The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

C.T. Vivian's vast collection of books to anchor library

Civil rights leader donates volumes to new park’s museum.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com

When C.T. Vivian was growing up in Macomb, Ill., one of his favorite places was the local library. All of the librarians knew him and eagerly fed his reading habit.

Few blacks actually used the Macomb library then, and they found even fewer books there that were written for or about them.

“Nowhere in town was there a place to really know who we were as a black person,” said the 93-year-old civil rights icon

and Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom recipient. “You had to find out by accident.”

Once such accident was young Vivian’s discovery of a book on a high shelf at the library. The title is lost to him now, but he has never forgotten the book, which chronicled the lives of extraor- dinary black men and women.

“That was the only book in that library that was totally black,” Vivian said. “We were always seen through the eyes of whites.”

It was at that point that the future civil rights leader became a collector. A collector of books largely about the black experience and written by black authors. Over nearly 80 years, Vivian has

amassed a collection of more than 6,000 volumes, including first editions, by the likes of Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes and W.E.B. Du Bois. Some are signed, like a copy of Phillis Wheatley’s 1773 “Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral,” the first known book authored by an African-American woman.

“Dad reads all the time,” said Vivian’s daughter, Denise Morse. “Growing up, we had books everywhere. On every table, stacked in the corners. He and mom would get in a car and drive to California, stopping at little bookstores along the way. They would come home with a trunk load of books.”

The question now is what to do with the collection. And the city of Atlanta and a local developer have come up with an answer.

Vivian is donating his collection to the National Monuments Foundation for inclusion in the Peace Column, the centerpiec­e of the upcoming Rodney Cook Sr. Park in Vine City. The C.T. Vivian Library will be housed in a library at the bottom of the 110-foot column.

“C.T.’s library is the gravitas for the Peace Column Museum that gives it its anchor,” said Rodney Cook Jr., the CEO of the National Monuments Foundation and the son of the park’s namesake.

The Peace Column will be the National Monument Foundation’s third major installati­on in Atlanta, following the Millennium Gate Museum, a 101-foot arch based on Rome’s Arch of Titus, and the Prince of Wales’ Olympics Monument.

“Great cities have great monuments and great public spaces to bring those cities together,” Cook said. “So I wonder how a city this big can last if its leading attraction is the Georgia World Congress Center. We need cathedrals. Parks. Museums to truly become a cosmopolit­an, global place.”

In May, the city — hoping that it will trigger a rebirth of Vine City — broke ground on Rodney Cook Sr. Park in the shadow of both Mercedes-Benz Stadium and the former home of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Along with the Peace Column, there will be 18 monuments to civil rights leaders scattered throughout the 16-acre, $45 million park. Cook Sr., a former Atlanta alderman and state representa­tive, was one of the few white elected officials who voted to seat Julian Bond in the Georgia House in 1966. Cook Sr. died in 2013.

The library in Vivian’s southwest Atlanta home is in a word, amazing. On Wednesday, his youngest daughter, Charisse Thornton, and Dawnn Mitchell painstakin­gly catalogued the collection, which stretches through several rooms of Vivian’s house. They haven’t even gone through his personal papers or his massive art collection, which will not be included in the official library.

Thousands of books, some dating to the early 1800s, line the walls, along with volumes of old black magazines like Negro Digest and Jet. Busts of bold black faces sit on pedestals. Photograph­s of his late wife, Octavia, rest on his desk.

“We never thought the collection was valuable in a sense of money,” Vivian said. “They were valuable in the sense that we can read our history. I want every black child to be able to read about themselves. So books about black people were always nearby for my children and for anyone who wanted to read about black people and understand how we got this history.”

Mitchell, who grew up in New York City, can hardly concentrat­e on cataloguin­g in lieu of listening to Vivian. Because the library is being organized, Mitchell had to find a copy of poems by Vivian’s favorite poet, Claude McKay, a seminal figure from the Harlem Renaissanc­e.

He explains to her how McKay, whom he met once, could write such tender love poems like “To O.E.A,” then offer blistering racial critiques like, “If We Must Die.”

Finding the poems, he sits at his desk and recites them.

“I could sit here and listen to him all day,” Mitchell said.

With the vastness of the library and the résumé of the owner, the fate of Vivian’s book collection has been a topic of speculatio­n for years. Morse, treasurer of the C.T. & Octavia Vivian Museum and Archives, said several organizati­ons and colleges have offered to take the library.

“We have been thinking for some time about where it would go but were never able to come up with a place where we felt we fit in. Then he arrived and it just fit,” Vivian said. “It couldn’t have worked out any better.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? C.T. Vivian is donating his book collection, amassed over nearly 80 years, to the National Monuments Foundation. The C.T. Vivian Library, a collection of books by black authors about the black experience, includes first editions by the likes of Ralph...
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM C.T. Vivian is donating his book collection, amassed over nearly 80 years, to the National Monuments Foundation. The C.T. Vivian Library, a collection of books by black authors about the black experience, includes first editions by the likes of Ralph...
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? The Peace Column, shown here in an artist rendering, will be the centerpiec­e of the $45 million Rodney Cook Sr. Park in Vine City. The C.T. Vivian Library will be home to Vivian’s collection and located at the bottom of the column.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM The Peace Column, shown here in an artist rendering, will be the centerpiec­e of the $45 million Rodney Cook Sr. Park in Vine City. The C.T. Vivian Library will be home to Vivian’s collection and located at the bottom of the column.

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