Home
  • About
  • Author List
  • Authors for Younger Readers
  • County List
  • Literary Map
  • Related Links
  • Resources for Teachers and Librarians
  • Writing Resources for Students
  • What Makes an Alabama Writer?
  • A Year in Alabama Books
  • Alabama Center for the Book
Menu Bottom Graphic
Author Information

Ellen Tarry

Dates

September 26, 1906 - September 23, 2008

Alabama Connection

  • Birmingham, Jefferson County: birthplace, childhood residence, brief adult residence
  • Montgomery, Montgomery County: education
  • Anniston, Calhoun County: brief adult residence

Selected Works

  • Tarry, Ellen. Janie Belle.Illus. Myrtle Sheldon. New York: Garden City Pub. Co., 1940. For younger readers.
  • Tarry, Ellen. Hezekiah Horton.Illus. Oliver Harrington. New York: Viking Press, 1942. For younger readers.
  • Tarry, Ellen, and Marie Hall Ets. My Dog Rinty.Illus. Alexander and Alexandra Alland. New York: Viking Press, 1946. Rpt. New York: Viking Press, 1970. For younger readers.
  • Tarry, Ellen. The Runaway Elephant.Illus. Oliver Harrington. New York: Viking Press, 1950. For younger readers.
  • Tarry, Ellen. The Third Door: The Autobiography of an American Negro Woman.New York: D. McKay Co., 1955. Rpt. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1992.
  • Tarry, Ellen. Young Jim: The Early Years of James Weldon Johnson.New York: Dodd, Mead, 1967. For younger readers.

Biographical Information

Ellen Tarry was born and grew up in Birmingham, Ala. She converted to Roman Catholicism while attending St. Francis de Sales School, a boarding school in Rock Castle, Va. In 1923, Tarry enrolled at the State Normal School (now Alabama State University) in Montgomery. Upon completion of her teacher training program, Tarry returned to Birmingham, where she taught from 1925 to 1929. During this time, Tarry began writing for The Birmingham Truth. She moved to New York City in 1929, hoping to earn enough money to attend journalism school at Columbia University. The Great Depression made this impossible, and she worked many jobs to support herself. In the mid-1930s, Tarry joined the Negro Writers' Guild where she became friends with Harlem Renaissance writers such as Claude McKay and James Weldon Johnson. In 1936, she began working as a researcher/writer for the Federal Writers Project in New York. For two years, she also received a scholarship to study at the Writers Laboratory in the Cooperative School for Student Teachers (now Bank Street College of Education).

In 1938, Tarry began volunteering at Friendship House, a Catholic interracial outreach center in Harlem. Her experiences there inspired her first two children's books, Janie Bell and Hezekiah Horton. Tarry began writing feature articles for the black newspaper Amsterdam News in 1942. Shortly after she started there, she was asked to co-found a Chicago branch of Friendship House. She returned to New York in 1943, working again briefly for the Amsterdam News before being recruited to open a USO club for black soldiers in Anniston, Ala. In Anniston, she was married to a soldier stationed locally, but the marriage didn't last. She returned to New York in 1944, where her daughter was born late that year. From 1945 to 1948, Tarry was the Harlem Area supervisor for the National Catholic Community Service. In 1951, she became the director of community relations for the St. Charles School and Community Center Fund. Later, she worked for New York City's Housing and Urban Development office. She published two more children's books (one co-authored by Marie Hall Ets), four biographies (including one of James Weldon Johnson) written for young adults, and her autobiography. Tarry died in New York in 2008.

Interests and Themes

Ellen Tarry's picture books portray black life in a positive and realistic way. Her young adult biographies reflect her Catholic faith as well as her black heritage. Tarry's autobiography, The Third Door, describes her experiences as an African American whose skin was light enough to pass for white but who chose to identify as black.

For More Information

Please check your local library for these materials. If items are not available locally, your librarian can help you borrow them through the InterLibrary Loan program. Your librarian can also help you find other information about this author.

There may be more information available through the databases in the Alabama Virtual Library. If you are an Alabama citizen, AVL can be used at your public library or school library media center. You can also get a username and password from your librarian to use AVL at home.

Reference Articles

  • Brown, Stephanie. "Bourgeois Blackness and Autobiographical Authenticity in Ellen Tarry's The Third Door" African American Review 41.3 (2007):557-570.
  • Smith, Katharine Capshaw. "From Bank Street to Harlem: A Conversation with Ellen Tarry" The Lion and the Unicorn 23.2 (1999):271-285.

Reference Book Chapters and Encyclopedia Entries

  • "Tarry, Ellen 1906-." Something About the Author Vol. 16. Detroit: Gale Research, 1979. 250-256.

Reference Book Prefaces

  • McKay, Nellie Y. Introduction. The Third Door: The Autobiography of an American Negro Woman. By Ellen Tarry. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1992. ix-xxvi.

Location of Papers

  • Auburn University
  • New York Public Library

Last updated on Dec 21, 2009.

footer bottom graphic