Personal Preservation: Keeper of Culture Bill Ferris鈥檚 Storied Career Reveals Depths of Deep South
March 12, 2021
- Author
- Lawrence Toppman
William Reynolds Ferris has been at home with U.S. presidents and praying pigs, angelic choirs and the 鈥渄evil鈥檚 music鈥濃攖he blues.
For six decades Ferris has been sticking his nose into obscure corners of American culture. His curiosity has been rewarded with a leadership position at the National Endowment for the Humanities and two 2019 Grammy awards for Voices of Mississippi: Artists and Musicians Documented by William Ferris鈥best historical album and best liner notes.
Ferris, who was born and raised in Mississippi, recorded that collection mostly in his 20s and 30s. He gathered sounds of gospel singers in now-vanished churches, unknown Delta blues musicians, tale-spinners who spoke of mules and ministers and signifyin鈥 monkeys of African-American legends.
He incorporated short films about anyone from author Eudora Welty to farmer Tom Johnson, who taught his pigs to say grace before assailing their trough. The label Dust to Digital spent a decade combing his archives and transcribing every word of the audio recordings for the hardcover book that accompanies the four-disc set.
鈥淭he most transformative moment of my life was winning those Grammy awards,鈥 Ferris says at his Chapel Hill home. 鈥淭hat was the defining moment that affirms this work has value. I thanked the Academy for recognizing these voices and making it possible for them never again to be left out of history.
鈥淧ut (them) all together, and it鈥檚 like a Faulkner novel. I鈥檇 come out of literature when I started listening to these voices and recording them. But the faculty at Northwestern said, 鈥楾his is simply not considered serious literature.鈥 So, I discovered folklore, which allowed me to study them in an academic field.鈥
He鈥檇 gone to Northwestern for his M.A. in English, after getting a B.A. in that subject from 皇家华人 in 1964. But he鈥檇 been moving toward folklore unknowingly for two decades.
Collecting Memories
As a boy at Broadacres, his father鈥檚 farm southeast of Vicksburg, Ferris was immersed in the community of sharecroppers that surrounded the farm鈥攖heir lives unlike his relatively privileged one. His African-American babysitter, Virgil Simpson, played her favorite dance music until midnight, letting Bill and younger brother Grey listen while their parents were out.
Though the Ferris family worshipped at a Presbyterian church, he found himself drawn to a cappella singing by the black congregation at Rose Hill Church, a quarter-mile from his house. Those sounds resonated in his mind on breaks from high school studies at Brooks School in Massachusetts.
鈥淚 realized there were no hymnals,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he music was sung from memory, and when those families were no longer there, the music would be gone. I began to record and later photograph those services as a way of preserving that memory, and I expanded that to blues music and folk tales, white and black.鈥
Though he picked up his first camera at 12, and he and Grey set up a darkroom on the farm, he needed a double epiphany at 皇家华人 to shift his career path.
There he discovered Frederic Ramsey鈥檚 book Been Here and Gone, chronicling African-American musicians around the South, and he heard Library of Congress field recordings by the father-son team of Alan and John Lomax.
鈥淚 listened to those with great excitement,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey were doing the kind of work I wanted to do but was not sure I could justify as serious.鈥
After getting his master鈥檚 degree, he went to Ireland to write a thesis at Trinity College in Dublin. He鈥檇 picked James Joyce as his subject, 鈥渂ecause I identified so deeply with Joyce as a rebel. In Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, he has Stephen Dedalus say, 鈥業 fled the nets of family, religion and politics.鈥 Dedalus was my man, though I would have added 鈥榬ace.鈥
鈥淚 was fleeing the South. But I began to see my work recording voices as social protest,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese were forgotten voices, and I was giving them recognition that was not otherwise possible.鈥
He enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania and collected master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees in folklore.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what the hell I was doing,鈥 he admits. 鈥淚 just knew I was following my heart. (I met) people whose lives were totally different from my own, working-class poor Black families and working-class poor white families who were incredibly smart at what they did and were teaching me. I thought, 鈥業鈥檓 going to work through this rich body of material and see what comes out.鈥欌
Ferris returned to Mississippi to teach literature at Jackson State University for two years. Then he moved to Yale University in 1972 to teach in the American and Afro-American Studies department, bringing pieces of Mississippi along.
He invited mule trader Ray Lum to spend a September afternoon outside Sterling Memorial Library, where Lum shared wisdom with passersby and conducted the mock auction of a professor鈥檚 bulldog. Lum鈥檚 motto: 鈥淵ou live and learn, then you die and forget it all.鈥 (He became the subject of one of Ferris鈥 dozen books.)
