Contact Us

Preserving the legacy of Jesse Stuart and the Appalachian way of life.

I want to walk around and look at these old immortal hills before I go, for here I was born and have lived all my days. ~ Jesse Stuart

 
View Your CartNo Items In Your Cart

Displaying items by tag: Jesse Stuart

Jesse Stuart: An American Writer

03 April 2012

 

 

 

Jesse Stuart: An American Writer 

Written by Michael Lasater

 

1997 Video documentary 60 minutes

I began work on this documentary in 1995, shortly after moving from Western Kentucky University to join the faculty at Indiana University South Bend. This is the third of my documentaries on writers of the mountain South—Jim Wayne Miller, James Still, and Jesse Stuart. These men knew one another very well. James Still and Jesse Stuart were students together at Lincoln Memorial University. Jim Wayne Miller, a generation younger, was a personal friend of both, and was a major critical resource relating to the work of both. I did not realize at the time I was making this program that I would not work with Jim Miller again; he died in August of 1996, having seen only the opening few minutes of my rough cut. I appreciate the opportunity to have known and worked with him over the span of fourteen years more than I can adequately express.

Additional critical and historical commentary is provided by John Spurlock, Professor of English at WKU, and H. Edward Richardson, Professor of English at the University of Louisville. A most crucial resource was the Jesse Stuart Foundation and its director, James Gifford, who provided me with the many photographs appearing in the documentary, arranged access to sites in Stuart’s W-Hollow home, and granted me permission to present Stuart’s “Split Cherry Tree” illustrated by artist Tom Foster and narrated by actor Warren Hammack.

Copyright 1997 Michael Lasater

February is Heart Month

24 January 2012
Published in Jim's Blog

If you have a friend or loved one recovering from illness or surgery, Jesse Stuart's The Year of My Rebirth would be a perfect heart-month gift.

 
In 1991, we republished a new oversized edition which remains in print today. It was especially fitting that this edition was sponsored by one of Kentucky's finest cardiologists, Dr. Charles Rhodes.
 
Stuart's message in this well-known book is that no person can really begin living until he has come close to dying. As a young man, Stuart lived at top speed. Then, in 1954, at age 48, rushing from a lecture in Murray, Ky. to catch a chartered plane to make another talk in Illinois, he was struck down by a severe heart attack, and he almost died.
 
The Year of My Rebirth is the record of the year that followed. From a big, aggressive man who loved hard work and physical activity, Stuart was reduced to an invalid who could not tie his shoes. Carried back to the Kentucky hill country where he was born, he became a prisoner in his house. A "No Visitors" sign in the driveway repelled friends and family, so Stuart turned to new friends: the three-legged possum who lived beneath the kitchen, the peewees nesting by the kitchen door, the baby-handed mole tunneling under the yard. His journal of recovery is alive with the awareness of a man who found time not only to live life but to examine it.
 
Physically, Stuart was like a child. He had to learn again to stand alone and then to walk and, finally, to use his arms and hands and even to put food in his mouth. Mounting a short flight of steps was exhausting. He subscribed to a new set of values in which the blades of grass and daisies in a pasture had more intrinsic worth than the expensive cattle that fed on them, and nature's annual resurrection in spring seemed proof of the presence of God and the promise of heaven.
 
For other heart attack survivors, Stuart has some cautionary words: Much more than the heart can be affected. His vision dropped abruptly from 20-20 to the point where he was unable to read newspaper headlines without the help of glasses. And the months immediately following an attack bring with them bouts of deep depression.
 
In compensation, as Jesse Stuart slowly recovered strength, he felt reborn and cast in a different mold, more tolerant, more gentle, more reflective than before. Says Stuart: "My world had been a thousand friends in a hundred cities, ten cups of coffee and loud talk until three in the morning. Now my world was reduced to my home, my farm, and my hills. I lived more closely with my wife, my daughter, and my animal friends. I thought more deeply of my God."
 
And implicit throughout the book is Stuart's strongly held feeling that his close brush with death was a valuable learning experience.
 
In his later year, Jesse Stuart and several members of his family became active spokesmen for the American Heart Association. Out of respect for Stuart's work, the Kentucky Affiliate of the American Heart Association endorsed our 1991 reprint of The Year of My Rebirth.
 
In the fall of 1963, working with the American Heart Association, Stuart also made a promotional film, Heart of A Town, narrated by Edward G. Robinson. It is available for viewing at the Jesse Stuart Foundation Bookstore, 1645 Winchester Ave. in downtown Ashland.
 
The Year of My Rebirth is available in the Jesse Stuart Foundation Bookstore at 1645 Winchester Avenue in downtown Ashland, or you can purchase it by clicking on this link.
For more information, call (606) 326-1667.
 
