Object Details
Summary
Field notes, manuscripts, photographs, booking contracts, correspondence, personal papers, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, interviews, and other research materials primarily relating to the history of American blues music. Collection documents the lives of significant blues musicians Robert Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Mance Lipscomb; insight into the life, writings, and research practices of Robert "Mack" McCormick; and the business side of recording and selling the blues.
Scope and Contents
The collection documents the life, writings, research practices, and business activities of blues scholar Robert "Mack" Burton McCormick who came to serve as a leading authority on the genre. Personal papers include diaries, curriculum vitae, biographical sketches, school papers, employment documents, correspondence, financial records, and an interview transcript. McCormick's writings consist of published magazine and journal articles, plays, essays, television scripts, short stories, and album liner notes. There are complete unpublished manuscripts, drafts with notes and research materials, and ideas for future work. McCormick's research practices and subjects of interest are documented in correspondence, field notes, annotated maps, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, city directories, interviews, photographic prints, negatives, slides, and contact sheets. American blues, Texas blues, and the music of significant blues artists, who McCormick served as an agent and manager for, dominated his extensive research efforts. In addition, the collection documents the recording, distribution and sale, and identification of consumer markets for American music in correspondence, contracts, agreements, music journals, publicity and promotional materials, music manuscripts, and interviews.
Throughout the collection preservation measures were performed to ensure long term use of the materials. Newspaper clippings were photocopied, and the originals were discarded. Audio cassette tapes have been reformatted and the digital copies will soon be available for research use.
sova.nmah.ac.1485
Collector
McCormick, Mack
Musician
Badeaux, Ed, 1926-2015
Chenier, Clifton, 1925-1987
Cotten, Elizabeth (1893-1987)
Estes, Sleepy John, 1899-1977
Hopkins, Lightnin', 1912-1982
House, Son
Howling Wolf
James, Harry
Jefferson, Blind Lemon, 1897-1929
Johnson, Robert, 1911-1938
Leadbelly, 1885-1949
Lipscomb, Mance, 1895-1976
Muddy Waters, 1915-1983
Historian
Oliver, Paul, 1927-2017
Musician
Rinzler, Ralph
Shaw, Robert, 1908 August 9-1985
Singer
Spivey, Victoria
Producer
Strachwitz, Chris
Musician
Thomas, Henry, 1874-1952
Wallace, Sippie
Place
United States -- Race relations
Delta (Miss.)
Sugarland Prison (Tex.)
Greenwood (Miss.)
Robinsonville (Miss.)
Dallas (Tex.)
Houston (Tex.)
San Antonio (Tex.)
Tunica (La.)
Texarkana (Tex.)
Galveston (Texas)
Occupation
African American musicians
Topic
Drafts (documents)
Blues (Music)
Blues musicians
Photographs
Postcards -- 20th century
telephone -- Directories
Plays
African American music -- 20th century
Sharecropping
Plantations
Zydeco music
Commercial recordings
Piano music (Barrelhouse)
Genealogy
African Americans -- Texas
Songsters
Blues (Music) -- Delta (Miss. : Region)
Rodeos -- United States
Prisons -- Songs and music
Festival of American Folklife -- History
Festival of American Folklife -- Planning
Street scenes
Blues (Music) -- Texas.
African Americans -- Folklore
American South
African American -- Social life and customs
Blues (Music) -- Mississippi.
Blues (Music) -- Alabama.
Blues (Music) -- New Orleans (La.)
Conjunto music
Jazz -- 20th century -- United States
Folk music -- United States
Ethnomusicology -- History
Sound recordings
Sound recording and reproduction
Tejano music
Transcripts
Folklorists
Zydeco musicians
Musicians, Cajun
Folk music -- United States -- History and criticism.
Music -- History and criticism
Festival of American Folklife
African Americans -- Alabama -- Music
Guitar -- 20th century
Guitar music
Guitarists
Country musicians
Sound recording executives and producers -- United States -- Biography.
Sound recording industry
Blues (Music) -- Southern States.
Blues musicians -- United States -- Interviews.
Hawaiian guitar
Hawaiian guitar music
African American farmers
Sharecroppers
Labor -- Southern states -- 20th century
manuscripts -- Editing
African Americans -- Songs and music
Sound recordings -- Album covers
African American prisoners
Crafts
Museum outreach programs
Folk music -- New Orleans (La.)
Black people -- Race identity
Race discrimination -- United States
Sound recordings -- Collectors and collecting
Provenance
Collection donated by Susannah Nix to the Archives Center in 2019.
Collector
McCormick, Mack
Culture
African Americans -- Mississippi
Arkansas
See more items in
Robert "Mack" McCormick Collection
Sponsor
Digitization of Series 1: Photographic Negatives, Photographs, and Slides was made possible by Andrew and Anya Shiva.
