Papers (1945-1990) of Folklorist and University of Arizona
professor Byrd Howell Granger. Includes biographical information, correspondence,
manuscripts, research notes and audiovisual material. The bulk of the collection
represents Granger's scholarly works and activities in the fields of English Literature
and Southwestern, particularly Arizona, Folklore.
Collection Number:
MS 340
Language:
Repository:
University of Arizona Libraries, Special Collections
University of Arizona
PO Box 210055
Tucson, AZ 85721-0055
Phone: 520-621-6423
Fax: 520-621-9733
URL: http://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/
E-Mail: LBRY-askspcoll@email.arizona.edu
Biographical Note
Byrd Howell was born to engineer Frank Scott Howell and musician Evelyn Byrd Howell on
October 18, 1912 in New Rochelle, NY. The exact origin of her acquired last name is
unknown; it is known only that Byrd Howell Granger became her legal name in 1940. By
Granger's own account, she was married at one time although to whom and for what period
of time is not known. Granger had at least two siblings, Laura Howell Dale (b. 1909) and
Frank S. Howell (vital dates unknown). Byrd Howell Granger's achievements were not only
numerous but also quite varied. Though she is perhaps best known for her work as a
Southwestern Folklore author and researcher, Granger had found success in several other
endeavors before entertaining the idea of a career in scholarly Folklore. In 1934, she
received her B.A. in Zoology from Goucher College. She went on to become the Assistant
Director of the Advisory Committee for the New York World's Fair from 1937-1940. Almost
immediately after this experience, she opened her own public relations firm, Byrd Howell
Associates, in New York City. She remained at the firm until 1942 when Granger elected
to join the war effort by serving in the Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASP) Squadron.
One of the first women to complete cadet flight training, she ultimately became a
commanding officer in the Air Transport Command which was responsible for ferrying
everything from trainers to bombers to locations throughout the United States.
After the war, Granger attempted to return to her public relations firm only to find
that the effects of a ground injury sustained during her WASP service made East Coast
winters almost unbearable. It was then that she had thoughts of moving West. After
spending some time writing aviation training manuals and articles, Granger finally
decided to return to a town she had admired briefly after making an emergency landing
there during the war: Tucson, Arizona. She eased into her adopted home by securing a
position as Director of Public Relations for the Tucson United Community Campaign. It
was during her last year at this agency that she was serendipitously introduced to the
notion of a career in English and Folklore. A friend asked Granger if she would be
willing to substitute teach an English class at the University of Arizona. Granger
agreed and immediately discovered a passion for teaching. Having been a writer both
professionally and vocationally, she decided to take a position as an English instructor
at the University and went on to receive her M.A. in English from the same institution
in 1953.
After receiving her degree, she was identified by the English faculty as an excellent
candidate for the considerable task of revising and enlarging Will C. Barnes' 1935
Arizona Place Names. In meeting this challenge, Granger flew, drove, and trekked
throughout Arizona, visiting and corresponding with hundreds of people. Arizona Place
Names was finally published in 1960. Granger quickly developed a fascination with
onomastics (the study of place names) and thus her interest in Folklore was born. By
1962, she had earned her Ph.D. in English from UCLA under the guidance of Folklorist
Wayland D. Hand (dissertation title: The Talk of the Place: Folk History of the Place
Names and Legends of Places in Arizona, May 1962, 590 pp).
Granger continued as an assistant and, ultimately, a full professor of English and
Folklore until her retirement in 1976. In addition to her regular teaching duties,
Granger developed the Folklore and Cultural Awareness program, funded by the National
Endowment for the Humanities from 1968 to 1972. This summer seminar series was designed
to give Junior High School teachers a better understanding of the cultural needs of
their students and to help integrate folklore and cultural issues into classroom
learning. During her tenure Granger was also active in several Folklore societies,
including the American Name Society for which she served as President in 1974. Honors
were frequently bestowed on this popular teacher and speaker having been thrice chosen
as Best Professor on campus and inducted into the University of Arizona Hall of
Fame.
