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Verni Robert Quillen (March 25, 1887 - December 9, 1948) was an American journalist and humorist who for more than a quarter century was "one of the leading purveyors of village nostalgia" from his home in Fountain Inn, South Carolina. Events 1199 - Richard I is wounded by a crossbow bolt while fighting France which leads to his death on April 6. Year 1887 ( MDCCCLXXXVII) was a Common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar of the Gregorian calendar (or a Common Events 536 - Byzantine General Belisarius enters Rome while the Ostrogothic garrison peacefully leaves the city Year 1948 ( MCMXLVIII) was a Leap year starting on Thursday (link will display the 1948 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the A journalist (also called a newspaperman) is a person who practices Journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current events trends A humorist is a person who writes or performs humorous material Fountain Inn is a city in Greenville and Laurens counties in the U [1]

Contents

Youth and early career

Quillen was born in Syracuse, Kansas, near the Colorado border, and was reared in Overbrook, Kansas, a hamlet south of Topeka, where his father, J. Syracuse is a city in Hamilton County, Kansas, United States. Overbrook is a city in Osage County, Kansas, in the United States. D. Quillen, published the local newspaper. [2] Robert early learned to set type and as a teenager sold pen-and-ink drawings and published a monthly magazine. [3] In 1904, shortly before his seventeenth birthday, Quillen joined the U. S. Army under an assumed name (swearing he was 21), but by mid-1905, he had been released from military service and then spent a few months working for newspapers in the northeastern United States where he had been discharged. [4]

In 1906, he answered an ad seeking an editor for a weekly that a publisher hoped to establish in Fountain Inn, South Carolina. Although after his first encounter he remained in Fountain Inn only three months, Quillen there met and married Donnie Cox, a milliner, five years his senior. He moved on to Americus, Georgia and then took his new bride to Washington State, where Quillen joined forces with his father and worked at publishing newspapers and magazines in Winlock, Anacortes, and Port Orchard. Americus is a city in Sumter County, Georgia, United States. The population was 17013 at the 2000 census Winlock is a city in Lewis County, Washington, United States. Anacortes (ˌænəˈkɔrtəs is a city in Skagit County, Washington, USA Port Orchard is a city in and the County seat of Kitsap County, Washington, United States. [5] Quillen later wrote that he had gone "busted" in the West. [6]

Fountain Inn Tribune

In 1910, when his brother-in-law in Fountain Inn offered to sell him a weekly advertising sheet called News and Notions, Quillen bought it and borrowed money to purchase his own press and type. In the following year Quillen began editing and publishing the newly christened Fountain Inn Tribune, "a well-organized publication overflowing with news of Fountain Inn and outlying communities. "[7]

At first, as Quillen confessed two decades later, "the natives were a little hot under the collar" at what he called his "hypothetical cases"—thinly veiled descriptions of the locals—but most soon warmed to him like an eccentric aunt. One Fountain Inn man warned a new preacher, "Don't get mad at anything Mr. Quillen says. We're used to him and just overlook his queerness. "[8] Among other oddities, Quillen regularly wore a "cowboy-type Stetson," raised a memorial to "Eve, the First Woman," published his father's obituary before he died, used a column to advertise his interest in adopting a baby boy ("must be between three and twelve months of age"), and built himself a faux Greek temple as a work space—which he never used. Stetson hats or Stetsons are a brand of hat manufactered by the John B In Genesis, Eve is the first woman the wife of Adam. God created her from Adam's rib as his helpmate [9]

Well into his forties, Quillen hoped to become a great novelist. Macmillan published his two novels, One Man's Religion (1923) and The Path Wharton Found (1924). Macmillan Publishers Ltd, also known as The Macmillan Group, is a privately-held International Publishing company owned by Georg von Holtzbrinck The first was "little more than a loose collection of pieces first published in the Saturday Evening Post," the second, a book which one reviewer called a "good enough conventional story, hampered by neither originality nor brilliancy. "[10] A decade later Quillen referred to these books as "fortunately out of print. "[11]

Meanwhile, Quillen engaged in a "never ending struggle" to make the Fountain Inn Tribune pay its own way. [12] With fewer than a thousand subscribers, the newspaper itself was probably never profitable, but Quillen used the ideas generated in Fountain Inn as the basis for pieces that appeared in scores of leading national magazines and newspapers. Twice, frustrated with the time it took to run the weekly, he sold the paper (notoriously in 1926 for one dollar) and twice bought it back. [13]In 1929, Quillen called the Tribune "my hobby—my substitute for golf. "[14]

