Martha Strudwick Young

Martha Strudwick Young (Jan. 11, 1862–May 9, 1941)[1] was an American regionalist writer known for her recounting of Southern folk tales, fables, and songs of black life in the plantation era. She was admired by other writers for her skill with dialect. Young was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 1986.

Martha Strudwick Young
BornEli Shepperd
(1862-01-11)January 11, 1862
Newbern, Alabama
DiedMay 9, 1941(1941-05-09) (aged 79)
Greensboro, Alabama
Occupationwriter
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materLivingston Female Academy and State Normal School
RelativesJulia Strudwick Tutwiler (aunt)

Early life and education

Martha Strudwick Young was the daughter of Confederate physician and surgeon Elisha Young and Anne Eliza Ashe (Tutwiler) Young.[2][3] The women's education and prison reform advocate Julia Strudwick Tutwiler was her aunt. Her family moved to nearby Greensboro after the Civil War, and it was there that she learned the Southern folk tales and stories of African-American culture that would form the basis of her later writings.[1][3]

Young was educated at the Green Springs School (which had been founded by her grandfather Henry Tutwiler as a school for boys), the Greensboro Female Academy, and the Tuscaloosa Female Academy before graduating from the Livingston Female Academy and State Normal School (later to become Livingston University and then the University of West Alabama).[3][4] One of her teachers at the Greensboro Female Academy was the writer Louise Clarke Pyrnelle.[5]

Writing

Young wrote eight books, mainly collections of Southern folk tales, fables, stories, and songs, many of which drew on black culture and featured black protagonists. She was one of a group of regional writers who helped to popularize the use of dialect as an adjunct to realism, including George Washington Cable, Kate Chopin, Mary Noailles Murfree, and Joel Chandler Harris.[6] Young, who aimed to preserve the tales and songs she had known as a child, has been called "Alabama's foremost folklorist."[7]

She began publishing in 1884 under the pseudonym 'Eli Shepperd' with a story in the New Orleans Times-Democrat.[8] For more than 50 years she continued to publish stories as well as sentimental and religious poems in regional and national magazines and newspapers, including The Atlantic Monthly, Cosmopolitan, Women's Home Companion, Metropolitan Magazine, Southern Bivouac, Detroit Free Press, and Southern Churchman.[1][4][8]

In 1901 Young published her first book, Plantation Songs for My Lady's Banjo and Other Negro Lyrics & Monologues.[8] It was illustrated with photographs "from life" by J. W. Otts. Young unmasked her identity sometime after this book was published, in an article in the Birmingham Age-Herald that was signed "Martha Young ('Eli Shepperd')".[4]

Young followed up in 1902 with Plantation Bird Legends, which established her reputation as a leading writer of dialect tales.[8] By the time of her 1912 book Behind the Dark Pines—which was a collection of some 50 stories about animals, including Br'er Rabbit—she was being compared to Joel Chandler Harris, who considered some of her dialect verse "incomparably the best ever written."[2] She collaborated with Harris on a book; entitled Songs and Ballads of Old Time Plantations, it may never have been published.[4][8]

Young also wrote stories and books for children, frequently with instructions on how to turn stories into performance games.[9] She traveled around the country lecturing and giving readings from her books.[8]

Legacy

Young's papers are held by the Hoole Special Collections Library at the University of Alabama. The University of West Alabama's Julia S. Tutwiler Library holds a small selection of her writings, including a notebook.[3]

Young was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 1986.

Books

  • Plantation Songs for My Lady's Banjo (1901; photos by J.W. Otts)
  • Plantation Bird Legends (1902; illustrated by J. M. Condé)
  • Bessie Bell (1903)
  • Somebody's Little Girl (1910)
  • Beyond the Dark Pines (1912; illustrated by J. M. Condé)
  • When We Were Wee (1913)
  • Two Little Southern Sisters and Their Garden Plays (1919)
  • Minute Dramas (1921)
gollark: I am now going to smelt an other iron ore because this is all manual ææææ.
gollark: I am now going to use my furnace to smelt an iron ore. Mwahahahaha.
gollark: Activate "furnace".
gollark: Built "furnace".
gollark: Built "mine".

References

  1. '"Young, Martha Strudwick 1862-1941". Alabama Authors website.
  2. Locke, Annie Reese. "Martha Young". In Library of Southern Literature. Atlanta, Georgia: Martin & HOyt, 1922, pp. 6043-6045.
  3. "Famous Green County Women". Greene County Alabama website.
  4. Willard, Frances Elizabeth, and Mary Ashton Rice Livermore, eds. American Women: Fifteen Hundred Biographies with Over 1,400 Portraits: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of the Lives and Achievements of American Women During the Nineteenth Century. Vol. 2. Mast, Crowell & Kirkpatrick, 1897, p. 810.
  5. Drew, Bernard A. Black Stereotypes in Popular Series Fiction, 1851-1955: Jim Crow Era Authors. McFarland, 2015, p. 262.
  6. Wilson, Charles Reagan, and M. Montgomery. The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. Vol. 5: Language. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007, p. 152.
  7. Hoole, William Stanley. Martha Young: Alabama's Foremost Folklorist. Confederate, 1982.
  8. "Martha Strudwick Young". Alabama Women's Hall of Fame website, 2000.
  9. "Martha Strudwick Young". University of Alabama Libraries website.
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