James M. Gifford, Ph.D.
CEO & Senior Editor

Jesse Stuart's Legacy (tabs)

06 October 2011
Published in Jesse Stuart

     The late Poet Laureate of Kentucky, Jesse Hilton Stuart, published 2,000 poems, 460 short stories, and more than 60 books. In addition to being one of Appalachia's best known and most anthologized authors, his works have been translated into many foreign languages.

     Yet his contributions are more than literary. During his life, this charismatic educator and author served as a leader for the people of his mountain homeland and as a spokesman for values like hard work, respect for the land, belief in education, devotion to country, and love of family. His life and works still attract hundreds of tourists to eastern Kentucky every year.

 

Jesse's highschool photo (on left) his Guggenheim Fellowship photo on the right.

-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

 

 

Jesse Behind the plow.

-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives

 

 

A 1939 photo of the Stuart siblings: Glennis, James, Mary, Jesse, Sophia and parents Martha and Mitch.

 -Voiers Photo Album

Early Life

     Jesse Stuart was born on August 8, 1906, in northeastern Kentucky's Greenup County, where his parents, Mitchell and Martha (Hilton) Stuart, were impoverished tenant farmers. From his father, Stuart learned to love and respect the land. He later became a far-sighted conservationist -- donating over 700 acres of his land in W-Hollow to the Kentucky Nature Preserves System in 1980.

     Mitchell Stuart could neither read nor write, and Martha had only a second-grade education, but they taught their two sons and three daughters to value education. Jesse graduated from Greenup High School in 1926 and from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1929. He then returned to Greenup County to teach.

Jesse working in his bunkhouse after a long day at school.

- Courtesy of the H. Edward Richardson Collection, Ekstrom Library, University of Louisville

 

Additional Info

  • Page 2

    Early Career

         By the end of the 1930s, Stuart had served as a teacher in Greenup County's one-room schools and as high school principal and county school superintendent. These experiences served as the basis for his autobiographical book, The Thread That Runs So True (1949), hailed by the president of the National Education Association as the finest book on education in fifty years. The book became a road map for educational reform in Kentucky. By the time it appeared, Stuart had left the classroom to devote his time to lecturing and writing. He returned to public education as a high school principal in 1956-57, a story told in Mr. Gallion's School (1967). He later taught at the University of Nevada in Reno in the 1958 summer term and served on the faculty of the American University of Cairo in 1960-61.


    alt

    Deane, Jane, and Jesse during Jesse's World War II service.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department



    alt

    "Autograph Party" for Dawn of the Remembered Spring, published in 1972.

    - Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

    Stories and Poems

         Stuart began writing stories and poems about Appalachia in high school and college. During a year of graduate study at Vanderbilt University in 1931-32, Donald Davidson, one of his professors, encouraged him to continue writing. Following the private publication of Stuart's poetry collection Harvest of Youth in 1930, Man with a Bull-Tongue Plow appeared in 1934 and was widely praised. Mark Van Doren, for instance, likened Stuart to Robert Burns as a poet "who captured the heart and soul of his people."

         Stuart began his autobiographical, Beyond Dark Hills, while he was at Vanderbilt. Published in 1938, it inspired readers to follow Stuart's example of overcoming great obstacles to obtain an education. His first novel, Trees of Heaven, appeared in 1940, followed by short story collections Head o' W-Hollow (1936) and Men of the Mountains (1941). More than a dozen other short story collections were published in Stuart's lifetime.


    alt

    “First, last, and always, I am a teacher,” Stuart often said.

    - Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department


    Kentucky's Poet Laureate

         He was also a widely-read novelist, and critics such as J. Donald Adams ranked Stuart as a first-class local colorist. His first novel, Trees of Heaven appeared in 1940, followed by Taps for Private Tussie (1943), an award-winning satire on New Deal relief and its effect on Appalachia's self-reliance. Taps catapulted Stuart to success, but the critical reaction was mixed. Some saw it as nothing more than a comical, almost stereotyped story of poor, lazy mountaineers on relief, while others explained that Stuart wrote for a popular rather than a high brow audience.

          Stuart was a successful poet. His ten volumes of verse include Album of Destiny (1944) and Kentucky Is My Land (1952). He was designated as the Poet Laureate of Kentucky in 1954 and was made a fellow of the Academy of American Poets in 1961. Stuart also wrote a number of books for children that are still highly regarded and much in use in today's classroom.


    alt 

    Jesse's recuperation after his first heart attack.

