George Wharton James

George Wharton James (27 September 1858[1] – 8 November 1923)[2] was an American popular lecturer, photographer, journalist and editor. Born in Lincolnshire, England, he emigrated to the United States as a young man after being ordained as a Methodist minister.

George Wharton James
Born27 September 1858
Lincolnshire, England
Died1923
Occupationlecturer, photographer, journalist
SubjectCalifornia and the American Southwest

He served in parishes in Nevada and Southern California, gradually beginning his journalism and writing career. An editor of two magazines, he also wrote more than 40 books and many articles and pamphlets on California and the American Southwest.

Biography

George Wharton James was born in Lincolnshire, England. He married and was ordained as a Methodist minister. He and his wife immigrated to the United States in 1881.

He served in parishes in Nevada and southern California. However, in 1889 his wife sued for divorce, accusing him of committing numerous acts of adultery. He was tried by the Methodist Church, charged with real estate fraud, using faked credentials, and sexual misconduct. He was defrocked, although he was later reinstated.[3]

In addition to writing his own books, James was associate editor of The Craftsman (1904–05), and editor of Out West (1912–14).[4] In the style of the times, he was a popular lecturer in the region. He also lectured at both the Panama-Pacific and Panama-California expositions 1915–16.[1]

James had a long-running feud with Charles Fletcher Lummis, a California writer with similar regional interests.[3] Both men also explored the American Southwest, becoming acquainted with Father Anton Docher, a French-born missionary priest who served at Pueblo of Isleta in New Mexico for 34 years.

James' books included the well-received The Wonders of the Colorado Desert (1906),[5] Through Ramona's Country (1909), In and Out of the Old Missions of California (1905), and The Lake of the Sky (1915). Characteristics of his writing included romanticism, an enthusiasm for natural environments, idealization of aboriginal lifeways, and promotion of health fads.

After his divorce, James married again, living in Pasadena, California with his second wife at 1098 North Raymond Avenue. Writer Lawrence Clark Powell later described James' home as serving as "a kind of museum salon in the same way that El Alisal served as the center for his rival booster Lummis' Los Angeles followers. He founded the Pasadena Browning Society, and the Anti-Whispering Society. According to Powell, the Anti-Whispering Society was "devoted to the suppression of (1) talking audiences, (2) peanut fiends, and (3) crying babies."[6]

James was an advocate of outdoor nakedness or nudism.[7]

Honors

Bibliography

George Wharton James in his workshop.
  • The Wonders of the Colorado Desert. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. 1906. OCLC 3313620. LCC F868.S15 J2 (with illustrations by Carl Eytel)[8]
  • Indian basketry. Henry Malkan. 1909. ISBN 0-486-21712-4.
  • Through Ramona's Country. Little, Brown. 1909. OCLC 1710960.
  • Indian Blankets and Their Makers. A.C. McClurg and Co. 1914. ISBN 0-486-22996-3.
  • The Story of Captain, the Horse with the Human Brain. Radiant Life Press, Pasadena. 1917.
  • The Old Franciscan Missions of California (Illustrated Edition). The echo library. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4068-2950-1.
  • The Lake of the Sky. The echo library. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4068-2952-5.
  • The Grand Canyon of Arizona: How to See It. The echo library. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4068-5328-5.
  • In and Out of the Old Missions of California. 2003. ISBN 978-0766142237.
  • Quit Your Worrying!. The Echo Library. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4068-5330-8.
  • Indian Basketry, and How to Make Indian and Other Baskets. BiblioBazaar. 2011. ISBN 978-1-178-58712-8.
  • New Mexico, the Land of the Delight Makers. The Page Company. 1929. ASIN B008LH6ZN0.
  • The Legend of Tauquitch and Algoot. Forgotten Books. 2008. ISBN 978-1605068480.

Notes

  1. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "James, George Wharton" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  2. Dan L. Thrapp (1 August 1991). Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography: G-O. U of Nebraska Press. p. 720. ISBN 0-8032-9419-0.
  3. Starr, Kevin (1985). Inventing the Dream: California through the Progressive Era. New York: Oxford University Press.
  4. OCLC 3687761 and OCLC 702604648
  5. Adams, Cyrus C. (March 2, 1907). "Wonders of the Far West: George Wharton James's New Book on the Colorado Desert" (PDF). The New York Times Saturday Review of Books. Retrieved August 30, 2012. ...[James] has gifts of observation far above the common and the literary art of vivid and picturesque description.
  6. Powell, Lawrence (1971). California Classics. Santa Barbara: Calpra Press. pp. 57. ISBN 0-88496-184-2.
  7. Shrank 2019, p. 2.
  8. Eytel contributed the color plate Mirage in the Desert (1905) and over 300 drawings – Edwards, Elza Ivan (1962). Desert Harvest. Los Angeles: Westernlore Press. p. 128. OCLC 2022836. LCC Z1251.S8 E3
gollark: Isn't it *also* the case that some states get more electoral college votes per unit of population?
gollark: You can know things without living in them, see.
gollark: Complaining about things is good and optimal.
gollark: And yet it's relevant.
gollark: It's totally possible to draw borders using a verifiable deterministic algorithm anyone interested can rerun.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.