William Alexander Percy
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- William Percy (bishop) was a Chancellor of the University of Cambridge during the 15th century
William Alexander Percy (May 14, 1885 – January 21, 1942), an American lawyer, planter and poet from Greenville, Mississippi. His autobiography Lanterns on the Levee (Knopf 1941) became a bestseller. His father LeRoy Percy was the last United States Senator from Mississippi elected by the legislature. And in that largely Protestant state, William championed the Roman Catholicism of his French mother.
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[edit] Overview
Percy attended the Episcopal University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, a postbellum tradition in his family, spent a year in Paris and then earned a law degree from Harvard and practiced law in his father's firm in Greenville. He served in the US Army in World War I, earning the rank of Captain and the Croix de Guerre. From 1925 to 1932 he edited the Yale Young Poets series, the first of its kind in the country. He also published four volumes of poetry himself with the Yale University Press.
A Southern man of letters, Percy befriended many fellow writers, Southern, Northern and European, including William Faulkner. He socialized with Langston Hughes and other people in and about the Harlem Renaissance. Will was a sort of godfather to the Fugitives, or Southern Agrarians, as John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate and Robert Penn Warren were often called, at Vanderbilt. His cousin was Walker Percy, whom he adopted along with Walker’s two siblings after their mother Mattie Sue Phinizee, the widow of Will’s cousin, died in a car accident, which was likely also suicide, a fate both her husband, her father-in-law (Will’s Uncle Walker), and his first cousin LeRoy Pratt Percy, Walker’s father, met with.
Other works include the text of "They Cast Their Nets in Galilee," which is included in the Episcopal Hymnal 1982 (Hymn 661), and the Collected Poems (Knopf 1943). A homosexual, one piece by Percy is included under the name A.W. Percy in Men and Boys, an anonymous anthology of Uranian poetry (New York, 1934).
A friend of Herbert Hoover from the Belgium Relief Effort during the early years of World War I, he was put in charge of relief during the great flood of 1927, when an area larger than all New England (minus Maine) was inundated. During the flood, thousands of African-Americans fleeing inundated farms and plantations sought refuge on the levee in Greenville. Percy believed that they needed to be evacuated to Vicksburg, Mississippi and ships were prepared to remove them. However, local planters, including Percy's own father, opposed this decision, believing that if the African-Americans were removed from the area, they would never return. Percy capitulated and the ships left Greenville empty. Thereafter, conditions on the levee deteriorated and Percy received his share of negative press. He later resigned his post and left for a trip to Japan the following day.
[edit] Percy Family Writers
[edit] Other Percys
[edit] External links
- American Experience: "Fatal Flood" - Percy bio and his participation in events after the Mississippi Flood of 1927
[edit] References
- Barry, John Rising Tide Simon&Schuster, 1998.
- Johansson, Warren & Percy, William A. Outing: Shattering the Conspiracy of Silence. Harrington Park Press, 1994, pp. 150,233
- Percy, William Alexander Lanterns on the Levee: Recollections of a Planter's Son (Alfred A. Knopf, New York 1941)
- Wyatt-Brown, Bertram The House of Percy: Honor, Melancholy, and Imagination in a Southern Family Oxford University Press, 1994.