Percy Jewett Burrell


Percy Jewett Burrell February 10, 1877 March 22, 1964 was an American author and director of historical and civic pageants. Known for his skills in oratory and elocution, he also taught public speaking and drama, and was known as a public reciter. A native and lifelong resident of the greater Boston area, he was described by Time magazine as a professional director of civic and patriotic shows. By the mid1920s, Burrell had developed a nationwide reputation for his work, having had 75,000 participants in his productions, which had collectively been performed in front of over 900,000 people. According to a printed program used at a service in his memory, His mastery of the spoken and written word led him to be a well known public speaker with an enviable reputation as a teacher of oratory, and later as an author and director of national distinction. Burrell served as the first supreme historian of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity from 1901 to 1903, and the sixth supreme president of

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Source: Wikipedia


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