Displaying items by tag: Kentucky
Jesse Stuart's Legacy (tabs)
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.

Deane, Jane, and Jesse during Jesse's World War II service.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

"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.

“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.
Jesse's recuperation after his first heart attack.
- Courtesy of the Louisville Courier-Journal

Jesse at the podium on Jesse Stuart Day, Greenup, Kentucky, October 15, 1955.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Depertment

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.

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.

Deane and Jesse in August, 1977.
-Jesse Stuart Archives Department

Proud father Jesse with daughter Jane.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

Grandpa Jesse with his grandsons Erik and Conrad.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

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 StuartPoetry- Man with a Bull-Tongue Plow, E.P. Dutton & co., 1934
- Album of Destiny, E. P. Dutton & co., inc., 1944
- Kentucky is My Land, Dutton, 1952; Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1980
- Hold April, McGraw-Hill, 1962
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)
Dr. Marshall Myers
Dr. Marshall Myers grew up in rural Kentucky. He holds a Ph.D. from University of Louisville and has done additional graduate work at Kansas State University. He has published in a variety of genres including poetry, short stories, scholarly articles, and personal essays, but most of his work in the last twenty years has focused on the Civil War. Currently president of the Madison County Civil War Roundtable, he was appointed by Governor Steve Beshear to the Sesquicentennial Committee on the Civil War in Kentucky. Married to Dr. Lynn Gillaspie, he has two daughters, five grandsons, and one great grandson. He is Professor of English and Coordinator of Composition at Eastern Kentucky University.
The Civil War affected the daily lives of almost everyone in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, a slave holding state that chose not to secede from the United States. Kentucky was the birthplace of both Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis presidents of The United States of America and The Confederate States of America, respectively, during the bloodiest conflict in American history. The dichotomy of its history doesn’t end there. Here are seventeen untold stories of lesser known combatants or “folks back home” who suffered in so many ways from the ravages of war. Chapters range in topics from interviews with former slaves to an examination of Mary Todd Lincoln’s family’s military involvement in the war.
Jesse Stuart Weekend 2011 - New Pictures!
Jesse Stuart Weekend is Sept. 28 - 29, 2012
at Greenbo Lake State Resort Park.
Make your reservations now by calling
800.325.0083
We hope you will make plans to attend the 2012 Jesse Stuart Weekend, September 28-29 at Greenbo Lake State Resort Park. The weekend is dedicated to the works and memory of the former Kentucky poet laureate, who was born in Greenup County, worked as an educator and became known for his poems, short stories, and novels.
A detailed agenda will be provided in our spring 2012 issue of the JSF Newsletter
or you can check back here at that time!
To make room reservations for Jesse Stuart Weekend contact the Greenbo Lake State Resort Park at 606.473.7324 or 800.325.0083. Greenbo Park is located on KY 1, 18 miles north of I-64 from Grayson exit or 8 miles south of U.S. 23, the Country Music Highway on KY 1. Greenbo Lake features the Jesse Stuart Lodge with 36 rooms, convention center, and Anglers’ Cove Restaurant. The park has a 225-acre lake for boating and fishing, tennis courts, 25 miles of multi-use trails for hiking, biking and horseback riding. The campground is open April 1 through Oct. 31. Greenbo Amphitheatre features musical concerts and plays during the summer and fall. For more information on Kentucky parks, visit http://www.parks.ky.gov.
Until next year you can enjoy these scenes from past Jesse Stuart Weekends
(A Special JSF Thank-you to Bud Vanzant for supplying the photos)







More to come . . .
Jesse Stuart's Legacy
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
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.

Deane, Jane, and Jesse during Jesse's World War II service.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

"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.

“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.
Jesse's recuperation after his first heart attack.
- Courtesy of the Louisville Courier-Journal

Jesse at the podium on Jesse Stuart Day, Greenup, Kentucky, October 15, 1955.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Depertment

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.

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.

Deane and Jesse in August, 1977.
-Jesse Stuart Archives Department

Proud father Jesse with daughter Jane.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

Grandpa Jesse with his grandsons Erik and Conrad.
-Jesse Stuart Foundation Archives Department

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 This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
You can also write to: Jesse Stuart Foundation, 1645 Winchester Ave., Ashland, KY 41101.
James M. Gifford, Ph.D.
CEO & Senior Editor
Contact Us
Jesse Stuart Foundation
Ashland, KY 41101
CEO and Senior Editor
Administrative Assistant to the CEO & Senior Editor
Marketing Director
Art Director
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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 |



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