    - Courtesy of the Louisville Courier-Journal


    alt

    Jesse at the podium on Jesse Stuart Day, Greenup, Kentucky, October 15, 1955.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Depertment



    alt

    Jesse's monument, dedicated on Jesse Stuart Day, still stands on the Greenup County courthouse lawn.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

    Honors and Health Issues

         Stuart suffered a major heart attack in 1954. During his convalescence, he wrote daily journals that were the basis for The Year of My Rebirth (1956), a book recording his rediscovery of the joy of life. He later became an active spokesman for the American Heart Association.

         Throughout his adult life, Stuart received numerous honors as a writer and educator. In 1944, the University of Kentucky awarded him his first of many honorary doctorates. October 15, 1955 was proclaimed "Jesse Stuart Day" by the Governor of Kentucky and a bust of Stuart, which is still standing, was unveiled on the Greenup County Courthouse lawn. In 1958, he was featured on This Is Your Life, a popular television show. In 1972, the lodge at Greenbo Lake State Resort Park was named the Jesse Stuart Lodge. In 1981, he received Kentucky's Distinguished Service Medallion.



    alt

    Jesse and Deane's graves and marker in Plum Grove Cemetary.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

    Death

         In 1978, Stuart was disabled by a stroke. In May 1982, he suffered another stroke which rendered him comatose until he died on February 17, 1984. He is buried in Plum Grove Cemetery in Greenup County, close to W-Hollow, the little Appalachian valley that became a part of the American mind through his world-famous books.


    alt

    Deane and Jesse in August, 1977.

    -Jesse Stuart Archives Department


    alt

    Proud father Jesse with daughter Jane.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department


    alt

    Grandpa Jesse with his grandsons Erik and Conrad.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department



    alt

         Jesse and Dean's home on W-Hollow.

    -Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department




    Jesse Stuart Foundation

         Late in his life, Stuart realized that he had created a legacy that needed to be perpetuated, so he and business and educational leaders across Kentucky created the Jesse Stuart Foundation in 1979.

         Incorporated for public, charitable, and educational purposes, the Jesse Stuart Foundation is devoted to preserving the legacy of Jesse Stuart and the Appalachian way of life. The foundation, which owns and manages the rights to Stuart's published and unpublished literary works, is currently reprinting many of his best out-of-print books, along with other books which focus on Kentucky and Southern Appalachia.

         Over the last three decades, it has become a highly regarded regional press and bookseller which serves a large and devoted reading public. "Every year," reports marketing director Anthony Stephens, "we sell books to bookstores, libraries, and individuals in every state and several foreign countries."

         The foundation opened its offices in Ashland in the fall of 1985. Since then, the Jesse Stuart Foundation has produced more than 100 printings and editions. Chairman Keith R. Kappes proudly reports, "Our books, along with a wide range of educational products and services, supplement the education system at all levels."

         The public is invited to visit the Jesse Stuart Foundation offices at 1645 Winchester Avenue, Ashland, Kentucky, where hundreds of regional books are in stock and available for sale. JSF visitors can also enjoy a visit to the Leming Gallery, a photographic gallery that focuses on Appalachian topics. Also available are displays of regional art and crafts. For more information, call (606) 326-1667; or jsftony@gmail.com.

    You can also write to:  Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1645 Winchester Ave., Ashland, KY 41101.


    James M. Gifford, Ph.D.

    CEO & Senior Editor




    Books by Jesse Stuart

    Poetry

    Autobiographical
    • Beyond Dark Hills, E.P. Dutton & company, inc., 1938; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1996, ISBN 9780945084532
    • The Thread that Runs So True. C. Scribner's Sons. 1950.; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1958, ISBN 9780871296771
    • The Year of My Rebirth, 1956; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1991, ISBN 9780945084174
    • To Teach, To Love, World Pub. Co., 1970; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1987, ISBN 9780945084020
    • My World, University Press of Kentucky. 1975. ISBN 9780813102115

    Novels
    • Daughter of the Legend, McGraw-Hill, 1965; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1994, ISBN 9780945084426
    • Trees of Heaven, E.P. Dutton & co.,inc.. 1940.; University Press of Kentucky, 1980, ISBN 9780813101507
    • Taps for Private Tussie, E.P. Dutton, 1943; World Pub. Co., 1969
    • Foretaste of Glory, E. P. Dutton and Company, inc.. 1946.; University Press of Kentucky, 1986, ISBN 9780813101705
    • Hie to the Hunters Whittlesey House, 1950; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1996, ISBN 9780945084594
    • Mr. Gallion's School, McGraw-Hill, 1967
    • The Land Beyond the River, McGraw-Hill, 1973, ISBN 9780070622418

