Hamlin Garland

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Hamlin Garland

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Hamlin Garland 1860-1940, American author, b. near West Salem, Wis. He grew up in the Middle Western farmlands, the region he later wrote about in verse, stories, and autobiography. His tales, collected as Main-travelled Roads (1891), Prairie Folks (1893), and Wayside Courtships (1897), were bitter pictures of the futility of farm lives. Besides realistic novels of the prairies— A Little Norsk (1892) and Rose of Dutcher's Coolly (1895), he wrote several propagandist novels, including Jason Edwards: An Average Man (1892), urging the single tax doctrine, and A Spoil of Office (1892), supporting the Populist party. Garland is perhaps best remembered for his two autobiographical works, A Son of the Middle Border (1917) and A Daughter of the Middle Border (1921, Pulitzer Prize). He was also the author of essays, a biography of President Grant (1898), and several books on spiritualism.

Bibliography: See biography by J. Holloway (1960, repr. 1971).

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Garland, (Hannibal) Hamlin

The Oxford Companion to American Literature | 1995 | | © The Oxford Companion to American Literature 1995, originally published by Oxford University Press 1995. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Garland, [Hannibal] Hamlin (1860–1940), born in Wisconsin, after sharing the oppressive labor of farm life there and in Iowa and South Dakota went to Boston, where he came under the influence of Howells. Returning to the farmland of the Middle Border, he chose the hardships of the farmer for the subject of his stories, which are characterized by objective realism and ethical romanticism. They were collected in Main‐Travelled Roads (1891), Boy Life on the Prairie (1899), and Other Main‐Travelled Roads (1910), the last containing stories from two previous books, Prairie Folks (1893) and Wayside Courtships (1897). The writing of these stories, all of which were completed before 1890, led Garland to believe that something besides realistic fiction was needed to ameliorate agricultural conditions. Accordingly, he wrote Jason Edwards: An Average Man (1892) as propaganda for the single tax theories of Henry George, and A Spoil of Office (1892), a novel that, in exposing political corruption, also campaigned for the Populist party. After A Member of the Third House (1892), a novel showing the legislative power of the railroads, he wrote A Little Norsk (1892), depicting the bleak life of a Dakota farm girl, and Rose of Dutcher's Coolly (1895), telling of a girl's revolt against this life. Crumbling Idols (1894), a book of essays, sets forth the author's theory of “veritism,” combining realism for a democratic purpose with individualism, stemming from Whitman and flavored by local color. The Captain of the Gray‐Horse Troop (1902) deals with the unjust treatment of the Indians by frontiersmen and cattlemen, and Cavanagh, Forest Ranger (1910) with the conflict between cattle ranchers and representatives of the government attempting to conserve natural resources. After the force of his youth had partially been spent, he wrote his comparatively mellow autobiography, A Son of the Middle Border (1917), continued in A Daughter of the Middle Border (1921, Pulitzer Prize), and the thinner, semi‐fictional works, Trail‐Makers of the Middle Border (1926) and Back‐Trailers from the Middle Border (1928). Subsequent volumes, Roadside Meetings (1930), Companions on the Trail (1931), My Friendly Contemporaries (1932), and Afternoon Neighbors (1934), dwindled into the category of garrulous memoirs. His last books were concerned with psychic research.

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James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Garland, (Hannibal) Hamlin." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. 9 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Garland, (Hannibal) Hamlin." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. (November 9, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-GarlandHannibalHamlin.html

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Garland, (Hannibal) Hamlin." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Retrieved November 09, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-GarlandHannibalHamlin.html

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Hannibal Hamlin Garland

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Hannibal Hamlin Garland

Hannibal Hamlin Garland (1860-1940), American author, augmented local-color writing by the new naturalistic techniques that combined realism with a sense of the individual's overwhelming struggle against a hostile environment.

In the late 1880s, when American local-color writers began to depict the brutal, dehumanizing aspects of life, the work which most effectively expressed the hardships of farmers of the northern prairies was Hamlin Garland's Main Traveled Roads (1891).

Garland was born near West Salem, Wis., on Sept. 14, 1860. Garland's father was an industrious farmer who moved his family from farm to farm in Wisconsin, Iowa, and South Dakota, hoping to wrest a better living from the fertile but unreliable fields. The successive homesteadsGarland later described them as "bare as boxes, dropped on the treeless plains"provided little in the way of literature, but what little was available young Hamlin read with enthusiasm. His parents encouraged his literary interests and helped him get as much education as the area and his necessary work on the farm would allow. In 1882 he received a diploma from Cedar Valley Seminary in Osage, Iowa, where his family was then living. He took a brief trip to New England and then returned to teach school for 2 years in Illinois.

