Dates: | 1939-1951 |
Size: | 0.5 linear feet |
Repository: | Chicago Public Library, Carter G. Woodson Regional Library, Vivian G. Harsh Research collection of Afro-American History and Literature, 9525 S. Halsted St., Chicago, IL 60628 |
Collection Number: | 2002/08 |
Provenance: | John and Anne Coyne donated the Willard Motley Papers to the Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection in December of 2002. William P. Schenk, who worked with Motley at Hull House Magazine , collected the clippings and correspondence he had with Motley between 1939 and 1951, and gave them to John and Anne Coyne. |
Access: | No restrictions |
Citation: | When quoting material from this collection the preferred citation is: Willard F. Motley Papers [Box #, Folder #], Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection of Afro-American History and Literature, Chicago Public Library. |
Processed by: | Angela Bacon, Mapping the Stacks, University of Chicago. |
Supervised by: | Michael Flug, Senior Archivist, Harsh Research Collection. |
Biographical Note
Willard Francis Motley was born on July 14, 1909 in Chicago, Illinois, and spent his childhood in the racially diverse community of Englewood on Chicago’s Southside. Born to a middle class family, his father Archibald Sr. worked as a Pullman porter for a railroad that ran between Chicago and New York, while his mother Mary was the primary caretaker and influence. Archibald John Motley, Jr., (known as Willard’s brother though he was actually an older cousin) was becoming a well-known artist during Willard Motley’s childhood.
Though known as a writer concerned with the plight of the poor, Motley reports experiencing very little racial discrimination as a child. He notes that, although the Motley’s were the only black family in their immediate neighborhood, their white neighbors defended them during the Chicago riot of 1919, and Willard was a well-liked and active student at Englewood High School.
When Motley was 13, he submitted a short story for publication in the Chicago Defender. Published in three installments during September and October of 1922, the short story led Robert S. Abbott to hire Motley to write a weekly children’s column, under the pen name Bud Billiken from December 1922 to July 5, 1924.
After graduating high school, and unable to afford college, Motley initially found little success as a writer for an adult audience. Faced with a steady stream of rejections from popular magazines, Motley left his parents home in order to gain more life experience and to gather material for writing. During this time, Motley traveled once to the East Coast by bicycle, and twice to the West Coast by car, until he settled permanently in a slum near Chicago’s Maxwell Street. During his travels west Motley gained material for his most successful novel, Knock on Any Door , after meeting a Mexican boy named Joe, while Motley were in a Denver jail for stealing gasoline.
Once back in Chicago, Motley began going to Hull House, founded by Jane Addams in 1889. In the 1930s, it was a gathering place for young radical artists and writers. It was there that Motley met William P. Schenk (known as Peter) and Alexander Saxton. More educated than Motley, Saxton and Schenk are credited with introducing Motley to a host of authors and broadening his literary exposure. Together, they founded Hull House Magazine, a small literary journal, which became the testing ground for Motley’s work. In 1940, Motley was accepted to the WPA Federal Writers Project.
From 1940 to 1943, Motley conducted the research for his first novel, Knock on Any Door by visiting reform schools, prisons, and other neighborhoods around Chicago. Ultimately, the novel became a sociological and artistic study of a lower class Italian boy named Nick Romano, which placed Motley in the tradition of “naturalists” such as Theodore Dreiser and Richard Wright. In order to uphold the novel’s projected image as a “raceless novel,” Motley refused to have his photograph printed anywhere on the book, in an attempt to avoid the label of “Negro author.” Knock on Any Door became widely successful upon its publication in 1947, selling 47,000 copies in three weeks, and 350,000 copies in two years. In 1949, Humphrey Bogart, along with director Nickolas Ray, produced a film based on the novel. Subsequently, Motley went on to publish We Fished All Night (1951) , Let No Man Write My Epitaph (1960), Let Noon Be Fair (1966), and, posthumously, The Diaries of Willard Motley (ed. Jerome Klinkowitz, 1979).
