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Perley F. Ayer Papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: BCA 0022 SAA 021

Scope and Contents

The papers, memorabilia, and sound recordings making up the collection relate to Perley F. Ayer’s work as a Berea College instructor (1947-1967) and as executive director of the Council of the Southern Mountains (1951-1967).

Listen To Perely Ayer Interviews and Speeches

Dates

  • created: 1952-1968

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Follow links in the box 15 contents list to listen to recordings. The collection can be accessed directly through the Reading Room, Berea College Special Collections and Archives, Hutchins Library, Berea College.

Conditions Governing Use

There are no known restrictions on the collection other than federal copyright regulations. Please cite all references to this collection.

Extent

8.25 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Perley F. Ayer, a native of New Hampshire, was educated at the University of New Hampshire (B.S.1922) and Cornell University (M.S. 1947).  Prior to coming to Berea in 1947, he had been employed as an extension agent in New Hampshire and as an instructor at Pleasant Hill Academy in Pleasant Hill, Tennessee.  He worked at Berea College as supervisor of an agricultural training program in the Foundation School, as a field representative for the Admissions office, and as an instructor in sociology.

He was appointed executive secretary of the Council of the Southern Mountains in 1951 and continued in that position until his death in 1967.  The Council, a non-profit membership organization dedicated to the improvement of social, health, and economic conditions in the Southern Appalachian region, had been in existence since 1912. However, by 1951, it was suffering decreased membership and diminished influence. Ayer’s efforts during his fifteen-year tenure revived interest in the Council's programs and brought it to be one of the largest and most significant social organization in the southern mountains.

Inclluded in the collection are miscellaneous correspondence, speeches and related notes, articles, and program materials reflecting Ayer's activities as executive director of the Council of the Southern Mountains (CSM). Details documented include Ayer's fundraising efforts, arrangements for speaking engagements, and the Council's publication of Mountain Life and Work.

Material in the collection also document Ayer's work with the Ford Foundation's Great Cities / Gray Areas Project (1960-1964). In this project, the Foundation utilized Ayer as a part-time consultant and through the CSM, funded workshops and consultant services for urban educators to aid in the adjustment of rural children to the urban environment.

Materials reflect Ayer's participation in such workshops at numerous urban centers including Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C., among others. Also included are reports to the Foundation, expense accounts, correspondence, and meeting agendas. Also present are newspaper clippings and correspondence relating to Ayer's death and the subsequent memorial fund established in his name (1967-1968).

Arrangement Note

Arrangement of the collection is by series- Personal/Biographical, Correspondence, Speeches & Interviews, Photographs, Printed Materials, Subjects, Writings, Great Cities/Gray Areas Project, and Sound Recordings.

Other Descriptive Information

Ayers distinctive manner of speaking and some of his views on his work and the Appalachian region are documented in the several audio recordings in Box 15.  For listening, follow the access links accompanying each of the listed recordings.

BCA 0022 SAA 021

Processing Information

The finding aid was updated in March 2015.

Title
Archon Finding Aid Title
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
eng

Repository Details

Part of the Berea College Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
Hutchins Library
100 Campus Drive
Berea Kentucky 40404 US
859.985.3262