Edwin Mims (1872–1959) was an American university professor of English literature. He served as the chair of the English Department at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, for thirty years from 1912 to 1942, and he taught many members of the Fugitives and the Southern Agrarians, two literary movements in the South. He was a staunch opponent of lynching and a practicing Methodist.
Early life
Edwin Mims was born in 1872 in Richmond, Arkansas, near [Texarkana, Texas|Texarkana]].[1][2] His father was Andrew Jackson Mims and his mother, Cornelia Williamson.[1] He had a brother, Stewart L. Mims, who later resided in Greenwich, Connecticut.[1]
The second Chancellor of Vanderbilt University, James Hampton Kirkland (1859–1939), convinced him to return to his alma mater to teach.[3] He went on to serve as the Chair of the English Department at Vanderbilt University from 1912 to 1942.[2][3][4][5] One of his requirements was to ask his students to learn a thousand verses of poetry by heart.[3] He also asked students to write an autobiographical essay each year.[6] He wrote a history of Vanderbilt University as well as of Chancellor Kirkland.[3] Some of his students included Donald Davidson, Robert Penn Warren, Cleanth Brooks, Andrew Nelson Lytle, Allen Tate, Merrill Moore and Jesse Stuart.[4][6][7] Stuart's Beyond Dark Hills, was the direct result of one of Mims's assignments (writing an autobiographical essay); it was published in 1938.[6] During his tenure as chair, he wrote to Chancellor Kirkland to discourage him to match the offer that Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, had made to his colleague John Crowe Ransom, so that Ransom would leave for Ohio instead.[4][8] However, Allen Tate tried to expose his hypocrisy as Mims assured Ransom he would be welcome to stay in his department at Vanderbilt.[8] Another colleague, Lyle H. Lanier, agreed that this demonstrated Mims's hypocrisy.[8]
In June 1898, Mims married Clara Puryear, the daughter of a tobacco broker from Paducah, Kentucky.[4] They had four children: Edwin, Catherine, Thomas and Ella.[4] His daughter Ella was active in the Nashville chapter of the Southern Regional Council.[9]
A pair of statues representing Dismas and Lazarus in the foyer of the Benton Chapel on the campus of Vanderbilt University are dedicated in his honor.[10] The Edwin Mims Professorship at Vanderbilt University is named in his honor.[2] It was the result of a fundraising campaign by alumnus Lucius E. Burch Jr. (1912–1996).[2]
^ abcdefghiWilliam Stevens Powell, Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 1991, p. 281 [2]
^ abcMary Weaks-Baxter, Reclaiming the American Farmer: The Reinvention of a Regional Mythology in Twentieth-century Southern Writing, Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press, 2006, pp. 81-82 [3]
^Alphonse Vinh, Cleanth Brooks and Allen Tate: Collected Letters, 1933-1976, Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press, 1998, p. 75 [4]
^Houston, Benjamin (2012). The Nashville Way: Racial Etiquette and the Struggle for Social Justice in a Southern City. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. p. 40. ISBN9780820343266. OCLC940632744.