Motley died on March 4, 1965, in a Mexico City hospital, of intestinal gangrene. At the time, and due in part to the shift from naturalist and “raceless” novels to authors who emphasized race, Motley was living a meager lifestyle after his decline in popularity. Willard Motley and William Schenk met at Hull House, a gathering place for young intellectuals and liberal artists, located at 800 S. Halstead. Along with Alexander Saxton, Schenk would become integral to Motley’s development as a writer. More widely read than Motley, Schenk and Saxton introduced him to authors such as John Steinbeck, Ben Hecht, and Emily Dickinson. Motley, Schenk, and Saxton went on to create Hull House Magazine .
The papers in this collection include eleven letters written or sent by Motley to William P. Schenk regarding Hull House magazine affairs, feedback on writings submitted for publication, and invitations to publicity events. Also, there are sixty newspaper clippings documenting the publication and reception of Knock on any Door , as a book and film, and two articles written by Motley, published in The Commonweal and Opportunity magazines. It is noted that, when Schenk met his wife, Beatrice, at University of Chicago, she thought that the “P” in William P. Schenk stood for Peter. The “P” actually stands for Paul. As a result, Schenk was known as Peter during this time, and the correspondence from Motley to Schenk is addressed to “Peter.”
While these papers, located at the Vivian G. Harsh Collection, revolve around a very specific interaction between Motley and Schenk, the bulk of Willard Motley’s papers can be found in the Special Collections Division, Northern Illinois University Library.
Scope and Content
The Willard Motley Collection contains correspondence written from Motley to William P. Schenk during the time they worked at Hull House Magazine, along with invitations to various events celebrating the publication of Knock on Any Door. Additionally, there are newspaper clippings documenting the reception of the novel, and its release as a film in 1949.
Container List
Series 1: Correspondence |
Folder 001 |
Motley, Willard to Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, 9/30/1943 |
Folder 002 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, 12/25/1943 |
Folder 003 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, 3/35/47 |
Folder 004 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, 5/12/1947 |
Folder 005 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, 5/26/1947 |
Folder 006 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 007 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 008 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 009 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 010 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 011 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 012 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 013 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 014 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Folder 015 |
Motley, Willard to Schenk, William Peter, [N.D.] |
Series 2: Clippings |
Folder 016 |
"First Generation of Artists," Survey Graphic, March 1939 |
Folder 017 |
"Religion and the Handout," Catholic Digest, May 1939 |
Folder 018 |
"Among the Authors," Chicago Tribune, 1/19/1947 |
Folder 019 |
"Among the Authors," Chicago Tribune, 4/27/1947 |
Folder 020 |
"Among the Authors," Chicago Tribune, 5/4/1947 |
Folder 021 |
"A Terrifying Cross Section of Chicago," Chicago Tribune, 5/4/1947 |
Folder: 022 |
"A Terrifying Cross Section of Chicago," Chicago Tribune, 5/4/1947 |
Folder: 023 |
"Disciple of Dreiser," NY Times, 5/4/1947 |
Folder 024 |
"Books in the News," Chicago Daily News, 5/5/1947 |
Folder 025 |