    For Young Readers
    • Hie To The Hunters, Whittlesey House, 1950; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1996 ISBN 9780945084594 
    • The Beatinest Boy, Whittlesey House, 1953; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1989, ISBN 9780945084129
    • A Penny's Worth of Character, Whittlesey House, 1954; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1993, ISBN 9780945084327
    • Red Mule, 1955; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1993, ISBN 9780945084334
    • The Rightful Owner, 1960; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1993, ISBN 0945084153
    • Andy Finds A Way, 1961; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1993, ISBN 0945084269
    • A Ride with Huey, the Engineer 1966; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1988, ISBN 9780945084105
    • Old Ben, 1970; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1992, ISBN 9780945084228
    • Come To My Tomorrowland, 1971; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1993, ISBN 9780945084549

    Short Story Collections
    • Head O' W-Hollow, E. P. Dutton & co., inc., 1936; Books for Libraries Press, 1971, ISBN 9780836940657
    • Men of the Mountains. E. P. Dutton & co.. 1941.; University Press of Kentucky, 1979, ISBN 9780813101439
    • Tales from the Plum Grove Hills E. P. Dutton & Company, inc., 1946; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1997, ISBN 9780945084624
    • Plowshares in Heaven, McGraw-Hill, 1958; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1984 ISBN 0945084218
    • A Jesse Stuart Reader, McGraw-Hill, 1963; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2003 ISBN 9781931672245 
    • Save Every Lamb, McGraw-Hill, 1964
    • Come Gentle Spring McGraw-Hill, 1969; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2008, ISBN 9781931672474
    • A Jesse Stuart Harvest 1965; Mockingbird Books, 1976, ISBN 9780891760108
    • My Land Has a Voice, McGraw-Hill, 1966
    • Come Back to the Farm McGraw-Hill, 1971; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2001, ISBN 9780945084945
    • 32 Votes Before Breakfast, McGraw-Hill, 1974
    • New Harvest: Forgotten Stories of Kentucky's Jesse Stuart, Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2003, ISBN 9781931672177
    • Clearing In The Sky & Other Stories. University Press of Kentucky. 1984. ISBN 9780813101576

    Books About Jesse Stuart
    • Jesse Stuart: His Life and Works, by Everetta Love Blair (University of South Carolina Press, 1967)
    • Jesse Stuart, by Ruel E. Foster (Twayne, 1968)
    • Jesse Stuart: An Extraordinary Life, by James M. Gifford and Erin R. Kazee (Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2010)
    • Jesse: The Biography of an American Writer, Jesse Hilton Stuart, by H. Edward Richardson (McGraw-Hill, 1984)





Jesse Stuart Trivia Quiz

26 September 2009
Published in Programs and Events


 

THE WINNER! 

Angela Campbell scored an impressive 113 total out of a possible 115 points in the Jesse Stuart Trivia Quiz that was conducted during Jesse Stuart Weekend 2011. She was awarded a $50 gift certificate to the Jesse Stuart Foundation bookstore in honor of her achievement.

"Congratulations Angela!"

 

 

Songs of a Mountain Plowman Reprint Project

05 August 2011

 

                                        

                                       

Dear friends and Associate Members:

Most Jesse Stuart fans know that Harvest of Youth, privately published by Jesse in 1930, was Stuart's first book. His next book was Man with a Bull-Tongue Plow, published in 1934 by E. P. Dutton & Company, a major commercial publishing house. The first printing of the First Edition sold out in less than a month. The success of this Pulitzer-nominated book was the springboard to a great writing career.

 

However, Between Harvest of Youth and Man With A Bull-Tongue Plow, Stuart wrote a second collection of poetry, Songs of a Mountain Plowman, that was not published until 1986, two years after his death. This is the first book I published when I became Executive Director of the JSF in 1985. Songs was edited and introduced by the late Jim Wayne Miller, a great Appalachian scholar and long-time member of the JSF Board of Directors. Its First Edition of 1000 sold out in the 1980s, and was never republished. It is an important book for Stuart fans who wish to uinderstand Stuart's development as a poet, a great addition to Stuart collection, and an important resource for school and public libraries.

 

Now, twenty-five years after its first appearance, the JSF plans to re-issue a hardback Special Edition of Songs of a Mountain Plowman that will be designed as a companion to our 2011 reprint of Man With A Bull-Tongue Plow. It will be presented Sepytember 28, 2012 at this year's Jesse Stuart Weekend. This publication will be funded by gifts ffrom friends of the JSF.

 

Donors will receive recognition in the Acknowledgements section of the book, invitations to book launch events, and a numbered copy of the special edition. Your gift will provide one copy of the book to you and as many as thirty-six copies of the book to libraries. Each gift copy will include a bookplate that identifies you as a donor, if you wish. 

