Dr. Hewitt was born Vivian Ann Davidson on February 17, 1920, in New Castle, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, to Arthur Robert and Lela Luvada (Mauney) Davidson and was the fourth of five children. The family attended the Bethel AME Church in New Castle. Dr. Hewitt graduated from New Castle High School in 1937 and then continued on to Geneva College, graduating in 1943. Following graduation from Geneva College, Dr. Hewitt moved to Pittsburgh where she attended the Carnegie Library School. At the time, the Carnegie Library School was a program of Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University). She was the second African American to graduate from the program, earning her Bachelor of Science Degree in Library Science in 1944. In 1962, the Carnegie Library School was transferred to the University of Pittsburgh and renamed the School Library of Information Sciences. Therefore, Dr. Hewitt is recognized by both Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh as an alumna.
Upon the completion of her library degree, Dr. Hewitt was employed by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, beginning her career at the Wylie Avenue Branch in the Hill District and later moving to the Homewood Branch. Dr. Hewitt holds the distinction of being the first African-American librarian employed by that institution.
While living in Pittsburgh, she boarded with Nancy H. Lee and joined the Aurora Reading Club. Hewitt pursued post-graduate work at the University of Pittsburgh from 1947 until 1948. She next accepted a position as librarian and instructor in the Graduate School of Library Science at Atlanta University and began in her new position on September 16, 1949.
In 1951, Dr. Hewitt relocated to New York City where she worked for Crowell Publishing Company as a researcher in its Readers' Service Division, from 1953 until 1955. In November of 1955, she became Librarian for the Rockefeller Foundation. She held this position for the next seven years. During her time working for the Rockefeller Foundation, she spent the summer of 1958 operating the agricultural program library in Mexico City. In February of 1963, she became the Head Librarian for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She held this position until her retirement in 1983, after which she accepted a position at the University of Texas, Austin, where she taught two courses during the summer of 1985.
Throughout her career, Dr. Hewitt was an active member of the Special Libraries Association (SLA). Joining in 1952, she was invited to represent the Association at the Pacem in Terris Convocation in 1965. In that same year, she was the SLA representative to the White House Conference on International Cooperation. She also served as the SLA's United Nations Non-governmental Organizations Observer from 1964 until 1970 and chaired the International Relations Committee from 1968 until 1973. In 1970, she became the first African American president of the SLA's New York chapter. From 1974 to 1979, she represented the SLA at the International Federation of Libraries and Associations (IFLA), attending conferences in Hungary, France, Switzerland, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, East Germany and Canada. In 1978, Dr. Hewitt became the international president of SLA.
Dr. Hewitt received a number of awards during her career. She was awarded the Distinguished Alumni Citation from the University of Pittsburgh-Carnegie Library School Alumni Association, the Merit Award from Carnegie Mellon University, and the L.H.D. (Honorary Doctorate) from Geneva College. She was also a recipient of the American Library Association (ALA) Black Caucus Award for Distinguished Service to Librarianship. In 1979, Dr. Hewitt was awarded Pittsburgh's First Blacks in Business and Professions Award.
While at Atlanta University, Vivian Davidson married John Hamilton Hewitt Jr. on December 26, 1949. They had one son, John H. Hewitt III, who was born January 29, 1952. Throughout their married life the Hewitts collected African-American and Haitian art. They became quite well known for their collection of fine paintings and began lending them to various institutions for exhibitions. In 1998, they sold fifty-five paintings to Bank of America. Since 1999, Bank of America has been underwriting a traveling exhibition of the works to museums and cultural centers throughout the United States.
The Hewitts celebrated fifty years of marriage in 1999. John H. Hewitt Jr., died on February 25, 2000, just a few months after their anniversary. Dr. Vivian Hewitt continues to be active in cultural activities in both her adopted home of New York City and in the Pittsburgh area.
The Vivian Davidson Hewitt Photographs are housed in one box. The majority of the photographs document Dr. Hewitt's life in Pittsburgh during the 1940s, from her graduation from Carnegie Library School through her librarianship with the Carnegie Public Library. Newer photographs are mostly of friends and family as well reunions at Geneva College. Many of the pictures are labeled on the back.
No Restrictions.
This collection, a gift of Dr. Vivian Davidson Hewitt, is comprised of six accessions received during the years 1995 through 2005.
Vivian Davidson Hewitt Photographs, 1944-2003, MSP# 460, Library and Archives Division, Senator John Heinz History Center
This collection was processed by D'Arcy Jackson in June 2007.
Property rights reside with the Senator John Heinz History Center. Literary rights are retained by the creators of the records and their heirs. For permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Library and Archives of the Senator John Heinz History Center.
The Vivian Davidson Hewitt Papers have been described and cataloged as MSS# 460.
An audio cassette pertaining to Nancy H. Lee has been separated and cataloged as MSC #460.
Pages from Dr. Hewitt's scrapbook have been cataloged as MSO#460. These pages hold memorabilia from Dr. Hewitt's life in Pittsburgh in the 1940s. They include newspaper articles, bulletins, letters and pamphlets. All of the scrapbook pages have been photocopied so that their original layout can be seen but some of them have been dismantled in order to preserve the photographs and pamphlets in a separate location.
Eight books have been transferred to the library collection.