"Realistic Novel of the Chicago Slums," Chicago Sun, 5/11/1947 |
Folder 026 |
"Knock on Any Door," Chicago Tribune, 5/11/1947 |
Folder 027 |
"The Known City," New Republic, 5/12/1947 |
Folder 028 |
"Knock on Any Door," Chicago Daily News, 5/14/1947 |
Folder 029 |
"Worth Noting: A Tribute to a Talented Writer," Chicago Sun, 5/18/1947 |
Folder 030 |
"Honor Author," Chicago Sunday Times, 5/18/1947 |
Folder 031 |
"Best Sellers in Midwest," Chicago Tribune; 5/18/1947 |
Folder 032 |
"Chicago in Naturalistic Novel," NY Herald Tribune, 5/18/1947 |
Folder 033 |
"It’s a Smash Hit! Knock on Any Door," Chicago Daily News, 5/23/1947 |
Folder 034 |
"From Alter-Boy to Killer," The Saturday Review, 5/24/1947 |
Folder 035 |
"Other Books," Newsweek, 5/26/1947 |
Folder 036 |
"Knock on Any Door-And Write a Book," Chicago Sun Times, 5/27/1947 |
Folder 037 |
"Knock on Any Door- And Write a Book," Chicago Times, 5/27/1947 |
Folder 038 |
"Chicago Tragedy," New Masses, 6/17/1947 |
Folder 039 |
"His Fiction Realistic? He Even Went to Jail to Obtain Background," Chicago Sun, 6/22/1947 |
Folder 040 |
"His Fiction Realistic? He Even Went to Jail to Obtain Background," Chicago Sun, 6/22/1947 |
Folder 041 |
"Best Sellers," NY Times, 6/29/1947 |
Folder 042 |
"Books for Men," True Magazine, August 1947 |
Folder 043 |
"The Carrot or the Club: Writers Break the Ice," Ebony, August 1947 |
Folder 044 |
"Willard Motley: Ex-Tramp Spent Eight Years Writing Long 600,00 Word Best Seller--All in Pencil," Ebony, September 1947 |
Folder 045 |
"Sunday Radio Highlights," Chicago Daily News, 9/13/1947 |
Folder 046 |
Adults Cause Juvenile Crime, Willard Motley Tells Forum," Chicago Daily News, 9/26/1947 |
Folder 047 |
"Knock on Any Door," Look, 9/30/1947 |
Folder 048 |
"Book Day," Chicago Sun, 10/1/1947 |
Folder 049 |
"Notable Appleton-Century Books for Christmas Giving," The Saturday Review, 12/6/1947 |
Folder 050 |
"Mark Hellinger, A Film Producer," NY Times, 12/22/1947 |
Folder 051 |
"Briefly Noted," The New Yorker, 1947 (?) |
Folder 052 |
"Live Fast...Die Young!" Parade, 6/20/1948 |
Folder 053 |
"Kup’s Column," Chicago Sun-Times," 9/21/1948 |
Folder 054 |
"Humphrey Bogart in Knock on Any Door," NY Times, 2/20/1949 |
Folder 055 |
"Dramatic Action on the High Seas and in the Court Room," NY Times, 2/20/1949 |
Folder 056 |
"’Knock’ No Boost," NY Times, 2/27/1949 |
Folder 057 |
"The Current Cinema," The New Yorker, 3/5/1949 |
Folder 058 |
"Movies: Suffering Humanity," New Republic, 3/7/1949 |
Folder 059 |
"Currently," This Week in Chicago, 3/12/1949 |
Folder 060 |
"Cinema- Knock on Any Door," Time Magazine," Time Magazine, 3/14/1949 |
Folder 061 |
"Humphrey Bogart ’Knock on Any Door," Look, 3/15/1949 |
Folder 062 |
"Bogey and Baby," Chicago Herald American(?) 3/23/1949 |
Folder 063 |
"Baby-Faced Killer," Silver Screen, March 1949 |
Folder 064 |
"Film Newcomer John Derek Scores Triumph in ’Knock on Any Door’," Chicago Suntimes 4/3/1949 |
Folder 065 |
"Big Christmas Book Week," Chicago Sun Times, 12/2/1949 |
Folder 066 |
"Vet Seeks Peace of Mind on Island in Lake Fire," Chicago Sun Times, 12/4/1949 |
Folder 067 |
"Humphrey Bogart ’Knock on Any Door," 1949(?) [N.P.] |
Folder 068 |
"Books of the Times," NY Times, 11/16/1951 |
Folder 069 |
"Into The Lower Depths," NY Times, 11/18/1951 |
Folder 070 |
"Motley’s 2d Novel Lacks Unifying Idea," Chicago Sun Times, 11/25/1951 |
Folder 071 |
"Motley’s Cynical Study in Futility," Chicago Tribune, 11/25/1951 |
Folder 072 |
"Mr. Motley’s Chicago, Big and Grim," NY Herald Tribune, 11/25/1951 |
Folder 073 |
"A Subtle Change on Halsted Street," [N.P.], [N.D.] |
Series 3: Serials |
Folder 074 |
"Small Town Los Angeles," The Commonweal, 6/30/1939 |
Folder 075 |
"Negro Art in Chicago," Opportunity- Journal of American Life, January 1940 |