 

We hope you will join us in reprinting this valuable and interesting book.

 

   

 

Sincerely,

James M. Gifford, Ph.D.

CEO and Senior Editor

 

 

 

 

JSF Board of Directors

04 August 2011
Published in JSF Board of Directors

OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS

 

David R. Palmore, Assistant Superintendent of the Erlanger-Elsmere School District in northern Kentucky is chair of the Board of Directors of the Jesse Stuart Foundation, Inc.

     Mr. Palmore is a native of Kenton County, Kentucky, with ancestral roots in the Upper Cumberland counties of Barren, Metcalfe and Monroe.  He received his B. S. degree from David Lipscomb University in Nashville, and his M.Ed. degree and administrative certification from Xavier University in Cincinnati.  Palmore has served public schools in Kentucky for nearly 4 decades as a teacher, principal, and central office administrator.  He is active in community and professional organizations, and has received numerous awards as both a teacher and school administrator. 
          A JSF board member since 2001, Palmore’s role as a public school teacher and administrator go hand-in-hand with the goals of the Jesse Stuart Foundation.  An avid Jesse Stuart collector and an expert on Stuart’s life and memorabilia, he believes that Stuart’s educational theories and practices provide a model for all educators.  In his professional role, Mr. Palmore often promotes the profound importance of teachers through his utilization of Jesse Stuart’s keen observation, “I am firm in my belief that that a teacher lives on and on through his students.  Good teaching is forever and the teacher is immortal.”  Of his service to the Jesse Stuart Foundation, Palmore notes, “I am greatly honored to be associated in this manner with the Jesse Stuart Foundation.  As a child, and as a young teacher, Jesse Stuart was my hero.  The impact of his work in the lives of countless millions across the world is immeasurable.”     
     Late in their lives, Mr. Palmore became very well acquainted with Jesse Stuart’s youngest sisters, Mary Nelson and Glennis Liles.  Due to their sudden deaths just several months apart in 2002, and because of Palmore’s knowledge, and ambitious interest, the Jesse Stuart Foundation asked him to “take over the reins” as tour director of Jesse Stuart’s W-Hollow environs each September as a part of the annual Jesse Stuart Weekend.  Jesse Stuart fans worldwide have become familiar with Mr. Palmore’s expertise in this capacity.
     In 2003, the Jesse Stuart Foundation published New Harvest, Forgotten Stories of Kentucky’s Jesse Stuart – compiled and edited by David Palmore.  Palmore is presently working on a new compilation of Jesse Stuart’s short stories and articles, which will be called A Jesse Stuart Christmas.
     A resident of Villa Hills, Kentucky, Mr. Palmore can be contacted by phone at 859-331-6785 or by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
 
JSF Board of Directors: January 1 - December 31, 2011
The Board of Directors of the Jesse Stuart Foundation, Inc., consists of 25 persons holding or sharing 19 voting seats. One seat is vacant, pending a designee from Northern Kentucky University. The board also has six non-voting emeritus members. As of January 1, 2011, the board membership consists of:
 
PUBLIC AT LARGE
Kappes, Keith R. Morehead, Kentucky 2013
Onkst, Wayne Erlanger, Kentucky 2012
Cartee, Ronald Ashland, Kentucky 2012
Enyart, Mildred Greenup, Kentucky 2013
McGinnis, John Greenup, Kentucky 2013
Leming, Carl & Buzzy Edgewood, Kentucky 2012
Miller, Don & Ruby Peebles, Ohio 2014
Monge, Greg Ashland, Kentucky 2014
Palmore, David R. Erlanger, Kentucky 2013
Stephenson, Jane Lexington, Kentucky 2014
Gilliam, Duane Argillite, Kentucky 2014
HIGHER EDUCATION    
Johns, Timothy Murray State University Indefinite
Kopacz, Dr. Paula Eastern Kentucky University Indefinite
Baker, Donna Morehead State University Indefinite
Vacant Northern Kentucky University Indefinite
Nicholls, Barbara Ashland Community & Technical College Indefinite
Jeffrey, Jonathan Western Kentucky University Indefinite
Green, Chris Marshall University Indefinite
STUART FAMILY    
Stuart, Jane Greenup, Kentucky Lifetime
STAFF    
Gifford, Dr. James M. Ashland, Kentucky Ex-Officio
EMERITUS*    
Anderson, Dr. Thayle Murray State University Lifetime
Blythe, Dr. Hal Eastern Kentucky University Lifetime
Sweet, Dr. Charlie Eastern Kentucky University Lifetime
Thomas, Judy Greenup, Kentucky Lifetime
McBrayer, Ethel Greenup, Kentucky Lifetime
Spurlock, Dr. John Western Kentucky University Lifetime
*non-voting member    

OFFICERS:

David R. Palmore, Chair

Jane B. Stephenson, Vice Chair

Dr. James M. Gifford, Secretary

Greg Monge, General Counsel

David R. Palmore, Executive Committee

 

At our latest Board Meeting . . .