Biographical / Historical
Robert Burton "Mack" McCormick (August 3, 1930-November 18, 2015) was a self-taught folklorist who spent a lifetime researching, collecting, and writing about vernacular music in the United States. Most of his work focused on the blues and other musical traditions of Black, brown, and white communities living throughout Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. After experiencing a difficult, transient childhood and eventually dropping out of high school, McCormick settled in Houston, Texas and began to work a series of odd jobs while relentlessly pursuing his goal of becoming a successful writer. Although researching and writing about music came to occupy most of his time, he also pursued passions as a screenwriter and novelist. The volume of historical research and personal interviews he conducted from the 1950s through the early 1970s is remarkable, and his published writings during this period about music and the musicians he doggedly studied were lauded by his peers as among the best in the field. Along the way he worked for a time as a manager for the careers of the Texas songsters Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins and Mance Lipscomb, and briefly ran his own record label. He made hundreds of hours of field recordings with musicians living throughout the South. He collaborated with colleagues such as Chris Strachwitz, founder of Arhoolie Records, and Paul Oliver, with whom McCormick spent over a decade researching and writing a manuscript on the history of Texas Blues. Beginning in the late 1960s, he was contracted by the Smithsonian Institution as a field worker for its annual Festival of American Folklife, and around the same time began researching the life of blues legend Robert Johnson for a manuscript that McCormick wrote and re-wrote but failed to publish in his lifetime.
McCormick's research, along with his personal archive, became the stuff of legend among fellow blues researchers and enthusiasts, particularly after his publishing output dwindled in the 1970s. He lived with a bipolar disorder that drew him into bouts of depression and paranoia. He came to distrust many of those colleagues working most closely with him, and sometimes shared untrue information to throw them off the trail of his research discoveries. He also "borrowed" heirloom photographs from the family members and descendants of blues artists and, in several cases documented in this collection, he refused to return them. Overcome with challenges that lay both within and without his control, he came to describe the massive archive in his Houston, Texas home as "the monster," and spent his final decades attempting with little success to publish his writings.
Extent
60 Cubic feet (172 boxes, 9 map folders)
Date
1858-2015, undated
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.1485
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Business cards
Compact discs
Contracts
Correspondence
Folklore
Newspaper clippings
Posters
Road maps
Television scripts
Ephemera
Black-and-white negatives
Contact sheets
Color slides
Business records
Family papers
Resumes
Diaries
Journals (periodicals)
Financial records
Audio cassettes
Manuscripts
Playbills
Field recordings
Writings
Transcripts
Manuscripts for publication
Color negatives
Negatives
Articles
Citation
Robert "Mack" McCormick Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Arrangement
Collection is arranged into fifteen series.
Series 1: Photographic Negatives, Photographs and Slides, 1959-1998, 2003, undated
Subseries 1.1: Photographic Negatives and Contact Sheets, 1967-1977, undated
Subseries 1.2: Photographs, 1959-1998, 2003, undated
Subseries 1.3: Photographs, Texas Blues (TB), 1961-1964, undated
Subseries 1.4: Photographic Slides, 1964-1977, undated
Subseries 1.5: Negative and Photograph Indices and Assorted Material, 1963-1975
Series 2: Personal Papers, 1937-2015, undated
Subseries 2.1: Biographical Information, 1945-2003, undated
Subseries 2.2: Correspondence, Greeting Cards, and Postcards, 1937-2010, undated
Subseries 2.3: Education, 1938-1946
Subseries 2.4: Employment Records, 1948-1961, undated
Subseries 2.5: Family Papers, 1945-1988, undated
Subseries 2.6: Press, 1960-2015, undated
Subseries 2.7: Archive, 1972-2015, undated
Subseries 2.8: Campaign, 1959-2015, undated
Subseries 2.9: Financial Papers, 1952-2015
Subseries 2.10: Legal Papers, 1950-2015, undated
Subseries 2.11: Business Records, 1941-2006, undated
Series 3: Project Files, 1960-2003, undated
Subseries 3.1: Library of Congress, 1960-1964
Subseries 3.2: Newport Folk Festival, 1965-1969
Subseries 3.3: Hemisfair, 1968
Subseries 3.4: Smithsonian Institution, Festival of American Folklife 1966-1980, undated
Subseries 3.5: Other Blues Project, 2001-2003, undated
Series 4: Manuscripts and Writings, 1952-2015, undated
Subseries 4.1: Almost A Savage Joy, 1959-1980
Subseries 4.2: Another Fine Mess, 1981-1987, undated
Subseries 4.3: Blues: A New Look, 1965-1984, undated
Subseries 4.4: Blues Odyssey, 1971, undated
Subseries 4.5: Death and Tragedy, 1975-1980, undated
Subseries 4.6: Down in Texas Blues, undated
