Owen Wister
Owen Wister was an American writer and historian, considered the "father" of western fiction. He is best remembered for writing The Virginian and a biography of Ulysses S. Grant.
Biography
Early life
Owen Wister was born on July 14, 1860, in Germantown, a neighborhood in the northwestern part of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His father, Owen Jones Wister, was a wealthy physician raised at Grumblethorpe in Germantown. He was a distant cousin of Sally Wister. His mother, Sarah Butler Wister, was the daughter of Fanny Kemble, a British actress, and Pierce Mease Butler.Education
Wister briefly attended schools in Switzerland and Britain, and later studied at St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he was a member of the Hasty Pudding Theatricals, and a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Wister was also a member of the Porcellian Club, through which he became lifelong friends with future 26th President Theodore Roosevelt. As a senior Wister wrote the Hasty Pudding's then most successful show, Dido and Aeneas, whose proceeds aided in the construction of their theater. Wister graduated from Harvard in 1882.At first he aspired to a career in music and spent two years studying at a Paris conservatory. Thereafter, he worked briefly in a bank in New York before studying law; he graduated from Harvard Law School in 1888. Following this, he practiced with a Philadelphia firm but was never truly interested in that career. He was interested in politics, however, and was a staunch supporter of U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt.
In the 1930s, Wister opposed President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal.
Writing career
Wister began his literary work in 1882, publishing The New Swiss Family Robinson, a parody of the 1812 novel The Swiss Family Robinson. It was so well received that Mark Twain wrote a letter to Wister praising it.Wister had spent several summers in the American West, making his first trip to the Territory of Wyoming in 1885, planning to shoot big game, fish trout, meet the Indians, and spend nights in the wild. Like his friend Teddy Roosevelt, Wister was fascinated with the culture, lore and terrain of the region. He was "...struck with wonder and delight, had the eye to see and the talent to portray the life unfolding in America. After six journeys for pleasure, he gave up the profession of law...", and became the writer he is better known as. On an 1893 visit to Yellowstone National Park, Wister met the western artist Frederic Remington, who remained a lifelong friend.
When he started writing, Wister naturally inclined towards fiction set on the western frontier. His most famous work remains the 1902 novel The Virginian, a complex mixture of persons, places and events dramatized from experience, word of mouth, and his own imaginationultimately creating the archetypal cowboy, who is a natural aristocrat, set against a highly mythologized version of the Johnson County War, and taking the side of the large landowners. This is widely regarded as being the first cowboy novel, though modern scholars argue that this distinction belongs to Emma Ghent Curtis's The Administratrix, published over ten years earlier). The Virginian was reprinted fourteen times in eight months. It stands as one of the top 50 best-selling works of fiction and is considered by Hollywood experts to be the basis for the modern fictional cowboy portrayed in literature, film and television.
In 1904 Wister collaborated with Kirke La Shelle on a successful stage adaptation of The Virginian that featured Dustin Farnum in the title role. Farnum reprised the role ten years later in Cecil B. DeMille's film adaptation of the play.
Wister was a member of several literary societies, a member of The Franklin Inn Club, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Board of Overseers of Harvard University.
Personal life
In 1898, Wister married Mary Channing, his cousin. The couple had six children. Channing died during childbirth in 1913. Their daughter, Marina Wister, married artist Andrew Dasburg in 1933.Death
In 1938, Wister died at his home in Saunderstown, Rhode Island. He is buried in Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.Legacy
Since 1978, University of Wyoming Student Publications has published the literary and arts magazine Owen Wister Review. The magazine was published bi-annually until 1996 and became an annual publication in the spring of 1997.Just within the western boundary of the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, there is an 11,490-foot mountain named Mount Wister, named for Owen Wister.
Near a house that Wister built near La Mesa, California, but never occupied due to his wife's death, is a street called Wister Drive. In the same neighborhood are Virginian Lane and Molly Woods Avenue. All of those streets were named by Wister himself.