Granger's talents and services were not limited to the University campus. She served in
many civic organizations including the 99s (a women pilots group), the Cerebral Palsy
Foundation of Southern Arizona, Tucson United Community Campaign (United Way), and the
Tucson Historical Council/Committee. Somewhere in the middle of this professional and
civic involvement, Granger also pursued her leisure interests which included
photography, fishing, and camping. She even found time to build her own home in Tucson
doing much of the work herself.
Retirement to Carefree, Arizona did not put an end to Granger's professional
productivity. In 1983, she published Arizona's Names: X Marks the Place, a revision of
the 1960 Place Names book. Just before her death in 1991, she published a history of the
WASP entitled On Final Approach. Earlier in her retirement, she also wrote "Evidences of
Military Service of Women Air Force Service Pilots of World War II;" a document which
played a role in earning the WASP recognition as military veterans. Retirement also
afforded Granger the opportunity to visit the many countries whose culture and lore she
had been teaching in the classroom. Her travels took her to such places as Denmark,
Greece, Guatemala, Singapore, Sweden, and the United Kingdom to name only a few.
Byrd Howell Granger died June 27, 1991 in her Carefree home. Though she is remembered
for many reasons, her most enduring and documented legacy will be her contribution to
the understanding and appreciation of the folklore of all peoples. She was particularly
influential in bringing the culture, stories, and lore of Southwestern Native Americans
to the collective consciousness of Arizona historians. Her initial revision of Arizona
Place Names reminded those concerned with the Southwest United States that its history
lies also in the folklore of those people who were here long before the Anglo settlers.
Granger believed there was value to be found in all peoples and that the study of
Folklore could foster an understanding of this value. Indeed, she was troubled by the
term "folklore" suggesting that it might more aptly be called "peoplelore". She firmly
believed in the adage which holds that the more we know about one another's differences,
the more we learn that we are not so different after all.
Scope and Content Note
Papers (1945-1990) of Folklorist and University of Arizona professor Byrd Howell
Granger. Includes biographical information, correspondence, manuscripts, research notes
and audiovisual material. The bulk of the collection represents Granger's scholarly
works and activities in the fields of English Literature and Southwestern, particularly
Arizona, Folklore. This collection contains biographical information, correspondence
sent and received, published and unpublished manuscripts, research notes, and
audiovisual material spanning the period from 1945 to 1990. This range of dates marks
the period of time from immediately following Granger's military service to one year
before her death. The printed material represents primarily the scholarly research and
works Granger produced during her tenure at the University of Arizona as a Professor of
English and Folklore. The smaller audiovisual portion of the collection has a reverse
emphasis, revealing more about her endeavors before teaching as well as her personal
life. The bulk dates of the collection, both print and audiovisual material, are from
1956 to 1975. The bulk of the material itself consists of published and unpublished
manuscripts of papers and books. Of particular interest are unpublished manuscripts of
creative works and several draft chapters of an unfinished book entitled Legends and
Folklore of Indians of the Southwest. The collection also contains a sizable amount of
correspondence the majority of which concerns data collection for the 1960 edition of
Arizona Place Names. These letters document accounts of place name origins that were not
necessarily included in the published book. Also of note are several oral history
transcripts which document the history of Tucson, Arizona as well as that of other
Southwestern locations.
None. Note: Patrons must use motion picture and audio reels under the direct supervision
of the Manuscripts Librarian. Preservation copies of this material are not currently
available. Depending upon equipment availability and item condition, users may not be
able to view and/or listen to this material.
Copyright
It is the responsibility of the user to obtain permission to publish from the owner of
the copyright (the institution, the creator of the record, the author or his/her
transferees, heirs, legates, or literary executors). The user agrees to indemnify and
hold harmless the Arizona Board of Regents for the University of Arizona, its officers,
employees, and agents from and against all claims made by any person asserting that he
or she is an owner of copyright.