Subseries 4.7: Folk Songs of Men, 1952-1977, undated
Subseries 4.8: Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley, 1958-1976, undated
Subseries 4.9: Henry Thomas, 1975-2002, undated
Subseries 4.10: Ira, George, Edward, and Lee, 1994, undated
Subseries 4.11: The Magic Room, 1961-1962, undated
Subseries 4.12: Origin of Blues, 1991-2004, undated
Subseries 4.13: Snake in the Belly, 1956-1957, undated
Subseries 4.14: Wiley, 1957-1984, undated
Subseries 4.15: Articles, Ideas and Drafts, 1961-2004, undated
Series 5: Artist Files, 1880-2010, undated
Series 6: Texas Blues Research, 1858-2011, undated
Subseries 6.1: Texas Blues Research, 1910-2010, undated
Subseries 6.2: Lead Files, 1962-1980, undated
Subseries 6.3: Trip Notes, 1960-1989, undated
Subseries 6.4: Song Histories, 1920-1982, undated
Subseries 6.5: Music, 1928-2011, undated
Subseries 6.6: Record Catalogs, 1963-2006, undated
Subseries 6.7: Maps, 1958-1989, undated
Series 7: Robert Johnson, 1910-2015, undated
Subseries 7.1: Research Materials, 1910-2015, undated
Subseries 7.2: Who Killed Robert Johnson Manuscript, 1955-2015, undated
Series 8: Office Files, 1938-2000, undated
Series 9: Correspondence, 1959-2015, undated
Series 10: Organizations, Groups and Buffs, 1961-2003, undated
Series 11: Festivals and Living Museums, 1960-2003, undated
Series 12: Music Journals, 1971-2006, undated
Series 13: Subject Files, 1896-2015, undated
Series 14: People Files, 1928-2014, undated
Series 15: Audio Cassette Tapes and Digital Files, 1941-2007, undated
Processing Information
Collection processed by Karen Adjei, intern, 2020; John Benko, intern, 2019; Vanessa Broussard-Simmons, archivist, 2019; Kevin DeVries, intern, 2019; MarÃa Daniela Jiménez, archivist, 2019; Katie Kerekes, intern, 2020; Alison L. Oswald, archivist, 2019; Franklin A. Robinson Jr., archivist, 2019; Brian Quann, intern, 2020; Kai Walther, intern, 2020; supervised by Vanessa Broussard-Simmons, archivist, 2019-2020.
Photographic materials scanned by Noah Stewart, digital imaging technician, 2020. Texas blues manuscripts photographed and digitized by Sydney Pearce, intern, 2023; Capri Stevenson-Bisom, intern, 2023; and Sophie Frankel, intern, 2023; supervised by Janice Stagnitto Ellis, senior paper conservator, 2023.
Materials have been removed from public access pending investigation under the Smithsonian Institution's Ethical Returns and Shared Stewardship Policy.
Finding aid authored by Vanessa Broussard-Simmons, MarÃa Daniela Jiménez, Alison L. Oswald, and Franklin A. Robinson Jr. with supplemental biographical and historical information contributed by Craig Orr, archivist, 2019; John Troutman, NMAH music curator, 2020; and Tony Scherman, author, music historian, and journalist, 2020 revised in 2023.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Existence and Location of Copies
Photographic materials in Series 1 were scanned in 2020.
Documents relating to the Texas blues in Series 6 were photographed and digitized in 2023.
In addition, materials in the collection were digitized for the National Museum of American History's 2023-2025 exhibit Treasures and Trouble: Looking Inside a Legendary Blues Archive; for Smithsonian Books' 2023 publication, Biography of a Phantom: A Robert Johnson Blues Odyssey; and Smithsonian Folkways' 2023 release, Playing for the Man at the Door: Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick, 1958-1971.
Genre/Form
Business cards
Compact discs
Contracts
Correspondence
Folklore
Newspaper clippings
Posters
Road maps -- United States
Television scripts
Ephemera -- 20th century
Black-and-white negatives
Contact sheets -- 20th cenury
Color slides -- 20th century
Business records -- 20th century
Family papers -- 20th century
Resumes
Diaries -- 20th century
Journals (periodicals) -- 20th century
Financial records -- 20th century
Audio cassettes -- 20th century
Manuscripts -- Music -- 20th century
Playbills
Field recordings
Writings -- 20th century
Transcripts -- 20th century
Manuscripts for publication
Manuscripts -- 20th century
Color negatives
Negatives -- 20th century
Articles -- 20th century
Restrictions
Collection is open for research. Access to original materials in boxes 76-80 is prohibited. Researchers must use digital copies.
Additional materials have been removed from public access pending investigation under the Smithsonian Institution's Ethical Returns and Shared Stewardship Policy.
Separated Materials
National Museum of American History's Division of Culture and the Arts
Artifacts acquired as part of the collection include:
Washburn style G guitar, serial number 46472, Accession number 2019.0234.01.
Set of quills (or panpipes) made and played by blues artist Joe Patterson. Accession number 2019.0234.02.
Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections
Audio recordings acquired as part of the collection are listed in The Guide to the Mack McCormick Audio Tapes Collection prepared by Jeff Place, 2020-2022.
NMAH.AC.1485
Large EAD
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep87d0d0dd0-eaee-4e5e-9e87-ebca1a5d86d7
NMAH.AC.1485
ACAH
Record ID
ebl-1687544100879-1687544123740-0
