Theresa Sherrer Davidson (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Theresa Julienna Sherrer Davidson (October 12, 1893 – September 23, 1986) was an American classicist, lawyer, law librarian, and artist. Theresa Sherrer Davidson was born on October 12, 1893 in Marion, Ohio, the daughter of Frederick Anthony and Mary Alge Sherrer. She studied at Western Reserve University from 1910-1912 and graduated from Oberlin College with a B.A. in 1914 and an M.A. in 1915, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with majors in mathematics and classics. She taught both subjects at Martin College in Pulaski, Tennessee from 1915 to 1917. While there, she met Donald Davidson, a Vanderbilt University student who would become a leading southern literary figure - a founder of both The Agrarians and The Fugitives - and an ardent southern regionalist, racist, and pro-segregationist. They ma

Property Value
dbo:abstract Theresa Julienna Sherrer Davidson (October 12, 1893 – September 23, 1986) was an American classicist, lawyer, law librarian, and artist. Theresa Sherrer Davidson was born on October 12, 1893 in Marion, Ohio, the daughter of Frederick Anthony and Mary Alge Sherrer. She studied at Western Reserve University from 1910-1912 and graduated from Oberlin College with a B.A. in 1914 and an M.A. in 1915, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with majors in mathematics and classics. She taught both subjects at Martin College in Pulaski, Tennessee from 1915 to 1917. While there, she met Donald Davidson, a Vanderbilt University student who would become a leading southern literary figure - a founder of both The Agrarians and The Fugitives - and an ardent southern regionalist, racist, and pro-segregationist. They married in 1918. Theresa Davidson received a Bachelor of Laws degree from Vanderbilt in 1922, and was admitted to the Tennessee bar. She taught at Ward Belmont from 1923-1924 and was law librarian at the Vanderbilt University Law Library from 1924-1929. She began doctoral studies in classics at Vanderbilt under Clyde Pharr, with a focus on Roman law. They collaborated on the first translation of the Codex Theodosianus into English, with Davidson translating the first book of the Codex as her doctoral thesis. She graduated with a PhD in 1943. Davidson lectured on classics at Vanderbilt from 1942-1949. Pharr and Davidson had a falling out over credit for the Codex project, and Davidson took legal action. Davidson was credited as Associate Editor when the Codex was published by Princeton University Press. Davidson studied at the Cleveland School of Art in the early 1910s and under Nashville artist Leora Pearl Saunders in the 1930s. Davidson created woodcut illustrations for some of her husband's books: The Tennessee (1946 and 1948), a two volume part of the Rivers of America Series, Still Rebels, Still Yankees (1957), and The Long Street (1961). The illustrations were favorably received by book critics. In 1957, Davidson was one of seventeen lawyers who defended sixteen defendants accused of violating an injunction by judge Robert L. Taylor prohibiting interference with the integration of Clinton High School in Clinton, Tennessee. The school was the subject of violent anti-desegregation protests and was the target of a terrorist bombing in 1958. Theresa Sherrer Davidson died on 23 September 1986 in Nashville. (en)
dbo:wikiPageID 71509338 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 4472 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1118455836 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Case_Western_Reserve_University dbr:Pulaski,_Tennessee dbr:Robert_Love_Taylor_(judge) dbr:Vanderbilt_University dbr:Donald_Davidson_(poet) dbr:Clinton,_Tennessee dbr:Clinton_High_School_(Clinton,_Tennessee) dbr:Codex_Theodosianus dbr:Martin_College dbr:Cleveland_Institute_of_Art dbr:Fugitives_(poets) dbc:1893_births dbc:1986_deaths dbc:American_classical_scholars dbc:American_women_artists dbr:Bar_(law) dbc:American_women_lawyers dbc:Created_via_preloaddraft dbr:Clyde_Pharr dbr:Marion,_Ohio dbr:Phi_Beta_Kappa dbr:Southern_Agrarians dbr:Southern_United_States dbr:Oberlin_College dbr:Racial_segregation dbr:Rivers_of_America_Series dbr:Ward–Belmont_College dbr:Woodcut dbr:Roman_law dbr:School_integration_in_the_United_States
dbp:dateformat mdy (en)
dbp:fetchwikidata ALL (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Fdate dbt:Authority_control dbt:Reflist dbt:Date dbt:Infobox_person/Wikidata
dcterms:subject dbc:1893_births dbc:1986_deaths dbc:American_classical_scholars dbc:American_women_artists dbc:American_women_lawyers dbc:Created_via_preloaddraft
rdf:type owl:Thing foaf:Person dbo:Person dul:NaturalPerson wikidata:Q19088 wikidata:Q215627 wikidata:Q5 wikidata:Q729 dbo:Animal dbo:Eukaryote dbo:Species schema:Person
rdfs:comment Theresa Julienna Sherrer Davidson (October 12, 1893 – September 23, 1986) was an American classicist, lawyer, law librarian, and artist. Theresa Sherrer Davidson was born on October 12, 1893 in Marion, Ohio, the daughter of Frederick Anthony and Mary Alge Sherrer. She studied at Western Reserve University from 1910-1912 and graduated from Oberlin College with a B.A. in 1914 and an M.A. in 1915, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with majors in mathematics and classics. She taught both subjects at Martin College in Pulaski, Tennessee from 1915 to 1917. While there, she met Donald Davidson, a Vanderbilt University student who would become a leading southern literary figure - a founder of both The Agrarians and The Fugitives - and an ardent southern regionalist, racist, and pro-segregationist. They ma (en)
rdfs:label Theresa Sherrer Davidson (en)
owl:sameAs http://viaf.org/viaf/165703489 wikidata:Theresa Sherrer Davidson http://data.bibliotheken.nl/id/thes/p069160074 https://global.dbpedia.org/id/CNn18
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Theresa_Sherrer_Davidson?oldid=1118455836&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Theresa_Sherrer_Davidson
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Donald_Davidson_(poet) dbr:Codex_Theodosianus dbr:Rivers_of_America_Series
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Theresa_Sherrer_Davidson