In 1976, he was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
Novels
- The New Swiss Family Robinson
- The Dragon of Wantley: His Tale
- Lin McLean
- The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains
- Philosophy 4: A Story of Harvard University
- A Journey in Search of Christmas
- Lady Baltimore
- Padre Ignacio: or, the Song of Temptation
- Romney: And Other New Works about Philadelphia
Non-fiction
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, in the "American Men of Letters Series"
- The Bison, Musk-Ox, Sheep, and Goat Family, with G. B. Grinnell and Caspar Whitney in the "American Sportsman's Library"
- Benjamin Franklin, in the "English Men of Letters Series"
- The Seven Ages of Washington: A Biography
- The Pentecost of Calamity
- The Aftermath of Battle: With the Red Cross in France
- A Straight Deal: or the Ancient Grudge
- Neighbors Henceforth
- A Monograph of the Work of Mellor Meigs & Howe
- The Philadelphia Club, 1834–1934
- The Illustrations of Frederic Remington
Story collections
- Red Men and White
- The Jimmyjohn Boss and Other Stories
- Members of the Family
- Safe in the Arms of Croesus
- When West Was West
- The West of Owen Wister: Selected Short Stories
Short stories
- "The New Swiss Family Robinson: A Tale for Children of All Ages", a parody of The Swiss Family Robinson
- "Hank's Woman"
- "How Lin McLean Went East"
- "Em'ly"
- "The Winning of the Biscuit-Shooter"
- "Balaam and Pedro"
- "The Promised Land "
- "A Kinsman of Red Cloud"
- "Little Big Horn Medicine"
- "Specimen Jones"
- "The Serenade at Siskiyou"
- "The General's Bluff"
- "Salvation Gap"
- "Lin McLean's Honey-Moon"
- "The Second Missouri Compromise"
- "La Tinaja Bonita"
- "A Pilgrim on the Gila"
- "Where Fancy Was Bred"
- "Separ's Vigilante"
- "Grandmother Stark"
- "Sharon's Choice"
- "Destiny at Drybone"
- "Twenty Minutes for Refreshments"
- "Padre Ignazio"
- "The Game and the Nation"
- "Mother"
- "Superstition Trail"
- "In a State of Sin"
- "The Vicious Circle"
- "With Malice Aforethought"
- "Stanwick's Business"
- "The Jimmyjohn Boss"
- "Napoleon Shave-Tail"
- "Happy Teeth"
- "Spit-Cat Creek"
- "In the Back"
- "How Doth the Simple Spelling Bee"
- Timberline |"Timberline"
- The Gift Horse |"The Gift Horse"
- "Extra Dry"
- "Where It Was"
- "The Drake Who Had Means of His Own"
- "Safe in the Arms of Croesus"
- "With the Coin of Her Life"
- "The Honeymoonshiners"
- "Bad Medicine |Bad Medicine"
- "Captain Quid"
- "Once Round the Clock"
- "The Right Honorable, The Strawberries"
- "Little Old Scaffold"
- "Absalom of Moulting Pelican"
- "Lone Fountain"
- "Skip to My Loo"
- "At the Sign of the Last Chance"
Essays
- "Where Charity Begins"
- "The Evolution of the Cow-Puncher"
- "Concerning "Bad Men" The True "Bad Man" of the Frontier, and the Reasons for His Existence"
- "Theodore Roosevelt, Harvard '80"
- "The Open Air Education"
- "After Four Years"
- "High Speed English and American Railroad Flyers"
- "The Keystone Crime: Pennsylvania's Graft-Cankered Capitol"
- "According to a Passenger"
- "How One Bomb Was Made"
- "Roosevelt and the 1912 Disaster: A Friend Remembers - and Interprets"
- "Roosevelt and the War: A Chapter of Memories"
- "John Jay Chapman |John Jay Chapman"
- "In Homage to Mark Twain"
- "Old Yellowstone Days"
Poetry
- "The Pale Cast of Thought"
- "From Beyond the Sea"
- "Autumn on Wind River"
- "In Memoriam"
- Done In The Open
- "Serenade"
- Indispensable Information for Infants: Or Easy Entrance to Education
Operas
- Dido and Aeneas
- Kenilworth
- Listen to Binks
- Montezuma
- Villon
- Watch Your Thirst: A Dry Opera in Three Acts
Plays
- The Dragon of Wantley
- The Honeymoonshiners
- Lin McLean
- Slaves of the Ring
- That Brings Luck
- The Virginian
Works inspired by ''The Virginian''
- The Virginian directed by Cecil B. DeMille, with Dustin Farnum
- The Virginian with Kenneth Harlan and Florence Vidor
- The Virginian with Gary Cooper and Walter Huston
- The Virginian with Joel McCrea and Brian Donlevy
- The Virginian with James Drury and Doug McClure
- The Virginian 2000 telefilm with Bill Pullman, Diane Lane, John Savage, Colm Feore, and Dennis Weaver
- The Virginian 2014 telefilm with Trace Adkins, Brendan Penny, Ron Perlman, and Victoria Pratt