
Jay
Milner Papers
1960-1993
1 linear foot
2 document cases
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inventory
Acquisition: Gifts donated by Jay Milner, 1994-1995.
Access: Direct inquiries to Archivist, Southwestern
Writers Collection, Albert B. Alkek Library, 601 University Drive, San Marcos,
Texas 78666-4604. (512) 245-2313.
Processed
by: Amanda Thompson, 2002.
BIOGRAPHICAL
NOTE
J. Dunston Milner was born near Muleshoe, Texas on October
30. 1926. The son of John and Nina
Milner, "Jay" moved with his family around small towns in West Texas,
following the development of cotton farms. The Milner family settled in Lubbock while Jay was in the
second grade, and he later became a member of the Lubbock High Westerners state
champion football team. After
graduating from high school, Milner attended college at Lubbock's Texas
Technological College, but then entered military service because of World War
II. While in the Navy, Milner also
attended school at Pittsburgh College.
After his discharge from military service, Milner earned his Bachelor's
degree from Mississippi Southern University in 1948, later earning his Master's
degree, also from MSU, in 1951.
After college,
Milner taught at the high school level and coached football for three years,
and then moved to the Mississippi Delta area during the racially turbulent
1950s, working at the Hattiesburg, Mississippi Hattiesburg American, and the Pulitzer-Prize winning Democrat-Times of Greenville, Mississippi. In 1959 Milner moved to New York
to join the staff of the now-defunct New York Herald Tribune to serve as the assistant to the
editorial page editor. In 1961,
having recently published his first novel, Incident at Ashton, Milner quit his job and returned to
Texas to concentrate on his writing.
It was at this time that Milner met and became friends with a group of
Texas men who were also becoming writers:
Bud Shrake, Gary Cartwright, Dan Jenkins, and Billy Lee Brammer.
After a few years
as a freelance writer, in 1965 Milner joined the faculty of Texas Christian
University in Fort Worth as a professor of journalism, and three years later
moved on to Southern Methodist University to serve as the Acting Chair of the
Journalism Department. After
leaving his job at SMU, Milner worked as a news anchor for the Fort Worth PBS
affiliate for one year. After
resigning his news anchor job, for a brief time Milner took over editorial
responsibilities for Iconoclast,
a Dallas weekly newspaper that had been created as an underground paper in the
1960s.
Milner was the
founding editor of the short-lived Texas Music magazine, but the magazine folded
quickly due to financial problems.
After the bankruptcy of Texas Music, Milner moved with his mother and daughter to Lufkin, to
live on the family home place.
While in Lufkin, Milner began to write a column for the Lufkin Daily
News. The Daily News was eventually bought by Cox Newspapers,
and Milner wrote for the newspaper and Cox for over fifteen years. Since 1995, Milner has lived in Fort
Worth with his wife Gail, whom he married in 1983. Upon his move to Fort Worth, Milner began to concentrate on
a memoir of his days as a Texas writer in the sixties and seventies. The book, Confessions of a Maddog: A
Romp through the High-flying Texas Music and Literary Era of the Fifties to the
Seventies, was published
in 1998.
Confessions
of a Maddog: A Romp through the High-lying Texas Music and Literary Era
of
the Fifties to the Seventies. Denton, Texas: University of North
Texas
Press,
1998.
SCOPE AND
CONTENTS
The Jay Milner
papers cover 1960-1994 and consist of newspaper clippings of columns and
reviews written by Milner, personal correspondence, photographs, and print
materials. Series include I. Works
(1960-1994,) II. Correspondence (1960-1993,) III. Photographs (n.d.) and
Printed Materials (1970-1977).
SERIES
DESCRIPTIONS
This series
includes clippings of columns and reviews which Milner wrote during his days as
a contributor to several newspapers, including the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the Lufkin Daily News, and the Nacogdoches Daily Sentinel.
The clippings are arranged in chronological order, and acid-free photocopies
have been made of all clippings.
This series
includes Milner's correspondence.
Most of the letters are dealing with personal issues between
friends. The letters are mostly
those sent by friends to Milner. In some cases, Milner attached copies of his replies to the
letters. Milner often grouped
letters together with staples.
These groupings have been retained, and each group is filed by the date
of the letter at the beginning of the group.
Subseries
A. King, Larry L. [1966-1993] Additional correspondence between King and Milner
can be found in the Larry L. King Papers, also in Southwestern Writers
Collection.
Subseries
B. Shrake, Bud [1967-1991]
Subseries
C. John Edward Weems [1981-1993]
Subseries
D. General Correspondence [1970-1988] Includes correspondence from writer
Billie Lee Brammer, Jim Fain, John Henry Faulk, Jody Gent, Grace, Keith
Gregory, Dorys C. Grover, John O. Lumpkins, Otto Mullinax, Lloyd A. Storrs,
M.D., W.K. Stratton, Frances B. Vick, and Susan Walker.
Series 3:
Photographs (n.d., circa 1970s)
Five b/w
snapshots of Billie Lee Brammer, Bud Shrake, Larry McMurtry, A.C. Greene, and
Jay Milner.
Series
4: Printed Materials (1970-1976)
Programs
and invitations for Willie Nelson's 4th of July Picnics, one copy of
Texas Music magazine,
one copy of The Nieman Reports,
one copy of The Quill,
and the original manilla envelope in which the materials were originally kept
by Milner. The majority of the
articles relate to Willie Nelson.
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