Access Terms
Personal Name(s)
Barnes, Will C. (Will Croft), 1858-1936
Goldwater, Barry M. (Barry Morris), 1909-1998 --
Correspondence
Granger, Byrd H. -- Biography
Hand, Wayland D. (Wayland Debs), 1907-1986
Jacob, Charlotte Hanson --
Correspondence
King, Isabella Greenway, 1886-1953
Satterthwaite, Frances --
Correspondence
Sonnichsen, C. L. (Charles Leland), 1901-1991 --
Correspondence
Udall, Morris K. -- Correspondence
Corporate Name(s)
Red Feather Campaign
United Way of America
University of Arizona -- Faculty -- Biography
Women Air Force Service Pilots (U.S.)
Geographic Name(s)
Arizona -- History, Local
Subject(s)
Authors -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Archives
College teachers -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Archives
Folklore -- Arizona
Folklore -- Mexico
Folklorists -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Archives
Indians of North America -- Folklore
Names, Geographical -- Arizona
Ranches -- Arizona -- Coconino County -- Pictorial
works
Women authors -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Archives
Women college teachers -- Arizona -- Tucson --
Archives
Women folklorists -- Arizona -- Tucson -- Archives
Correspondence sent and received during the course of Granger's career at the
University of Arizona. Letters to and from U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater, U.S.
2nd District Representative Morris K. Udall, and Frances Satterthwaite document
Granger's efforts to secure support and funding for the Folklore and Cultural
Awareness program. Also represented is correspondence with C.L. Sonnichsen,
editor of the Journal of Arizona History,
regarding book reviews Granger was to submit to the Journal. Letters received
from Cookie Hanson Jacob address issues related to Jacob's collection of
folklore material in Europe for Granger as well as personal matters. The
General Correspondents file contains primarily letters received from
colleagues, friends, and family.
Correspondence sent and received concerning the Arizona portion of the Dictionary of American Popular Beliefs and
Superstitions. Edited by the UCLA Center for the Study of
Comparative Folklore and Mythology under the direction of Wayland D. Hand, this
cooperative work was intended to document the beliefs and superstitions of
people across the United States. The work was never completed; nonetheless,
Granger served as the collaborator for the Arizona collection for over twenty
years.
box
folder
1
12
Dictionary of American Popular Beliefs and
Superstitions. , 1962-1983
These letters, sent and received, chronicle Granger's task of revising and
enlarging Will C. Barnes' 1935 Arizona Place
Names. Hundreds of pioneers, historians, Native Americans, political
leaders, and other then-current and former Arizona residents share with Granger
their knowledge about the origins of place names throughout Arizona.
box
folder
1
13
Apache County, 1955-1957
1
14
Cochise County, 1955-1958
1
15
Coconino County, 1955-1958
box
folder
2
1
Gila County, 1955-1958
2
2
Graham County, 1955-1956
2
3
Greenlee County, 1956-1957
2
4
Maricopa County, 1955-1957
2
5
Mojave County, 1955-1956
2
6
Navajo County, 1955-1957
2
7
Pima County, 1953-1957
2
8
Pinal County, 1955-1956
2
9
Santa Cruz County, 1955-1958
2
10
Yavapai County, 1956
2
11
Yuma County, 1955-1956
2
12
Arizona Place Names: Proposal, 1954-1958
2
13
Arizona Place Names: Corrections &
Additions, 1954-1958?
Manuscripts and drafts of published and unpublished articles, essays, and
papers. Works from throughout Granger's career are represented, from before her
days teaching at the University of Arizona to after her retirement. Most of the
writings deal with matters of Folklore and Folklore in literature. A smaller
number are instructive or administrative works, such as teaching guides and
proposals. One work which stands apart in terms of content is "Ice on My
Heels", a narrative account of Granger's airplane ferrying trip from Texas to
Alaska.
box
folder
2
14
"Arizona Institute: March 1974", 1974
2
15
"Arizona, Tucson and the Bicentennial", 1975
box
folder
3
1
"Bicentennial Plan", 1970-1976?
