 Photo by Elizabeth Buehrmann |
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Carl Sandburg
Carl Sandburg was born in Galesburg, Illinois, on January 6, 1878. His
parents, August and Clara Johnson, had emigrated to America from the north of
Sweden. After encountering several August Johnsons in his job for the railroad,
the Sandburg's father renamed the family. The Sandburgs were very poor;
Carl left school at the age of thirteen to work odd jobs, from laying bricks to
dishwashing, to help support his family. At seventeen, he traveled west to
Kansas as a hobo. He then served eight months in Puerto Rico during the
Spanish-American war. While serving, Sandburg met a student at Lombard College,
the small school located in Sandburg's hometown. The young man convinced
Sandburg to enroll in Lombard after his return from the war.
Sandburg worked his way through school, where he attracted the attention of
Professor Philip Green Wright, who not only encouraged Sandburg's writing,
but paid for the publication of his first volume of poetry, a pamphlet called
Reckless Ecstasy (1904). While Sandburg attended Lombard for four years,
he never received a diploma (he would later receive honorary degrees from
Lombard, Knox College, and Northwestern University). After college, Sandburg
moved to Milwaukee, where he worked as an advertising writer and a newspaper
reporter. While there, he met and married Lillian Steichen (whom he called
Paula), sister of the photographer Edward Steichen. A Socialist sympathizer at
that point in his life, Sandburg then worked for the Social-Democrat Party in
Wisconsin and later acted as secretary to the first Socialist mayor of
Milwaukee from 1910 to 1912.
The Sandburgs soon moved to Chicago, where Carl became an editorial writer
for the Chicago Daily News. Harriet Monroe had just started Poetry: A
Magazine of Verse, and began publishing Sandburg's poems, encouraging
him to continue writing in the free-verse, Whitman-like style he had cultivated
in college. Monroe liked the poems' homely speech, which distinguished
Sandburg from his predecessors. It was during this period that Sandburg was
recognized as a member of the Chicago literary renaissance, which included Ben
Hecht, Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson, and Edgar Lee Masters. He
established his reputation with Chicago Poems (1916), and then
Cornhuskers (1918). Soon after the publication of these volumes Sandburg
wrote Smoke and Steel (1920), his first prolonged attempt to find beauty
in modern industrialism. With these three volumes, Sandburg became known for
his free verse poems celebrating industrial and agricultural America, American
geography and landscape, and the American common people.
In the twenties, he started some of his most ambitious projects, including
his study of Abraham Lincoln. From childhood, Sandburg loved and admired the
legacy of President Lincoln. For thirty years he sought out and collected
material, and gradually began the writing of the six-volume definitive
biography of the former president. The twenties also saw Sandburg's
collections of American folklore, the ballads in The American Songbag
and The New American Songbag (1950), and books for children. These later
volumes contained pieces collected from brief tours across America which
Sandburg took each year, playing his banjo or guitar, singing folk-songs, and
reciting poems.
In the 1930s, Sandburg continued his celebration of America with Mary
Lincoln, Wife and Widow (1932), The People, Yes (1936), and the
second part of his Lincoln biography, Abraham Lincoln: The War Years
(1939), for which he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. He received a second
Pulitzer Prize for his Complete Poems in 1950. His final volumes of
verse were Harvest Poems, 1910-1960 (1960) and Honey and Salt
(1963). Carl Sandburg died in 1967.
A Selected Bibliography
Poetry
Chicago Poems (1916)
Complete Poems (1950)
Cornhuskers (1918)
Good Morning, America (1928)
Harvest Poems (1950)
Honey and Salt (1963)
In Reckless Ecstasy (1904)
Selected Poems (1926)
Slabs of the Sunburnt West (1922)
Smoke and Steel (1920)
The People, Yes (1936)
Prose
Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years (1926)
Abraham Lincoln: The War Years (1939)
Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow (1932)
Steichen the Photographer (1929)
The American Songbag (1927)
The New American Songbag (1950)
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