 

 

 

Regional Readers Book Group

04 August 2011

The Regional Readers Book Group meets the last Tuesday of the month (except December) at 5:45 pm to discuss a book written by an Appalachian author or a book about Appalachia. Our readers have wide backgrounds and experiences and the discussions are always lively. Come join us! There's no admission fee, and the book prices are discounted to members. The group is open to the public and new members are always welcome.

This months selection:

May 29: 40 Acres and No Mule by Janice Holt Giles

 

$24.00
Quantity:
Add to Cart
 

For more information about joining the Regional Readers Book Group, contact Judith Kidwell, Administrative Assistant to the CEO & Senior Editor at 606-326-1667 or e-mail Judith at:  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
 

2012 Schedule

 

Jan 31 - The Bluegrass Conspiracy:  An Inside Story of Power, Greed, Drugs and Murder by Sally Denton

 

Feb 28 - Billy Creekmore:  A Novel by Tracey Porter

 

March 27 - Watches of the Night by Harry Caudill

 

April 24 - Johnny Logan:  The True Story of a Shawnee Who Became a US Spy by Allan W. Eckert

 

May 29 - 40 Acres and No Mule by Janice Holt Giles

 

June 26 - Growing Up Hard in Harlan County by  G. C. Jones

 

July 31 - Run Me a River by Janice Holt Giles

 

Aug 28 - She Walks These Hills by Sharyn McCrumb

 

Sep 25 - Velva Jean Learns to Drive by Jennifer Niven

 

Oct 30 - Bluegrass: A True Story of a Murder in Kentucky by William Van Meter

 

Nov 27 - At the Breakers by Mary Ann Taylor-Hall

 

Make a Gift!

04 August 2011
Published in Make a Gift!

Make a Gift!

  • Support our operations with a gift of cash or other property.
  • Support a book re-print or the publication of a new book.
  • Support the Building Fund.
  • Support our Box O' Books Program.
  • Support an Eastern Kentucky college student in our Summer Work Study Program.
  • Make a gift in memory or in honor of a loved one or someone whose life or work made an impression on you.
  • Help us raise funds for specific needs, such as a hydraulic lift to move book pallets, additional heating elements for the HVAC system, and de-humidifiers for the basement book storage area.
  • Gifts made to the Jesse Stuart Foundation are tax-deductible as allowed by law.
  • To print a Gift Form you can complete and mail to us, click here.
  • To make a secure gift on-line, click here. 

Allan W. Eckert - New Photos!

10 October 2001

  

“I think it cannot be denied that for one to become a good writer, one must first become a good reader of a very wide scope of books." -- Allan W. Eckert

 

Allan W. Eckert was an historian, naturalist, novelist, poet, screenwriter, and playwright. The author of forty published books—plus one, The Infinite Dream, available the fall of 2011 by Jesse Stuart Foundation—he was nominated on seven separate occasions for the Pulitzer Prize in literature and, in 1985, was recipient of an honorary degree as Doctor of Humane Letters from Bowling Green State University in Ohio. In 1998 he received his second honorary doctorate, also in Humane Letters, this time from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. In addition to his, he wrote and had published over 150 articles, essays, and short stories, as well as considerable poetry, a major outdoor drama, and screenplays for several movies.

 

Most noted for his historical and natural history books, Eckert's works have been translated into thirteen foreign languages around the world. A number of his books have been selections of Reader's Digest Condensed Books and several have been major book club selections. The seven of his books that have been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in literature include A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood (history), Wild Season (fiction), The Silent Sky (fiction), The Frontiersmen (history), Wilderness Empire (history), The Conquerors (history), and A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh (biography).

 

Seven of Allan's books have been nominated for the Pulitzer

 

Eckert's varied writing includes over 225 performed half-hour television scripts which he wrote for the renowned Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom series and for this writing he received, in 1970, an Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in the category of Outstanding Program Achievement. He was playwright of the acclaimed Outdoor Drama entitled Tecumseh! which, in 2011, celebrated its 38th year of production at the multi-million dollar Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheater near Chillicothe, Ohio. It has been described as the finest outdoor theater production in America. Over that period, the production has been attended by upwards of three million people. For this drama and his other writings, he received from the Scioto Society, in 1987 the Second Annual Silver Arrow Humanitarian Award “for his contributions to the human spirit and knowledge as an author, novelist, playwright, naturalist, and historian.”