Garland's brief visit to Boston (which still kept up its pretense of being the literary capital of America) inspired him to return, and in 1884 he went to resume his education there. The only "university" he could afford was the Boston Public Library, but it proved ideal for him: whenever possible he devoted 14 hours a day to reading.

Garland entered Moses True Brown's Boston School of Oratory, working for his tuition. But, lacking money, he soon decided to give up his studies temporarily. When Brown heard that his brilliant pupil was quitting school, he proposed to make Garland a teacher. Consequently, in 1885 Hamlin Garland, "Professor of Elocution and Literature," presented public lectures on American, French, and German authors, the admission fee being his pay.

Early Career

His lectures brought Garland the attention of Boston literary people, and his reviews, articles, and stories were soon appearing in the Transcript, Harper's Weekly, and other publications. His admiring reviews of William Dean Howells eventually led to a meeting with that important novelist and critic, beginning what Garland called "the longest and most important friendship" of his life. Garland's praise of poet Walt Whitman similarly brought him the acquaintance and encouragement of that giant. Garland's appearancehe was a strikingly handsome young man with well-tended long brown hair and beardprompted Whitman to comment, "Garland is much better mettle than his polished exterior would indicate."

"Main Traveled Roads"

However polished his exterior, Garland's stories were intentionally plain and rough. This was apparent in his first and best book, Main Traveled Roads. His objective was to convey the hard, unromantic truth of life on the plains, and he accomplished it effectively. His hostility toward landowners is manifest in one of the best stories in this collection, "Under the Lion's Paw." A poor man with a sick wife and hungry children rents a dilapidated farm from a greedy town merchant who turns farmers' misery to his profit. The tenant farmer has the owner's promise that he can buy the property at a reasonable price if he can make it pay, and so he and his family slave for 3 years to improve the house, barn, and fences which will one day be their own. But when they have doubled the value of "their" farm, the owner doubles the price, ensuring that both land and tillers will remain mortgaged to him forever. Garland dedicated the book to his parents "whose half-century pilgrimage on the main roads of life has brought them only toil and deprivation."

Commitment to Realism

Garland's commitment to realism in literature was expressed in his stories and also in his vigorous support of the new realistic drama and of many young realistic writers, most notably Stephen Crane. Crumbling Idols (1894) states Garland's theory of "veritism:" "The realist or veritist is really an optimist, a dreamer. He sees life in terms of what it might be, as well as in terms of what it is; but he writes of what is, and, at his best, suggests what is to be, by contrast." Garland seldom attained this ideal after 1891. His next novels, Jason Edwards, A Member of the Third House, and A Spoil of Office (all 1892), were hastily written propaganda pieces, not carefully wrought works of fiction. Rose of Dutcher's Coolly (1895) comes closer to fulfilling Garland's critical standard, although it is severely flawed.

Later Writing

In 1899 Garland married Zulime Taft, a beautiful woman with artistic training. Two daughters were born to the couple. After his marriage Garland consciously or unconsciously abandoned his bleak realism and in such books as The Captain of the Gray-Horse Troop (1902) achieved greater popularity at the cost of literary value. But if his fiction declined in quality, he found a new medium in which he could excell: autobiography. A Son of the Middle Border (1917) and A Daughter of the Middle Border (1921) treat his own life with honesty and understanding. The latter book received the Pulitzer Prize in 1922. Many honors came to Garland in his later years. He continued to write memoirs and accounts of psychic research until his death on March 4, 1940.

Further Reading

Jean Holloway, Hamlin Garland (1960), is a detailed and authoritative biography. Donald Pizer, Hamlin Garland's Early Work and Career (1960), is an excellent study. For a shorter treatment consult the chapter on Garland in H. Wayne Morgan, American Writers in Rebellion: From Mark Twain to Dreiser (1965). Larzer Ziff, The American 1890s: Life and Times of a Lost Generation (1966), places Garland in his period.

Additional Sources

Garland, Hamlin, Back-trailers from the middle borde, St. Clair Shores, Mich., Scholarly Press, 1974.

