Acknowledgements

Now, a personal note. As we get ready to launch, I want to thank everyone who worked on this first episode and on the project, and who gave us encouragement. You can find full credits on the Episode 1 page.

Hannah Huber and Sam Worley have been the very best partners on this project. I’m grateful also for Bruce Manuel whose buttery voice to me summons Green’s words and thoughts so beautifully. Will Davis believed in us and got us off the ground.

This project would not be possible without the support and the groundwork of The Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, especially its director Woody Register, and his colleagues Chris McCreary and Tiffany Momon. Thanks to them we were able to meet the brilliant Cynthia Greenlee, and you’ll be hearing more from her. Also thanks to Sewanee’s Center for Southern Studies, and my former boss John Grammer who introduced me to Hannah Huber, director of the digital humanities project based on Green’s manuscript, the Ely Green Variorum. John Grammer, the ultimate matchmaker, brought me over to meet Hannah at a faculty party and said you two should talk about Ely Green. So we did. 

The School of Letters brought me into contact with Sam Worley, the incredibly talented writer of the first episode, and third musketeer. Writer Karla Diggs, who will author an upcoming episode, is also a School of Letters graduate. Finish your novel Karla, we have work to do! While they were School of Letters students with Hannah Huber, both Kristy Sherrod and Ayo Alofe produced academic work on Green’s writings. 

The Sewanee Archives, headed by Mandi Johnson, is the keeper of this manuscript. Both the Archives and the Shiverick Recording Studio are under the purview of Kevin Reynolds, Associate Provost for Library and Information Technology Services. Arthur Ben Chitty and his wife Betty made sure every note about their relationship with Ely Green made it to the archives. Em Chitty continues to provide contemporary insight into their historical work. 

All of this would be one-dimensional without the extraordinary Patricia Ravarra, Ely Green’s granddaughter. Her openness and insight are at the center of this project. 

While this is an independent project, the mountain, Sewanee, and the University of the South have been sources of support and inspiration. In addition to those mentioned above, so many people have engaged us in conversations of joy and of reckoning. For this I thank Sibby Anderson-Thompkins, Tiana Clark, Virginia Craighill, Patrick Dean, Brooks Egerton, Rachel Fredericks, Luke Gair, David Haskell, Adam Hawkins, Sally Hubbard, Adam Latham, Kelly Malone, Pamela Macfie, Tom Macfie, Chris McDonough, Lizzie Motlow, Jamie Quatro, Kevin Reynolds, Neil Shea (honorary mountaineer), Eric Smith, Jerry Smith, Nathan Stewart, Meera Subramanian, John Jeremiah Sullivan, John Willis, Elizabeth Wilson, and my bartender Brian. Thanks to Rob and Phoebe Pearigen for returning to the mountain to reignite a love for the arts and humanities. 

In Los Angeles, Sara Terry and Thomas Lakeman have gone the extra mile in a very real way to help me see Ely Green’s life in Los Angeles. Thomas, besides artfully imitating Transatlantic accents, is also our designer. 

I want to thank again everyone involved in the audio and music: Ryan Crouch, Sarah Rimkus, Bria Suggs, Madison Sellers, Amelia Barakat and Gus Goldsmith.

And sometimes it’s important to thank people who haven’t done anything—in that amazing way of keeping obstacles from alighting on your desk. That’s my boss Justin Taylor, who, to be serious, has kindly supported this project every step of the way, and made it possible through the magic of Veranda for me to meet author Ralph Eubanks, a very important consultant for this project for whom I am so grateful.

My husband, Stephen Alvarez, recorded, edited, directed, offered insight, patience, love and very firm feedback, and reminded me that we have everything we need to do our work. To Stephen, thank you from the depths of my heart. 

Finally, I always want to say thank you to Mr. Green, who so openly shared his life, who had so many secrets, and adventures, and heartaches, who fought for equality, and whose footsteps I try to find here on the mountain.

April Alvarez

Next
Next

The Ely Green Project