A Guide to the Helen Wolfe Evans Papers, 1860-2002 Evans, Helen Wolfe, Papers, 1860-2002 42286

A Guide to the Helen Wolfe Evans Papers, 1860-2002

A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession Number 42286


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© 2006 By the Library of Virginia. All rights reserved.

Processed by: Jessica Tyree

Repository
Library of Virginia
Accession number
42286
Title
Helen Wolfe Evans Papers, 1860-2002
Physical Characteristics
1.05 cu. ft. and 1 oversize folder.
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

Collection is open to research.

Use Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Preferred Citation

Helen Wolfe Evans. Papers, 1860-2002. Accession 42286. Personal papers collection, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.

Acquisition Information

Gift of Helen Wolfe Evans, Raleigh, North Carolina, 31 October 2005.

Biographical/Historical Information

Helen Wolfe Evans (1935- ) was born Helen Baldwin Wolfe on 9 February 1935 in Richmond, Virginia, the daughter of Helen Perkins Hughes Wolfe (1897-1992) and Thomas Kennerly Wolfe (1892-1972). Her elder brother is the novelist Tom Wolfe (1930- ). On 21 August 1957, she married Murphy Evans (1932- ) in Richmond. The couple, which eventually relocated to North Carolina, had four children: Helen Hughes Evans, Virginia Borden Evans, David Murphy Evans, and Thomas Kennerly Wolfe Evans. In 1989, Helen Wolfe Evans earned a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies degree from Duke University. Much of her research there focused on Ella Graham Agnew (1871-1958), younger sister of Evans's maternal grandmother, Martha "Mattie" Agnew Hughes (1860-1934).

Scope and Content

Papers, 1860-2002, include correspondence, newspaper clippings, and legal documents gathered by Helen Wolfe Evans (1935- ) while researching the life of her great-aunt Ella Graham Agnew (1871-1958), an educator, administrator, and pioneer of the home demonstration movement. Files deal with various aspects of Agnew's life and legacy, including family members, friends, and business associates; the town of Burkeville, Virginia, where she spent her childhood; her service as a teacher and seminary principal in South Africa from 1895-1900; her place in and the general history of home demonstration work; organizations and agencies with which she was involved, including the Young Women's Christian Association and the Works Progress Administration; and honors such as buildings named after her, an honorary doctorate from the College of William and Mary, and a highway marker. Also included are a genealogy of the Agnew, Hughes, and related families; a transcript of a 1988 interview by Evans of her mother, Helen Hughes Wolfe; and two papers, 1988 and 1989, written on Agnew by Evans while a graduate student at Duke University.

Arrangement

File groupings and labels assigned by the donor have been maintained for the most part, and are arranged alphabetically.

Contents List

Papers, 1860-2002
Box 1-3

Papers, 1860-2002, include correspondence, newspaper clippings, and legal documents gathered by Helen Wolfe Evans (1935- ) while researching the life of her great-aunt Ella Graham Agnew (1871-1958), an educator, administrator, and pioneer of the home demonstration movement. Files deal with various aspects of Agnew's life and legacy, including family members, friends, and business associates; the town of Burkeville, Virginia, where she spent her childhood; her service as a teacher and seminary principal in South Africa from 1895-1900; her place in and the general history of home demonstration work; organizations and agencies with which she was involved, including the Young Women's Christian Association and the Works Progress Administration; and honors such as buildings named after her, an honorary doctorate from the College of William and Mary, and a highway marker. Also included are a genealogy of the Agnew, Hughes, and related families; a transcript of a 1988 interview by Evans of her mother, Helen Hughes Wolfe; and two papers, 1988 and 1989, written on Agnew by Evans while a graduate student at Duke University.

Arrangement

alphabetical by folder title.