 

Scenes from the Tecumseh! Outdoor Drama in Chillicothe, Ohio

 

Eckert's best known historical narrative, The Frontiersmen, from which he adapted his Outdoor Drama, Tecumseh!, won the Ohioana Library Association Book-of-the-Year Award in 1968. In that same year, the Chicago-based national literary society, The Friends of American Writers, presented him with its highest award of the year for The Frontiersmen and Wild Season—the first time in that organization's forty-year history of awarding literary prizes that it could not decide between the two books by the same author and therefore awarded him first prize for both. He also received, for his book Incident at Hawk's Hill, the Newbery Honor Book Award, the highest award for juvenile literature in America. Again for Incident at Hawk's Hill, in 1976 he accepted, in person in Vienna, the Austrian Juvenile Book-of-the-Year Award—the first time this prize was ever awarded to a non-Austrian. This same book brought him Best Book of the Year Award from Claremont College in California and it was also made into a two-part television movie by Walt Disney under the title The Boy Who Talked to Badgers. A quarter-century after that book's initial publication, Eckert wrote a sequel entitled Return to Hawk's Hill, which was published in May, 1998.

 

 

His widely-acclaimed series of historical narratives entitled The Winning of America consists of six volumes, including The Frontiersmen, Wilderness Empire, The Conquerors, The Wilderness War, Gateway to Empire, and Twilight of Empire. For this series Eckert was presented the Americanism Award by the Daniel Boone Foundation in 1985, and the governor of Kentucky, late in 1987, bestowed upon him the status of honorary resident of that state and conferred upon him its highest honor, commissioning him a bona fide Kentucky Colonel. In 1995, his book That Dark and Bloody River: Chronicles of the Ohio River Valley was named runner-up for the Spur Award of the Western Writers of America. In 1997, Eckert was recipient of the Writer of the Year Award bestowed for his entire body of work by the National Popular Culture Association.

 

With respect to films, Eckert's book, Incident at Hawk's Hill, was adapted into a two-part television movie in 1974 by Walt Disney Productions. He wrote four screenplays: The Legend of Koo-Tan, Don Meier Productions, 1971; Wild Journey, 1972, Don Meier Production; The Kentucky Pioneers, 1972, Encyclopedia Britannica Production; and George Rogers Clark, 1973, Jerry Bean Production. In recent years Eckert's writings have included a series of children's fantasy adventures which includes two published works—The Dark Green Tunnel and The Wand.

 

Allan with cast members of Tecumseh! summer of 2010

 

An esteemed American naturalist, Eckert specialized, in addition to historical writing, in writing about natural history subjects. He had a keen interest in the natural history subjects of geology, entomology, ornithology, herpetology, paleontology, archaeology, anthropology, mineralogy, and allied fields. Among his important natural history writings are his companion volumes, The Owls of North America and The Wading Birds of North America. He also wrote a series of four volumes, published in 1987 by Harper & Row Publishers, called Earth Treasures—a guide to over 5,000 sites in the contiguous United States where the amateur collector can find excellent minerals, rocks and fossils. His major definitive work on the gemstone opal, entitled The World of Opals was published by John Wiley & Sons in October, 1997. In its review of this book, Lapidary Journal said, “A book that all opal lovers have been waiting for...this is one of the most complete books that has ever been published for any gemstone.”

 

Allan W. Eckert was born in Buffalo, New York, raised in the Chicago area, graduated (1948) from Leyden Community High School in Franklin Park, Illinois, and, after four years in the United States Air Force, attended the University of Dayton (Ohio) and The Ohio State University. He was founder and chairman of the board of the Lemon Bay Conservancy in Englewood, Florida, an organization which preserves wildlife and estuarial systems, and he was a life member and former trustee of the Dayton (Ohio) Museum of Natural History and, similarly, was a life member of the Mazon Creek Paleontological Society. He was a member of the American Gemcutters Society, and a consultant for La Salla Extension University in Chicago. He also designed and wrote for Writer's Digest magazine their popular correspondence courses entitled The Writer's Digest Course in Article Writing and The Writer's Digest in Short Story Writing.

 

                             A man of great literary talent, great hair, and the great outdoors - early 80s

                                                                                                     (photograph by Mark Harmel)

 

In 1999, the Ohioana Library Association, in celebration of its 70th anniversary, invited all Ohioans to vote for their “all time favorite Ohio authors and their books.” Ballots were sent to all public libraries in Ohio and many Ohio newspapers also participated in the event. Eckert's book The Frontiersmen was selected as Ohioans' favorite book “About Ohio or an Ohioan.” Eckert was himself selected as Ohio's favorite author in the category of “About Ohio or an Ohioan,” and in the principal category of “Overall Favorite Ohio Writer of All Time,” the top honor resulted in a tie—shared by Toni Morrison and Eckert.