3
2
"Review: Black Names in
America", c. 1975
3
3
"Review: Cowboy Culture", 1981
3
4
"Causes and Cures of Cultural Diseases and Disorders in
Arizona", 1975+
3
5
"Customary Law in America", 1980+
3
6
"Emblems in Donne, Herbert, Crenshaw and Bunyan", 1952+
3
7
"Expletive Deleted: The Death of Opprobrious Names", 1970+
3
8
"Folk Museums", 1970-1975?
3
9
"Folk Narrative in the 'Magnalia Christi Americana' of Cotton
Mather", c. 1969
3
10
"Folklore Along the Colorado River", 1968?
3
11
"Folklore and History", 1972?
3
12
"Folklore in John Millington Synge's Riders
to the Sea", 1969-1970
3
13
"The God's Eye in Many Cultures", 1973+
3
14
"The Henry Sproul Letters", 1945
3
15
"Ice on My Heels", c. 1950
Scope and Contents
(See also Box 9/Folder 5 for slides, Box 11/Items 1 & 2 for motion
pictures).
3
16
"Influences on Place Names of the Inverted Mountains of the Grand
Canyon of Arizona", 1969
3
17
"Isabella Greenway King", 1953+
box
folder
4
1
"Lore of the Moon", 1980-1981
4
2
"The Lore of Numbers", No Date
4
3
"The Many Faces of Arizona's People", 1973
4
4
"The Myth of the Cowboy and Westerner: Names in Some Works by Zane
Grey", c. 1975
4
5
"The National Place-Name Survey of the United States", 1973
4
6
"None Shall Be Nameless: The Lore of Naming", 1969+
4
7
"Peoplelore and the Teaching of English", 1971+
4
8
"Shrines in Southern Arizona", 1968-1969
4
9
"Some Aspects of Folk Medicine Among the Spanish-Speaking Population
of Southern Arizona", c. 1973
Primarily drafts of unpublished books. The exception is found in two folders
pertaining to Arizona's Names: X Marks the Place
(published 1983). These contain administrative information relating to the book
as well as original illustrations by Connie Asch. The remaining two books
represented are The Grand Canyon and Its Names
and Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest. These draft works were never completed or published.
box
folder
4
14
Arizona's Names: X Marks the Place : Accounts
and Expenses, 1979-1982
4
15
Arizona's Names: X Marks the Place: Original
Illustrations by Connie Asch, c. 1983
4
16
The Grand Canyon and Its Names: Outline and
Research Plan, 1977-1982?
4
17
Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest: Apache, 1960s-1970s
4
18
Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest: Havasupai, 1960s-1970s
4
19
Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest: Hopi, 1960s-1970s
box
folder
5
1
Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest: Navajo, 1960s-1970s
5
2
Legends and Folklore of Indians of the
Southwest: Pima, Maricopa & Papago, 1960s-1970s
Poetry, short stories, and correspondence relating to the submission of the
short stories for publication. There is no evidence in this collection or
elsewhere to indicate that any of these works were published.
Files related to Granger's involvement in various academic, professional, and
civic activities. Highlights include transcripts from the Tucson Historical
Committee's Oral History Project for which Granger served as Chairman. These oral
histories contain unique information concerning the history of Tucson as told by
both Spanish and English speaking residents. The sound recordings of these oral
history interviews are available in the Southwest Folklore Center Field Recordings
Collection (SWF 011) where noted. Notes for and correspondence about public
speaking engagements are also included.
box
folder
5
6
BIA Report: Folklore and Cultural Awareness Program, 1971
5
7
National Geographic Society, 1975-1976
5
8
People: Their Lore and Cultural Awareness: A Manual for
Participants, 1973
5
9
People: Their Lore and Cultural Awareness: NEH Grant
Report, c. 1973
5
10
Tucson Historical Committee: Oral History Project -
Administrative, 1973-1974
box
folder
6
1
Tucson Historical Committee: Oral History Project - Transcripts B -
H, 1973-1974
6
2
Tucson Historical Committee: Oral History Project - Transcripts L -
S, 1967-1974
6
3
Speeches and Public Appearances, c. 1970
6
4
Summer Seminar: The Lore of Peoples - Course Outline, 1 970
6
5
University of Arizona International Folk Dance Club:
Advising, 1973-1976
Granger's typed and handwritten lecture notes. Various Folklore and Literature
topics are represented. The bulk consists of notes for the People: Their Lore
and Cultural Awareness program (also known as the Folklore and Cultural
Awareness program).
