Weik, Mary Hays, 1898-
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Weik, Mary Hays, 1898-
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Weik, Mary Hays, 1898-
Weik, Mary Hays
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Weik, Mary Hays
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Biographical History
Writer, activist in the world government and anti-nuclear movements, founder and director of the American Federation of World Citizens (ca. 1954-1964) and the Committee to End Radiological Hazzards (ca. 1964-1979).
Mary Hays Weik was born in 1898 in Greencastle, Indiana. She graduated with an A.B. from DePauw University and later worked as a journalist, a consultant for social agencies and schools, and as a writer. Mary Hays Weik published her first book, Adventure: A Book of Verse in 1919. She also wrote books on the atomic pollution of the environment and edited an anti-nuclear newsletter. She published her first book, The House at Cherry Hill, for children and young adults in 1938. In 1966, she published The Jazz Man, a story about a young African-American boy living in Harlem. The book, illustrated by her daughter the author/illustrator Ann Grifalconi, was a Newbery Honor Book in 1967 and also was the Caldecott Medal runner-up for best illustrated book that same year. Mary Hays Weik continued to write for children and young adults and in 1972 published a work of historical fiction, A House on Liberty Street, that drew on the life of an ancestor, a German immigrant who came to the United States in the 1840s. Mary Hays Weik died on December 25, 1979 in Manhattan, New York. Biographical Sources: Something About the Author, vol. 3, pp. 247-248. and vol. 23, p. 233.
American author of children's and young adult books; Newbery Honor for The Jazz Man in 1967.
Mary Hays Weik was born in 1898 in Greencastle, Indiana. She graduated with an A.B. from DePauw University and later worked as a journalist, a consultant for social agencies and schools, and as a writer. Mary Hays Weik published her first book, Adventure: A Book of Verse in 1919. She also wrote books on the atomic pollution of the environment and edited an anti-nuclear newsletter. She published her first book, The House at Cherry Hill, for children and young adults in 1938. In 1966, she published The Jazz Man, a story about a young African-American boy living in Harlem. The book, illustrated by her daughter the author/illustrator Ann Grifalconi, was a Newbery Honor Book in 1967 and also was the Caldecott Medal runner-up for best illustrated book that same year. Mary Hays Weik continued to write for children and young adults and in 1972 published a work of historical fiction, A House on Liberty Street, that drew on the life of an ancestor, a German immigrant who came to the United States in the 1840s. Mary Hays Weik died on December 25, 1979 in Manhattan, New York.
Biographical Sources: Something About the Author, vol. 3, pp. 247-248. and vol. 23, p. 233.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/52223430
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85177304
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n85177304
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Musicians
Musicians
African Americans
African Americans
Authors, American
Antinuclear movement
Children's literature
Children's literature, American
Children's plays, American
Jazz
Jazz
Nuclear energy
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United States
AssociatedPlace
Harlem (New York, N.Y.)
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>