Garland, Hamlin, Companions on the trail; a literary chronicl, St. Clair Shores, Mich., Scholarly Press 1974, 1931.

Garland, Hamlin, A daughter of the middle borde, St. Clair Shores, Mich., Scholarly Press 1974, 1921.

Garland, Hamlin, Roadside meeting, St. Clair Shores, Mich., Scholarly Press 1974, 1930.

Garland, Hamlin, A son of the middle border, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 197.

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Melodramatist of the middle border: Hamlin Garland's early work reconsidered.
Magazine article from: Studies in American Fiction; 9/22/1993; ; 700+ words ; ...seventy-eight short stories, Hamlin Garland announced to a surprised reporter...some time to come, at least." Garland was understandably optimistic about...share the reporter's surprise at Garland's identification of himself as...
LANDED AND LITERARY: HAMLIN GARLAND, SARAH ORNE JEWETT, AND THE PRODUCTION OF REGIONAL LITERATURES.
Magazine article from: Studies in American Fiction; 9/22/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...To readers in 1895 familiar with Garland's work and its reception, reviewer...Thompson's analogy between Hamlin Garland's Crumbling Idols (1894) and...if most reviewers of the early Garland found his work too radical and...
THE VALUE OF REGIONAL IDENTITY: LABOR, REPRESENTATION, AND AUTHORSHIP IN HAMLIN GARLAND.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in American Fiction; 9/22/1999; ; 700+ words ; Hamlin Garland has always posed something of a problem...passionate, sometimes absurdly polemical, Garland's writing has always occupied an uneasy...sympathies those stories seemed to embody, Garland's later literary output consisted almost...
"I am as ever your disciple": the friendship of Hamlin Garland and W. D. Howells.
Magazine article from: Papers on Language & Literature; 6/22/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...wrote William Dean Howells in his fullest public account of his life-long friendship with Hamlin Garland ("Mr. Garland's Books" 523). And Garland too remembered their friendship with affection and respect: During our long friendship I...
"This spreading radicalism": Hamlin Garland's 'A Spoil of Office' and the creation of true populism.(Fictions of Reform)
Magazine article from: Studies in American Fiction; 3/22/1998; ; 700+ words ; A Spoil of Office (1892), Hamlin Garland's most sustained Populist novel, captures...about the book is how "it illustrates Garland's development as a writer," as shown by Garland's revision of it in 1897, five years...
Sexuality in Hamlin Garland's Rose of Dutcher's Coolly.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Papers on Language & Literature; 6/22/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...response to fresh circumstances. (1) Garland had made notes in 1890 for a story about...with its active participation and aid. Garland had been deeply moved in late 1889 by...practice of the regionalist aesthetic Garland had expounded in his 1894 literary manifesto...
Roots of Garland's novels grew deep in rich dirt of Green's Coulee Series: The Wisconsin Story \ 1848-1998 Wisconsin Sesquicentennial \ 150 Stories, 150 Years
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 4/9/1998; ; 695 words ; ...expansion. His nomadic years left Garland with a gritty, unromanticized...Middle Border," which earned Garland a Pulitzer Prize in 1922...existence of his forefathers, the Garlands and the McClintocks, while...Cemetery at West Salem. The Hamlin Garland Homestead is on the National...
MPS school shows how it's done; Scores soar at Garland, where focus is on what kids learn
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 1/3/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...at least 40% of the students at Hamlin Garland Elementary School were proficient...scores have risen steadily at Garland in recent years. This year, it...School awards. The moral of the Garland story is one that MPS officials...
Russell sparks Penquis Hamlin, Allen strong in win
Newspaper article from: Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME; 1/12/2002; 700+ words ; ...high school action. Lindsay Hamlin added 10 points, and April...McGinn 1-1-3, Batchelder, Garland 0-1-1, Young 2-0-4...56 Russell 8-0-18, L. Hamlin 5-0-10, Dolley 1-0...Gerrish, Madden 1-0-2, K. Hamlin 2-0-5, Comeau, Cobb 2...
Russell's 30 leads Riverside comeback, Logan wins own invitational; Hamlin takes Classic crown
Newspaper article from: Charleston Daily Mail; 12/23/2004; ; 692 words ; ...basketball action Wednesday: Hamlin 62, Guyan Valley 38 - After a 22-point second quarter, Hamlin (3-1) won the Armstrong...first half points as Shawnice Garland led the Cougars to the road victory. Garland's 20 points helped Capital...

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