 

Since 1967, Eckert has been listed in Who's Who in America, Who's Who International, Who's Who in the Midwest, Who's Who in the Southeast, Who's Who in Entertainment as well as in Contemporary Authors, and Something About the Author Autobiography Series.

 

Allan and his wife, Joan, made their home in Corona, California.

 

Shortly before Allan's death, he submitted an 1,800 page manuscript for what he called a "two maybe three book project". This work is currently being edited. More information on this at a later date.

 


 
The Works of Allan W. Eckert
Nonfiction
  • The Writer's Digest Course in Article Writing, Writer's Digest, 1962.
  • The Writer's Digest Course in Short Story Writing, Writer's Digest, 1965.
  • The Owls of North America: All the Species and Subspecies Described and Illustrated, illustrations by Karl E. Karalus, Doubleday, 1974, new edition, 1975, reprinted as The Owls of North America, North of Mexico: All the Species and Subspecies Illustrated in Color and Fully Described, illustrations by Karalus, Weathervane, 1987.
  • The Wading Birds of North America: All the Species and Subspecies Described and Illustrated, illustrations by Karalus, Doubleday, 1979, published as The Wading Birds of North America (North of Mexico), illustrations by Karalus, Weathervane, 1987.
  • Earth Treasures: Where to Collect Minerals, Rocks, and Fossils in the United States, Volume 1: The Northeastern Quadrant, Volume 2: The Southeastern Quadrant, Volume 3: The Northwestern Quadrant, Volume 4: The Southwestern Quadrant, Perennial Library, 1987.
  • The World of Opals, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997
Novels

Documentary Fiction

  • The Great Auk (Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1963. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation as The Last Great Auk, 2003.
  • The Silent Sky: The Incredible Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon, Little, Brown, 1965.
  • Wild Season, Little, Brown, 1967.
  • Bayou Backwaters, Doubleday, 1968.
  • The Crossbreed (Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1968.
  • In Search of a Whale, Doubleday, 1970.
  • The Court-Martial of Daniel Boone, Little, Brown, 1973. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2005.
  • Johnny Logan: Shawnee Spy, Little, Brown, 1983. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2010.
  • Opals, John Wiley and Sons (New York City), 1997.
Historical Narratives
For Children And Young Adults
  • The King Snake (nature novel), Little, Brown, 1968.
  • Blue Jacket: War Chief of the Shawnees, Little, Brown, 1969. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2004.
  • Incident at Hawk's Hill (novel; Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1971.
  • Savage Journey (novel), Little, Brown, 1979.
  • Song of the Wild (novel), Little, Brown, 1980.
  • Whattizzit? Nature Pun Quizzes, Landfall Press, 1981.
  • The Dark Green Tunnel ("Mesmerian Annals" series), Little, Brown, 1984.
  • The Wand: The Return to Mesmeria, ("Mesmerian Annals" series), Little, Brown, 1985.
Other
  • Tecumseh! (play), Little, Brown, 1974.  http://www.tecumsehdrama.com/
  • Author of more than 200 television scripts for Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom (1963 – 1988).  http://www.wildkingdom.com
  • Author of screenplays including The Legend of Koo-Tan, 1971, Wild Journey, 1972, The Kentucky Pioneers, 1972, and George Rodgers Clark, 1973.
  • Contributor of more than 200 articles to periodicals.

 

Page 1 of 2
Contact Information
Online Payments

Contact Us

Jesse Stuart Foundation

1645 Winchester Ave
Ashland, KY 41101
Phone: 606.326.1667
Toll Free: 855.407.6243
Fax: 606.325.2519
 
Store Hours:
Monday — Friday  
9:00am — 5:00pm
 

James M. Gifford

CEO and Senior Editor


Judith Kidwell

Administrative Assistant to the CEO & Senior Editor


Anthony B. Stephens

Marketing Director


Suzanna MW Stephens

Art Director

 

Follow us on:

 

twitter bird twitter bird facebook logo

Upcoming Events

Mon May 28
MEMORIAL DAY
Tue May 29 @ 5:45PM -
Regional Readers Book Club
Fri Jun 01 @12:00PM -
Board Meeting & Lunch
Fri Jun 01 @ 5:00PM - 08:00PM
First Friday Art Walk
Sun Jun 17
FATHER's DAY
Wed Jun 20
FIRST DAY of SUMMER