Carl Sandburg
Famous as | Writer & Editor |
Born on | 06 January 1878 |
Born in | Galesburg, Illinois |
Died on | 22 July 1967 |
Nationality | United States |
Works & Achievements | Wrote important works like Chicago Poems (1916), Cornhuskers (1918), Good Morning, America (1928) and Potato Face (1930) and the significant biographies like, Abraham Lincoln: The War Years (1939). |
Carl Sandburg Childhood & Life
Carl Sandburg was born on January 6, 1878 in Galesburg, Illinois.
His parents were August and Clara Johnson, who had immigrated to America
from the north of Sweden. When his father found his name very common in
his job in the railroad, he changed it to the Sandburg. The family was
not financially well-off which is why Carl had to abandon school at the
young age of thirteen. In order to support his family, he did a variety
of odd jobs, from driving milk wagon,
laying bricks to dishwashing. At the age of seventeen in 1895, Sandburg
moved west to Kansas. He served eight months in the military and was
posted in Puerto Rico with the 6th Illinois Infantry during the
Spanish-American War. While serving in the military, he made a friend at
Lombard College who helped him get enrolled in the Lombard College
after the completion of the war. In college, Sandburg came in contact
with Professor Philip Green Wright, who not only encouraged him to
write, but also financed the publication of his first volume of poetry, a
pamphlet called “Reckless Ecstasy”
(1904). Even though Sandburg attended the Lombard College for four
years, he could not get a degree from the college. He, then, moved to
Milwaukee, where he worked as an advertising writer and a newspaper
reporter. In 1907, Sandburg met Lilian Steichen at the Social Democratic
Party office and married her the following year. He started working for
the Social-Democrat Party in Wisconsin and later served as the
secretary to the first Socialist mayor of Milwaukee from 1910 to 1912.
Sandburg then moved to Chicago, where he became an editorial writer
for the Chicago Daily News. A group of his poems were published in the
newly established national magazine, ‘Poetry: A Magazine of Verse’. It
was started by Harriet Monroe who encouraged Sandburg to continue
writing in the free-verse. Monroe liked the homely speech of his poems,
which differentiated Sandburg from his predecessors. Meanwhile, he was
also making his mark as a member of the Chicago literary renaissance,
which included the names like Ben Hecht, Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood
Anderson, and Edgar Lee Masters. In 1916, he published his famous,
“Chicago Poems”, which established his reputation as a poet. The success
of this book was followed by another successful work, “Cornhuskers”
(1918). For the same, Sandburg was felicitated with a Pulitzer Prize.
From 1919 to 1930, he lived at 331 S. York Street in Elmhurst, Illinois.
In 1920, Sandburg came with “Smoke and Steel”, his first prolonged
attempt to find beauty in modern industrialism. In 1920s, he started
working on his ambitious projects, including his study of Abraham
Lincoln. Since his childhood, Sandburg had always admired Abraham
Lincoln. For thirty years, he collected material on Abraham Lincoln and
then published the first volume of the biography, “Abraham Lincoln: The
Prairie Years” in 1926. While he was living in Elmhurst, Sandburg wrote
three children's books, “Rootabaga Stories” (1922), “Rootabaga Pigeons”
(1923), and “Potato Face” (1930). His other important works from this
period were “The American Songbag” (1927), and a book of poems “Good
Morning, America” (1928). In 1930, he moved to Michigan. During 1930s,
he continued his significant works with the publication of “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 the latter, he received his first Pulitzer Prize. Sandburg
received his second Pulitzer Prize for his “Complete Poems” in 1951.
Important Works & Awards
Majority of Sandburg’s poetic works including “Chicago” was based
on Chicago, Illinois, where he worked as a reporter for the Chicago
Daily News and the Day Book. He was also remembered for his works for
children including “Rootabaga Stories” and “Rootabaga Pigeons”. The
latter was a series of whimsical, sometimes, melancholy stories which he
originally wrote for his own daughters. Sandburg won three Pulitzer
Prizes for his works, “The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg”,
“Cornhuskers”, and for his biography, “Abraham Lincoln: The War Years”.
In 1957, Sandburg recorded excerpts from the biography and some of
Lincoln's speeches for Caedmon Records in New York City. Two years later
he was awarded a Grammy Award for Best Performance - Documentary Or
Spoken Word for his recording of Aaron Copland's Lincoln Portrait with
the New York Philharmonic
Personal Life
Carl Sandburg married Lilian Steichen in 1908. Lilian was the sister of famous photographer Edward Steichen. The couple had three daughters.
Death
Carl Sandburg breathed his last on July 22, 1967 at Flat Rock, North Carolina estate, Connemara.
Memorials
Sandburg's home in Flat Rock, Henderson County,
North Carolina, where he lived for 22 years, is preserved by the
National Park Service as the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site. A
college dedicated to him, Carl Sandburg College is located in his
birthplace Galesburg, Illinois. His childhood home in Galesburg is now
operated by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency as the Carl
Sandburg State Historic Site. This site constitutes the cottage where he
was born in, a modern visitor's center, and small garden with a large
stone named Remembrance Rock, under which he and his wife Lilian's ashes
are buried. In 1959, Carl Sandburg Junior High School was established
in Golden Valley, Minnesota, the dedication was attended by the Sandburg
himself.
In 1960, to honor him, the former Elmhurst Junior High School in
Elmhurst, Illinois was renamed as 'Carl Sandburg Middle School.
Following year in the month of December, he was honored by dedicating
one more school to his name, Carl Sandburg Elementary School in San
Bruno, California. There are many other schools named after him in
Illinois, including those in Wheaton, Orland Park, Springfield,
Mundelein, and Joliet. There are few other schools established outside
Illinois named after him, such as Carl Sandburg Middle School in
Neshaminy School District of lower Bucks County and Carl Sandburg Middle School, located south of Alexandria, Virginia On January 6, 1978, the United States Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp honoring Sandburg on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of his birth.
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Carl Sandburg Timeline: | ||||
1878: Was born in Galesburg, Illinois.
1895: At the age of seventeen, moved west to Kansas.
1904: Published his first volume of poetry, a pamphlet called Reckless Ecstasy.
1908: Married Lilian Steichen.
1910-12: Served as the secretary to the first Socialist mayor of Milwaukee.
1916: Published his famous work, Chicago Poems.
1918: Published his successful work, “Cornhuskers”.
1920: Published “Smoke and Steel”.
1922: Published “Rootabaga Stories”.
1923: Published “Rootabaga Pigeons”.
1926: Published the first part of his biography, “Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years”.
1930: Published another children work, “Potato Face”.
1932: Published, his significant work “Mary Lincoln, Wife and Widow”.
1939: Published the second part of his Lincoln biography, “Abraham Lincoln: The War Years”.
1951: Received Pulitzer Prize for his “Complete Poems”.
1959: Was awarded a Grammy Award for Best Performance - Documentary Or Spoken Word
1967: Died at the age of 89.
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