Henry Louis Gates Jr., a Yale student when Ferris arrived and then a fellow faculty member, recalls 鈥淏ill pulling off a miracle and nominating B.B. King for an honorary degree. B.B. brought out Lucille (his guitar), played right in the middle of the stage at commencement, and 10,000 people went crazy.鈥
Gates, a Peabody Award-winning historian teaching at Harvard University, says Ferris 鈥渉as been one of my role models for bridging the gap between town and gown. I do scholarly work, but I also translate scholarship into more digestible forms through my documentary series on PBS. He edited the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, and I edited an encyclopedia (Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience). Bill has been a man on a mission, and I鈥檝e watched him.鈥
That mission has been linked to race all his life.
鈥淢y first vivid memory of prejudice was when I was five years old,鈥 Ferris remembers. 鈥淲e were the only white family on the farm, and I was put on a bus to go to an elementary school where each teacher taught two grades. My Black friends on the farm went to a one-room schoolhouse and had only one teacher for six grades.鈥
Ferris complained to his parents that it wasn鈥檛 fair.
鈥淭hey understood my concern and said, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 just the way things are. You have to accept that.鈥 But I didn鈥檛 accept it. I never accepted it,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y work in folklore and oral history and social justice began at the age of five, with a clear sense that the world beyond our farm was a world I didn鈥檛 feel comfortable with.鈥
Moving the Needle
He noticed that 皇家华人 had three Presbyterian churches: A big one for students, who were all white, a smaller one for working-class whites, and a Black church across the tracks.
鈥淚 volunteered there in the little Sunday school, and I became involved with civil rights issues, organizing marches and inviting speakers to campus鈥 he says. 鈥淚 stirred the pot.鈥
He brought Michael Scriven, an evangelical atheist, to debate God鈥檚 existence with 皇家华人 professor Earl MacCormac; a blizzard of angry letters to the Charlotte Observer followed. Ferris didn鈥檛 always fit in with fraternity brothers in Kappa Alpha, whose racial politics rarely matched his, but he stayed to change minds from within. (鈥淎t least, I thought I could.鈥)
He found mentors in William Goodykoontz, who 鈥済ot football players to write poems鈥 in English classes, and economics professor Ernest Patterson, 鈥渁 Marxist socialist who said his mission was to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. They were the two radical voices who encouraged students to dissent against racial segregation.鈥
Ferris got involved with the Council of Federated Organizations, an umbrella group for civil rights groups in Mississippi. Today, he says, 鈥淚鈥檓 still trying to move the needle to address intolerance, which is alive and well. In the 鈥60s, we thought we had put it to rest. Racism is like cancer in remission; you have to keep fighting it.鈥
He does that by showing how American literature, folk art, music and other cultural elements鈥攐ften with roots in the African diaspora鈥攃ut across lines of color to unite us.
While at Yale, he co-founded the Center for Southern Folklore in Memphis. Then the University of Mississippi lured him to Oxford in 1979, first to launch the Center for the Study of Southern Culture and then to teach. The initial edition of his Southern encyclopedia followed in 1989.
At Ole Miss, Ferris engaged in feats of bureaucratic wizardry.
鈥淭he chancellor said, 鈥楾ell us what you want to do.鈥 I said, 鈥榃e鈥檇 like to be housed in this antebellum observatory and would like the entire building, once we raise $3 million to renovate it.鈥 The chancellor鈥檚 advisor said, 鈥楬e鈥檒l never raise $3 million. Go ahead and agree.鈥欌
Ferris raised the $3 million.
鈥淚 said, 鈥業 want to purchase the largest folklore library in the world, which my (University of Pennsylvania) advisor Kenneth Goldstein has put up for sale. For the first five years, for every grant we receive, I want to keep the indirect charges that would otherwise go to the university budget.鈥欌
The administration acquiesced. Ferris鈥檚 Yale friends were incredulous: 鈥淭hey said, 鈥楾his is unbelievable!鈥欌
Ferris kept stirring pots. Curtis Wilkie, then a New Orleans-based reporter for The Boston Globe and now associate professor of journalism at Ole Miss, recalls the time in 1995 when Ferris scheduled an international conference on Elvis Presley. It fell one week after a prestigious annual conference on William Faulkner and raised a stink.
鈥淚 called Bill and asked, 鈥業s there a story?鈥 He said, 鈥業f you come up here, we can make one,鈥欌 Wilkie says.
