Elsie struggled with reconciling the social class her mother's family represented with the life they actually lived. The transition which Tennessee was undergoing toward social and economic progress, and the pull of opposing forces in her mother's and father's outlook, combined with the ever present shadow of the Civil War, was to have a significant effect on Evelyn's development as a thinker and writer. As an only child Elsie felt lonely and misunderstood. She attended the Sophie Newcombe Preparatory School and became the youngest girl student to enroll at Tulane University. By the age of twenty she had become discouraged by her inability to make a real difference in society.
It was at this time, in 1913, that Elsie met Frederick Creighton Wellman. Wellman, twenty years her senior and married to a concert pianist, had four children by a previous marriage which ended in divorce, and was now dean at Tulane University's School of Tropical Medicine. He and Elsie shared many intellectual interests and he eventually asked her to accompany him to Brazil where he planned to collect insect specimens. They left secretly in December 1913 and by a circuitous route arrived at their destination in February 1914. It was at the beginning of this trip that both Elsie and Wellman changed their names to Scott to protect their identity, with Elsie becaming Evelyn Scott and Wellman changing his to Cyril Kay Scott. She had become pregnant with her only child, Creighton Scott, before they landed. Evelyn later wrote about their poverty and hardships in Brazil in her autobiography,
When they returned to the United States the Scotts lived in New York City's Greenwich Village where Evelyn quickly embraced the Bohemian life style, as well as various lovers such as Waldo Frank and William Carlos Williams. Evelyn had submitted a few poems for publication while in Brazil and soon was at work producing a volume of poems entitled
The year 1927 also saw the publication of the first volume of her historical trilogy,
In addition to her novels and poetry, Evelyn produced four children's books, a play, numerous short stories, essays, and reviews. She wrote two additional novels, “Escape into Living,” reflections of a middle aged woman on her life, and “Before Cock Crow,” a work about the French Revolution, both of which remain unpublished. Though she lived for an additional 22 years Evelyn was unable to publish her work after 1941, due in part to its controversial nature and her refusal to accept her publishers' suggestions for changes, as well as to her growing paranoia about conspiracies directed against her. Additionally, each of her novels had a unique style which the general public found difficult to read or understand.
Late in 1925 Evelyn began a relationship with John Metcalf that was to last until her death. In March of 1928 Cyril Scott decided to formally end his common law marriage with Evelyn and obtained a divorce in Juarez, Mexico. Although John and Evelyn claimed to be married as early as 1925, they went through a legal ceremony in 1930. During World War II, when John was drafted into the RAF to train pilots, Evelyn joined him in England in 1944, and was not to return to the U.S. until 1953 when a fund, organized by Margaret DeSilver in the U.S., was set up for that purpose. Scott had found it difficult to interest publishers in her work at such a distance and, along with her growing mental instability, poverty and illness took its toll. She suffered from heart trouble and lung cancer and passed away on August 3, 1963.
The Evelyn Scott Collection comprises 19 boxes of primarily manuscripts and correspondence ranging in date from 1894 to 1952, with the bulk covering the period when she was most actively involved in writing (ca. 1920-1941). The material is arranged in three series: I. Works, 1914-1952 (14 boxes), II. Correspondence, 1924-1942 (2 boxes), and III. Miscellaneous, 1894-1940 (3 boxes). Within each series the material is arranged alphabetically by title or author. This collection was previously accessible only through a card catalog, but has been re-cataloged as part of a retrospective conversion project.
The Works series consists of original and carbon copy typescripts of books, articles, essays, short stories, plays, and poems, many unpublished, arranged alphabetically by title. Included is a carbon copy typescript of Scott's autobiography,
Outgoing correspondence comprises a single folder principally of typed carbon copies of letters Scott wrote to her agents, Brandt & Brandt and Hill & Peters; publishers Bennett Cerf of Random House, Charles Scribner's & Sons, and Thomas Seltzer; also the Authors' League of America, the New York
Incoming correspondence includes letters concerning her literary output and that of her correspondents, as well as discussions of the work of other authors, as her circle of acquaintances held many literary friends in common. Scott carried on an active correspondence with such literary notables as Sherwood Anderson, Kay Boyle, Van Wyck Brooks, Willa Cather, Sidney Cox, John Dewey, Lovat Dickson, John Dos Passos, Theodore Dreiser, Albert Einstein, Waldo Frank, Marie Tudor Garland, Emma Goldman, Swinburne Hale, Aldous Huxley, James Joyce, D.H. Lawrence, Sinclair Lewis, Amy Lowell, Owen Merton, Georgia O'Keeffe, Jean Rhys, Elmer Rice, Lola Ridge, Bertrand Russell, Upton Sinclair, Frank Swinnerton, Thornton Wilder, William Carlos Williams, Morton Dauwen Zabel, and Marya Zaturenska.
Publishing houses with which she had dealings included Boni & Liveright; Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith; Lovat Dickson & Thompson Ltd.; Harcourt, Brace; Henry Holt; Simon & Schuster; Robert McBride; Random House; Charles Scribner's & Sons; Thomas Seltzer; Harrison Smith and Robert Haas; and H.W. Wilson. Literary agents included Brandt and Brandt; A.M. Heath & Co.; Hill & Peters; Hale, Nelles & Shorr; A.D. Peters; Virginia Rice; and Willis Kingsley Wing. Included also is correspondence with magazine publishers such as
The Miscellaneous series contains various items relating to Evelyn Scott such as financial information, a certification of divorce, a dedication to an unidentified work, a passport, and a small holograph recipe book. Also included is a description of book contracts, royalty statements, typescript notes for a theatre story, and a document entitled, “A Precis of Events Indicative of Libel.”
Materials for Scott's mother, Maude Thomas Dunn, include items such as checks, invoices, receipts, the Record of Visitors for her funeral, her will, and two small holograph notebooks with comments about Evelyn as a small child. In addition, there are translations of two novels into English by Maude Dunn, one from French and the other from Portuguese. Items relating to Seely Dunn are a calling card and a sketch.
This series also contains an extensive correspondence by Owen Merton to his mother, Mrs. Alfred Merton (224 letters), covering the years 1909-1913. There are also 18 letters to other Merton family members during those years, and three letters to his future wife, Ruth Calvert Jenkins, as well as letters from Ruth to his mother, Mrs. Alfred Merton.
Elsewhere in the Center are twelve Vertical File folders and two Scrapbooks that contain newspaper clippings of reviews of Scott's work. There is also one box of photographs in the Literary File in the Photography Collection containing photographs of Evelyn as a baby and at various ages as she was growing up, with several at 16 years of age. Photographs of Evelyn as an adult are also included, as well as snapshots of the Gracey Mansion in Clarksville, Tennessee, the home in which Maude Dunn was raised and in which Evelyn was born.
Purchases and gift, 1967-1996 (R3288, R7122, R7191, R8527, G1125, R13580)
Open for research
Sally M. Nichols, 1998
Additional Evelyn Scott materials in the HRC may be found in the Henry E. Turlington Collection of Cyril Kay-Scott and Evelyn Scott Materials, the Jean Rhys Collection, and the John Metcalfe Collection.
Index entries followed by the notation (from Scott) indicate people to whom Scott wrote. Box and folder numbers followed by a number in parenthesis indicate the number of items by (or to) that person. No parenthetical notation indicates there is just one item. So in the example
Ames, Elizabeth, d. 1977--15.1 (2 from Scott), 15.3 (24), 17.1 (2)
there are two items from Scott in box 15, folder 1; 24 items from Ames in box 15, folder 3; and two items from Ames in box 17, folder 1.