
Wilson
Mathis Hudson Papers
1913-1991, n.d.
Bulk Dates:
1936-1974
Collection 011
8 boxes (4
linear feet)
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inventory
Acquisition: donated by Wilson M. Hudson and Bill
Wittliff from 1986 to 1992
Access: Direct inquiries to the Archivist,
Southwestern Writers Collection, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas
78666-4604
Processed by: Gwyneth Cannan, February 1993,
Inventory revised by Brandy Harris, 2005
Wilson
Mathis Hudson was born in Flatonia Texas on December 26, 1907. He received his B.A. in 1929 and M.A.
in 1930 from the University of Texas at Austin. Hudson was an instructor of English at Rice University until
1937, when he briefly left teaching to work as a traveling representative for
the publishing house of G & C. Merriam Co. In 1939, Hudson began his doctoral studies at the University
of Chicago. World War II
intervened and he left to serve in the United States Army Air Force from 1942
to 1946. He ultimately received
his Ph.D. in English in 1947. He
then joined the English Department of the University of Texas at Austin and
taught there until retiring as professor emeritus in 1974.
At
the University of Texas, Hudson was friend and colleague to the folklorist J.
Frank Dobie and the historian Walter Prescott Webb. In 1950, Hudson began teaching the popular English
Department course, Life and Literature of the Southwest, which was initiated by
Dobie in 1930. While teaching
Southwestern literature, Hudson became interested in the cowboy writer Andy
Adams, whose fiction had been rediscovered and championed by both Webb and
Dobie as an accurate depiction of cowboy life. In 1956, Hudson edited Why the Chisholm Trail Forks and
other Tales of the Cattle Country,
a collection of Adam's campfire tales extracted from his fiction. Aided by Dobie's previous research
papers, he wrote Adams' biography in 1964.
Comparative
literature and folklore were Hudson's chief areas of scholarly interest. He was named an associate editor to the
Texas Folklore Society in 1951 and was secretary-editor from 1951 to 1972. He edited or co-edited approximately
eighteen books under the auspices of the Folklore Society.
Hudson
was married to Mildred Ruckman from 1932 until her death in 1949. He married the professor of English and
Browning scholar Gertrude Reese in 1951.
SCOPE
AND CONTENTS NOTE
The
Wilson M. Hudson Papers date from 1913 to 1991 and are made up of research
material collected for (1) the biography of cowboy writer Andy Adams and (2) a
study of J. Frank Dobie. The
material consists of note cards, clippings, articles, photographs,
correspondence, maps, manuscript drafts, and genealogical notes. There are also pamphlets and brochures
from the Texas Folklore Society.
Wilson
Hudson donated his books and papers to the Southwestern Writers Collection
through Bill and Sally Wittliff of Encino Press. Encino Press had printed five books edited by Hudson, Andy
Adams' Corporal Segundo,
and four publications for the Texas Folklore Society.
Series 1: Andy Adams, 1913-1978, n.d.
Boxes 1-6
This series
contains the research material and notes that Hudson used to write the
biography of cowboy writer Andy Adams.
The materials include J. Frank Dobie's research materials on Adams,
maps, genealogical material, clippings, microfilm, copies of letters, articles
by Adams, photographs (prints and negatives), correspondence with relatives and
friends of Adams, handwritten note cards, and manuscript copies of Adams' Corporal
Segundo, Barbed Wire,
and Army Beef. There is also material on the
collection of Adams' campfire tales edited by Hudson. Finally, there is correspondence with Southern Methodist
University Press on the editing and publication of HudsonŐs biography of Andy
Adams.
Series
2.: J. Frank Dobie, 1938-1974, n.d.
Boxes
7-8
This
series contains Hudson's files on J. Frank Dobie which include clippings and
articles by and about Dobie, files of Dobie's autobiographical notes, clippings
on Dobie's death in 1964 and a file on Dobie's widow Bertha.
Series 3: Texas Folklore Society and
other Southwestern writers, 1936-1991,
This
series contains programs and publications of the Texas Folklore Society for
which Hudson was editor. Also
included are articles and clippings on Texas writers Mody Boatright, Roy
Bedichek and William Humphrey, as well as the illustrator Jose Cisneros.
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inventory
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