FMP: Florida Memory Project
      State Library and Archives of Florida | Site Map | Contact Us     
 
  Home Florida Photographic Collection Online Classroom Highlights of Florida History Collections Exhibits  

 Florida Memory Home > Online Classroom > Zora Neale Hurston


Zora Neale Hurston Home

History

Documents

Photos

Teacher Resources

Contact Us

History - Zora Neale Hurston, the WPA and the Cross City Turpentine Camp

Zora Neale Hurston began working for the Florida division of the Work Projects Administration (WPA) in Florida in May of 1938. She signed on for the position of "Junior Interviewer" with the Federal Writers' Project (FWP). At the time, Hurston had already published Jonah's Gourd Vine and Mules and Men and was the only widely published author on the Florida payroll. Working out of her Eatonville home, she finished her fifth novel, Moses: Man of the Mountain, while making numberous folklife collecting trips across Florida. Hurston never mentioned her work with the FWP in her autobiography, perhaps because of the stigma associated with the WPA's relief programs.

In 1939, Hurston went to Cross City, Florida to interview workers of the Aycock and Lindsay turpentine camp. Material from her essay "Turpentine" later appeared in her book Seraph on the Suwanee.

Turpentine camps were isolated and known for their terrible and abusive working conditions. It was unusual for a writer to be allowed in to gather information. Hurston's essay is one of the few written, first-hand accounts of the lives of turpentine workers. Although Hurston was aware of and made notes concerning some of the abuses that occurred in the camp, this essay focuses on the workday.

From 1937 to 1942, Stetson Kennedy headed the Florida Writers' Project unit on folklore, oral history, and social-ethnic studies. Kennedy and Hurston worked together to capture the traditions, songs, tales, and anecdotes of the people of Florida. Kennedy's introduction to A Reference Guide to the Florida Foklore from the Federal WPA includes the story of the trip that he and Hurston took to the Cross City turpentine camp. His introduction mentions the essay she wrote and helps to put the piece in context.

(For a more thorough description of Hurston's work with the WPA, see Go Gator and Muddy the Water: Writings by Zora Neale Hurston from the Federal Writer's Project. Edited and with a biographical essay by Pamela Bordelon.)

 


NEW AND NOTEWORTHY ON FLORIDA MEMORY
Conjunto Aventura   2010 Florida History Fair   Common Ground
Conjunto Aventura
Norteño, sometimes also called Norteña or Conjunto, literally translates to the word “northern,” referring to the region of northern Mexico and present day southern Texas where the musical style originated.
  Resources for the 2010 Florida History Fair
This is a list of resources available online from the State Library and Archives of Florida relating to the suggested Florida History Fair topics.
  See the "Common Ground" slideshow!
This presentation is part of “Common Ground,” a global event consisting of museums, galleries, and archives worldwide showing the same slideshow of photographs in public spaces on the same weekend (October 2-3, 2009).

 


Great Seal of the State of Florida  
Florida Memory is funded under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the Florida Department of State, State Library & Archives of Florida. Contact Us. Disclaimer.

Florida’s history is your history. Help us preserve it by joining the Friends of the State Library & Archives of Florida.


MyFlorida.com