[Alton
Augustus Adams: Bandmaster, United States Navy]
A
visitor to AfriClassical.com this week asked where Alton Augustus
Adams was. We explained that the website is a one-person project
which can present only a tiny fraction of the thousands of composers
and musicians of African descent. The site was launched in 2000 to demonstrate to teachers,
students, musicians and the general public that African Heritage in
Classical Music has existed for centuries. We explained to the
visitor that AfriClassical can post information on many more
composers and musicians, and Alton Augustus Adams could be featured
on the blog.
The papers and music manuscripts of Alton Augustus Adams are in the reference collection of the Center for Black Music Research of Columbia College Chicago. An online entry on him is the CBMR Research Project Discovering Alton Augustus Adams. Here is an excerpt:
The papers and music manuscripts of Alton Augustus Adams are in the reference collection of the Center for Black Music Research of Columbia College Chicago. An online entry on him is the CBMR Research Project Discovering Alton Augustus Adams. Here is an excerpt:
“Alton
Augustus Adams (1889-1987) was the first black bandmaster in the
United States Navy - an incredible fact since his service in that
capacity began with an all-black band in 1917, when blacks could
serve in the armed forces only in such positions as steward and mess
attendant. He also organized three Navy bands that toured the U.S.
mainland during 1924, and in 1942 he founded the first integrated
band in the United States Navy.”
Professor
Mark Wolbers is Conductor of the University Wind Ensemble at the
University of Alaska Anchorage. He has kindly provided us with a
copy of a program, picturing Alton Augustus Adams, from April 18,
2008:
“The
University Wind Ensemble: Wade In Water
Work
songs, dances, spirituals, marches and more. Original music for the
wind band by Adolphus Hailstork, William Grant Still, Florence Price,
Julian Work, Gary Powell Nash and Alton
Adams.”
Prof.
Dominique-René de Lerma, http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
has contributed this biography from the manuscript of a major reference work. It is accompanied by a Bibliography and Works list
which we will present at a later date:
“He was born a
Danish citizen in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, and began music studies
at age nine. He was apprentice to the shoemaker Albert Francis, who
was also a bandmaster from whom Adams learned conducting and studied
instruments. He joined the St. Thomas Municipal Band playing piccolo
in 1906. In 1910 he organized the St. Thomas Juvenile Band which was
engaged for social events and concerts at Emancipation Garden.
“He had been a
student by correspondence of Hugh Clarke of the University of
Pennsylvania, followed by work at the School of Music Theory at
Carnegie Hall, then at the Royal College of Music, earning his B.M.
degree from the University Extension of Chicago’s Conservatory of
Music. He was appointed music editor in 1915 of The herald, a
newspaper in St. Croix and in the next year he began writing a band
column for Jacobs' band monthly which caught the notice of
John Philip Sousa and Edwin Franco Goldman. He was also on the
editorial staff of Metronome, and Army and Navy musician.
“When the United
States purchased the Virgin Islands in 1917, his Juvenile Band became
affiliated with the U.S. Navy with Adams as Chief Musician. He
served in that capacity – the first Black bandmaster of the Navy --
from 1917 to 1947, with tours of the U.S. starting in 1924, when he
studied the American music education system (he developed the music
program for the Virgin Island schools, supervising it from 1918 to
1931) and found himself a welcome visitor at Hampton, Washington,
Philadelphia, and New York, with particular success when his band
marched in Harlem.
“His unit was
transferred to Guantanamo Bay in 1931, interrupting his social
contacts. In 1932 a fire in St. Thomas destroyed his home and
library, and killed his daughter, Hazel. He retired from the Navy in
1933, returning to St. Thomas to resume his work as an educator and
newspaper columnist (now for The bulletin). With the start of
World War Two, he was reactivated and sent again to Guantanmo Bay,
conducting what then became briefly an integrated band until he was
moved back to St. Thomas and then, in 1944, to Puerto Rico.
“He retired from
the Navy in 1945. The remainder of his life was spent working with
the Virgin Islands Hotel Association, opening his home as the Adams
1799 Guest House until he closed it... In 1963, the Virgin
Islands march was designated the official anthem of the
territory. In addition, he was an officer of the Red Cross and helped
in the establishment of the Charlotte Amalie public library.”
“BIBLIOGRAPHY [Excerpt]
Adams,
Alton. The memoirs of Alton Augustus Adams, Sr., first Black
bandmaster of the United States Navy, ed. by Mark Clague,
with a foreword by Samuel Floyd, Jr. Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2008. 2008).”
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