box
folder
6
6
People: Their Lore and Cultural Awareness Lectures, c. 1970
Typed and handwritten notes taken by Granger while earning her Ph.D. in English
at UCLA. Some notes represent lectures and courses attended after earning her
degree in 1962. Various Folklore and Literature topics are represented.
These general research files include a transcript of a conversation between
Granger and Wayland D. Hand on the topic of Folklore classification.
Transcripts of oral histories and interviews on a variety of Arizona and
non-Arizona topics are also included; corresponding sound recordings in the
Southwest Folklore Center Field Recordings Collection (SWF 011) are indicated
where available. Informant cards containing bits of collected folklore from the
Southwest, particularly Arizona, provide unique information.
box
folder
7
3
Housing - Tucson, 1968
7
4
Spanish Proverbs, No Date
7
5
Transcript: Dr. Wayland Hand on Classification, 1975
This subseries includes research files pertaining to the published work
"Arizona Place Names." These research notes include alphabetized place names,
most of which include descriptive information, general notes, or bibliographic
research notes. Items are in Granger's original filing scheme.
box
box
14
1
The Bibliography, circa 1940-1960
14
2
The Bibliography -- Rejects, maps, AHS files used, circa 1940-1960
Motion pictures taken by and of Granger in a variety of settings. Highlights
include the construction of Granger's home and aerial footage of her airplane
ferrying trip from Fort Worth, Texas to Anchorage, Alaska along the Alaska
Highway. A notable exception is a commercial film produced by the Red Feather
Campaign, forerunner to the network of charitable organizations which has been
known through the years by several names including Community Chest, United
Community Campaign, and the United Way. The film, likely acquired by Granger
through her public relations work for the Tucson United Community Campaign, was
intended to encourage the public to make donations to the Red Feather Campaign
instead of individual charities.
box
folder
11
1
Alaska ferrying trip, (See also Box 3/Folder 15 for narrative
account and Box 9/Folder 5 for slides). (16mm, color, 7" reel), c. 1950
11
2
See 1-2. (16mm, color, 7" reel),
11
3
Camping trip in Grand Canyon area, (16mm, color, 2 7/8''
reel), 1954
11
4
Fishing trip, (16mm, color, 2 7/8" reel), 1953
11
5
Grand Canyon and Havasupai by helicopter, (16mm, color, 3 5/8''
reel), No Date
Oral histories, speeches, interviews and other recordings made by or for
Granger. Highlights include a recording of Granger and students of the Folklore
and Cultural Awareness program speaking about the program and its
effectiveness. Also of note are two tapes of an oral history interview with a
Colorado pioneer woman.
box
folder
12
1
Conversation with man and woman (Beaudry?) regarding Granger's
house, hobbies, and other topics, side 2 only, No Date
12
2
Cookie Hanson: Oral correspondence to Granger and Isabella
Breasted, Oct. 25, 1972
12
3
Folklore and Cultural Awareness Program: Granger speaking
about, 1971
12
4
Material Culture: Granger interviewing Jane Adams, No Date
12
5
"National Geographic Society Food Customs", (See also Box 5/Folder
7), No Date
12
6
National Place Name Survey: Granger dictation, No Date
12
7
Oral History: Dr. & Mrs. Gennady Platoff in San Antonio, Texas
talking about family and world travels, 1970
12
8
Oral History: Mrs. Miles - Pioneer woman talking about early life in
Colorado, February 13, 1969
12
9
Oral History: Mrs. Miles - Pioneer woman talking about early life in
Colorado, 1969
12
10
"Random Notes on Mayan Folklore" - Granger speech at Maya Study
Group, April 1980