鈥淏ill is one of four or five people that old-timers would say was responsible for the renaissance of Oxford. It was a one-horse town when I went to school here, but Oxford has blossomed into one of the great places in the South,鈥 Wilkie says. 鈥淭he Center was part of a critical mass that helped turn this country town Faulkner wrote about in his novels (as 鈥淛efferson鈥) into a politically progressive community that鈥檚 the hottest place to live in the state.鈥
President Bill Clinton nominated Ferris to become the seventh chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, a post he held from 1997 to 2001. The New York Times reported that Mississippi鈥檚 Republican senators, Trent Lott and Thad Cochran, asked incoming president George W. Bush to keep him, because he鈥檇 minimized ideological battles. Asked by the Times if he was a Republican or a Democrat, Ferris replied, 鈥淚鈥檓 an educator.鈥
Bush booted him anyway, and Ferris settled in 2002 at the University of North Carolina. There he became senior associate director of The Center for the Study of the American South and taught history and folklore. Up to retirement in 2019, he led seminars in Southern music and Southern literature and the oral tradition.
Gospel singer Mary D. Williams studied with him there. She remembers Ferris starting all classes at 8 a.m. but keeping students alert with an array of guests.
鈥淗e鈥檇 bring in Dom Flemons of the Carolina Chocolate Drops or Lonnie Bunch (now secretary of the Smithsonian Institution),鈥 Williams says. 鈥淗e has this huge repertoire of music dating so far back, and his ideas come not just from scholarship but from knowing folks.鈥
The class read the book Big Fish, by Ferris鈥檚 friend, Daniel Wallace.
鈥淲e read the book aloud in excerpts, discussed it from the angles of critical thinking and Southernness,鈥 Williams says, 鈥渁nd the next time we met, Wallace was there, talking about his influences.鈥
Composer-author Bland Simpson has had twin careers for decades, as pianist for the bluegrass band The Red Clay Ramblers and professor of English and creative writing at UNC. He knows Ferris both ways, playing his musical theater piece 鈥淜udzu鈥 at an Oxford conference and watching Ferris teach his daughter at UNC.
鈥淏ill loves fieldwork and sees value in all manner of expression. He鈥檚 curious across the board, which made him ideal for the NEH. He has that welcoming quality, that generosity of spirit, that serves him wherever he goes,鈥 Simpson says. 鈥淗e also gets a great kick out of things that are funny, like Ray Lum鈥檚 tall tales. He has full belief in the importance of his enterprise but doesn鈥檛 try to make things serious when they aren鈥檛.鈥
Tom Hanchett, former historian at Levine Museum of the New South, earned his doctorate in history at UNC. He calls Ferris 鈥渙ne of the great coaches and nurturers I鈥檝e met. He has accomplished so much you鈥檇 assume he was a type-A, fast-talking person, but his main skill is as a listener. He hung a quote from Alex Haley in his office: 鈥楩ind the good and praise it.鈥 That鈥檚 what Bill does: He listens to students and community members and validates what they鈥檙e interested in.鈥
Hanchett saw Ferris work his magic when the city of Shelby sought to create the Earl Scruggs Center to honor its native son, the greatest American banjo player.
鈥淭hey brought me in, and I tried to say helpful things. They brought in folks I knew nationally, and they said helpful things, but we couldn鈥檛 make it work,鈥 Hanchett says. 鈥淏ill called Cissy Anklam, who put together the Newseum in D.C., and Jeff Place, who won his third Grammy this year reissuing recordings for the Smithsonian. They came to this town of 40,000 to sit around the table because Bill said, 鈥楾his is interesting. Y鈥檃ll will work well together.鈥欌
Patchwork Quilt
Ferris believes there鈥檚 no mystery to his job: You must be caring, open-minded and patient.
鈥淎ll people have a story, and they鈥檙e waiting for someone to listen,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he more you interview them, the more comfortable they are. I recorded 50 to 100 hours with Ray Lum, and it was like we became soulmates.
鈥淎 lot of (my success) was letting the machine run while people were talking; I would nudge them one way or the other or just let them carry on. When there鈥檚 a pregnant pause, (don鈥檛 come) in with another question. Let that pause hang there, and almost always, the speaker will come back with things that are unimaginably interesting.鈥
Ferris says UNC is digitizing 100,000 photographic images for the William R. Ferris Collection in its Southern Folklife Collection. (His mother, hearing this, remarked, 鈥淢y God! That would be like cleaning out the Augean stables.鈥) He鈥檚 assembling a volume of black-and-white photos shot around the world to complement his 2016 book, The South in Color.
He concedes he鈥檚 still obsessive at 78: On a recent trip to Rust College, he photographed the room where he stayed, the soul food restaurant where he ate, the audience at his speech. He does with a cell phone what he once did with a Pentax camera.
鈥淚t鈥檚 part of my DNA to document everything,鈥 Ferris says. 鈥淚n many ways, that鈥檚 a Southern quality. I always loved the French phrase la vie quotidienne, the everyday life.
鈥淟ife is like a patchwork quilt stitched together,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e may not see at first how the dots are connected. I may not be the person to make those connections. But the more we talk with different people and listen to their voices, the more those connections are there.鈥
This piece appears in the spring/summer issue of the 皇家华人 Journal magazine.