Robert Deane Pharr Papers 1978
Access and use
- Location of collection:
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L. Douglas Wilder LibraryVirginia Union University1500 North Lombardy StreetRichmond, VA 23220
- Contact for questions and access:
- POC: Selicia AllenEmail: sngregory@vuu.eduEmail: archives@vuu.eduPhone: (804) 278-4117Fax: (804) 257-5818
Collection context
Summary
- Creator:
- Robert Deane Pharr Papers
- Language:
- English
Background
- Scope and content:
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These papers consist chiefly of a draft and galleys for the book Giveadamn Brown. The draft is Pharr's original typescript and the galleys are printed by the publisher, Doubleday. The correspondence and clippings consist of a letter enclosed with the draft sent to Virginia Union and two clippings from Richmond newspapers regarding the novel.
- Biographical / historical:
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Waiter and novelist Robert Deane Pharr was born July 05, 1916 in Richmond, VA to John Benjamin (minister) and Lucie Deane Pharr (schoolteacher). He was raised in New Haven, CT and returned south to attend school. He was graduated from Virginia Union University (B.A., 1939) and did graduate work at Fisk, Columbia and New York Universities. He pursued his interest in writing at Virginia Union, where he was an editor on the school newspaper, and at Fisk. His race and medical history, a three year sanitorium stay for tuberculosis and a battle with alcoholism, limited his career opportunities and he became a waiter, working in exclusive resort hotels and private clubs.
Pharr's first novel, The Book of Numbers, was published in 1969 to critical praise. The story of an illegal lottery system in a southern town during the depression (reputedly based on Richmond's Jackson Ward), the book won favorable reviews for its realistic portrayal of Black Americans. The next three novels, S.R.O., The Welfare Bitch, and The Soul Murder Case, were less successful portrayals of crime and addiction in a Black urban setting. His fifth novel, Giveadamn Brown, relates the experiences of Lawrence "Giveadamn" Brown who moves from Florida to Harlem and takes over the empire of his kinsman, crime boss Harry Brown. The book is described as a thriller that follows Brown through his transition from naif to con man.
Robert Deane Pharr died during surgery for an aneurysm on April 01, 1992 in Syracuse, NY.
- Acquisition information:
- Received from Robert Deane Pharr, 1978.
- Arrangement:
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Collection is arranged by subject.
- Physical description:
- 1.0 linear feet