  • Box 1 Folder 1
    Agnew Association newsletter
  • Box 1 Folder 2
    Agnew--Assorted notes
  • Box 1 Folder 3
    Agnew coat of arms
  • Box 1 Folder 4
    Agnew-Hughes and others, genealogy
  • Box 1 Folder 5
    Alexander Forward
  • Box 1 Folder 6
    Aunt Meda, Aunt Ellen, Jas. Fowlkes, Perkins Agnew
  • Box 1 Folder 7
    Boys' work--T.O. Sandy--Farm demonstration
  • Box 1 Folder 8
    Burkeville Cemetery
  • Box 1 Folder 9
    Burkeville--family
  • Box 1 Folder 10
    Burkeville--History, "Great Road," Jennings Ordinary
  • Box 1 Folder 11
    Commission on Interracial Cooperation
  • Box 1 Folder 12
    Confederate Home
  • Box 1 Folder 13
    Craft exhibit
  • Box 1 Folder 14
    Defense nutrition work, 1941
  • Box 1 Folder 15-16
    Dictionary of Virginia Biography , M. Swain
  • Box 1 Folder 17
    Duke paper I
  • Box 1 Folder 18
    Duke paper II
  • Box 1 Folder 19-20
    Ella Graham Agnew--Associates
  • Box 2 Folder 21
    Ella Graham Agnew--Biographical sketches
  • Box 2 Folder 22
    Ella Graham Agnew--Death certificate
  • Box 2 Folder 23
    Ella Graham Agnew portrait, VPI
  • Box 2 Folder 24
    Ella Graham Agnew and Winston Churchill
  • Box 2 Folder 25
    Ella Graham Agnew--1920's
  • Box 2 Folder 26
    George Melton--Progressives
  • Box 2 Folder 27
    Grove Avenue
  • Box 2 Folder 28
    Hampton archives
  • Box 2 Folder 29
    Her Story--Home Demonstration, and other histories
  • Box 2 Folder 30
    Highway marker
  • Box 2 Folder 31
    Home demonstration clippings
  • Box 2 Folder 32-38
    Home demonstration/Home economics resources
  • Box 2 Folder 39
    Home demonstration work
  • Box 2 Folder 40
    Home extension pay, Black and White
  • Box 3 Folder 41
    James Anderson Agnew
  • Box 3 Folder 42
    James Perkins Agnew
  • Box 3 Folder 43
    Kathleen Hilton paper (on EGA)
  • Box 3 Folder 44
    Land tract drawing, signed "Agnew," n.d.
  • Box 3 Folder 45
    Martha Meade Perkins
  • Box 3 Folder 46
    McLean family
  • Box 3 Folder 47
    Naming, second building
  • Box 3 Folder 48
    Negro work (salaries compared to White)
  • Box 3 Folder 49
    Nottoway Co. houses, Iverness
  • Box 3 Folder 50
    Nottoway Co. wills, Agnew-McLean
  • Box 3 Folder 51
    Obituaries--Ella Graham Agnew and Mattie Agnew Hughes
  • Box 3 Folder 52
    Olive Schreiner
  • Box 3 Folder 53
    Rhea Scott case
  • Box 3 Folder 54
    Samuel McLean
  • Box 3 Folder 55
    South Africa
  • Box 3 Folder 56
    South Africa--Archives
  • Box 3 Folder 57
    Southern Planter
  • Box 3 Folder 58
    Transcription, taped interview of Helen Hughes Wolfe, 1988
  • Box 3 Folder 59
    Virginia Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs
  • Box 3 Folder 60
    Virginia Historical Society--"Nottoway Stuff"
  • Box 3 Folder 61
    Virginia Tech--Agnew resources
  • Box 3 Folder 62
    William and Mary degree
  • Box 3 Folder 63
    William Bingay Agnew
  • Box 3 Folder 64
    Woman's Work Today , 1917 , article by EGA
  • Box 3 Folder 65
    Works Progress Administration
  • Box 3 Folder 66
    Works Progress Administration--Looking back
  • Box 3 Folder 67
    Works Progress Administration--Resources
  • Box 3 Folder 68
    YWCA