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Choral Music Contributions

  • Photograph of the Tuskegee School of Music faculty, 1934-1935
  • Photograph of the Tuskegee Choir and Orchestra performing "The Death of
                Minnehaha" at the Tuskegee Institute Chapel on April 1, 1939,
  • "One of the greatest choral organizations in the world," relays the
                Dunbar News of the Tuskegee Choir in January
                1933.
  • The Tuskegee Institute Choir in Carnegie Hall, January 1933.
  • Listen to Dawson speak about some of the concerts his Choir 
                gave, including Sunday radio shows, a performance at the New York
                residence of President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, and a performance for President
                Hoover at the White House. (3:20 min.)
  • Wedding photograph of Cecile Demae Nicholson
  • William Levi Dawson and Ed Sullivan on the set of the Ed Sullivan Show, 6 April
                1952.
  • Listen to selections from the Tuskegee singers' first performances for the NBC network in 1937 (29:55 min.).
  • The Tuskegee Choir performing on the NBC television show “Coke Time,” December
                1950.
  • Inscription in Invisible Man from Ellison to William Levi Dawson
  • Photograph of Dawson conducting, 1979
  • The Tuskegee Choir at Carnegie Hall with Leontyne Price, March 20, 1955
  • "There Is a Balm in Gilead," sheet music, 1967
  • "Ain'-a That Good News," manuscript
  • "Ain'-a That Good News," in Folk Songs of the American Negro, 61
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar
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The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison (Random House, 1952)

Inscription in Invisible Man from Ellison to William Levi Dawson

At the zenith of Dawson's own career in 1934, the year of the premiere of his Negro Folk Symphony, Dawson's most famous student, the insecure young Ralph Ellison, was already beginning to resent his teacher who--Ellison felt--should have been his foremost champion. Within two years of Dawson's triumph, Ellison fled Tuskegee, Dawson, and the South in a rage that would begin to abate with the publication in 1952 of his brilliant novel, Invisible Man. Only at the zenith of his own career, with the extraordinary reception given that work, could Ellison look back with sweet irony on Dawson as perhaps the mentor he had, in fact, needed at the time. Dawson’s copy of Invisible Man, held by Emory University, is inscribed “For William L. Dawson—Who before I knew him inspired me, and who after I came to Tuskegee taught me by example the discipline of the writer—with Gratitude, Ralph Ellison, June 1953.” In subsequent years, the two men became good friends. In the archives at Emory University, researchers may listen to a tribute speech to Dawson given by Ralph Ellison on December 4, 1971, for the Tuskegee-Philadelphia Alumni Chapter Golden Anniversary Dinner.