Syndicated journalist

By 1932 his work, which included editorials, paragraphs, cartoons, and one-liners, was regularly appearing in four hundred newspapers in the United States, Canada, England, and the Far East. The word cartoon has various meanings based on several very different forms of Visual art and Illustration. A one-liner is a Joke that is delivered in a single line Many comedians have adopted this comedic method in their act [15] Quillen wrote for such major periodicals such as the Baltimore Sun, the Saturday Evening Post, and American Magazine, and he "took the greatest pride" in one-liners picked up by Literary Digest. The Baltimore Sun (officially just The Sun) is Maryland ’s largest general circulation daily newspaper and provides comprehensive coverage The Saturday Evening Post was a weekly Magazine published in the United States from August 4, 1821 to February 8, The American Magazine was a Periodical publication founded in June 1906, stemming from failed publications purchased a few years earlier from publishing The Literary Digest was an influential general-interest weekly Magazine in the early 20th century United States, published by Funk and Wagnalls According to a biographer, he was known as the best "paragrapher" of his day. [16] With the assistance of Chicago newspaper executive Eugene P. Conley, Quillen also syndicated two single-panel cartoons (drawn by John H. Striebel), "Aunt Het" and "Willie Willis"—the latter of which was translated into Dutch as "Pimmie Pimmel. John H Striebel (1891 - 1962 was an American illustrator and Comic strip artist who was best known for his work on the newspaper comic strip Dixie Dugan "[17] As early as 1924, Quillen's income from syndicated material alone was probably more than $25,000—easily ten times that amount in early twenty-first century dollars. [18]

In 1934 Hollywood screen writer Lamar Trotti and producer George Marshall visited Quillen to use him as a prototype for a Will Rogers film, Life Begins at Forty, in which Rogers played a small-town newspaper editor. Lamar Jefferson Trotti ( October 18, 1900 - August 28, 1952) was an American Screenwriter, producer and motion picture executive This page is about the humorist for others with similar names see William Rogers. The film credits mentioned Quillen for "contributing dialogue. "[19]

Facile with words, Quillen took inconsistent political, economic, and racial positions; but he was "not afraid to bare his soul, express personal views, and even vent scorn and anger. "[20] For instance, he hated patent medicine, people who put on airs, late night noises (both human and natural), and the cats and jays that killed his beloved song birds. [21] Although a shy man who refused to speak in public, he became something of a "one-man welfare and relief agency for the poor and needy of Fountain Inn. "[22]

Personal life

Unable to find the adoptive son for whom he had advertised, Quillen and his wife adopted a baby girl, Louise, to whom Quillen later wrote a noted series of public epistles, "Letters from a Bald-Headed Dad to His Red-Headed Daughter. " Shortly after the adoption, his wife died after routine surgery. In 1922, Quillen married another woman from Fountain Inn, Marcelle Babb, whom he had known from childhood. [23]

Despite years of ill health, Quillen continued to smoke and avoid doctors. [24] He died at a nursing home in Asheville, North Carolina in 1948 and was buried in Fountain Inn. Asheville is a City in and the County seat of Buncombe County, North Carolina, United [25] Not surprisingly, he had written and published his own obituary sixteen years earlier, which read in part, "He was a writer of paragraphs and short editorials. He always hoped to write something of permanent value, but the business of making a living took most of his time and he never got around to it. In his youth he felt an urge to reform the world, but during the latter years of his life he decided that he would be doing rather well if he kept himself out of jail. "[26]

Notes

  1. ^ John Hammond Moore, ed. , The Voice of Small-Town America: The Selected Writings of Robert Quillen, 1920-1948 (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2008), xi.
  2. ^ Moore, xi. According to Quillen, his paternal grandfather was a "dour, hard man, who made wonderful wagons and once took me by the seat of the pants and threw me into a watering trough because I had not obeyed him and remained away from it. " (83)
  3. ^ Moore, 84.
  4. ^ Moore, xii. Quillen published an autobiographical essay, "Concerning Me" on October 17, 1929 (Moore, 82-86). He did not mention his military service.
  5. ^ Moore, xii-xiii.
  6. ^ Moore, xiii.
  7. ^ Moore, xiii.
  8. ^ Moore, xiv.
  9. ^ Moore, xxi, 8 (December 17, 1925), xvi; Alexander Woollcott, "The Sage of Fountain Inn", Cosmopolitan (September 1933), 69. Alexander Humphreys Woollcott ( January 19, 1887 &ndash January 23, 1943) was an American critic and commentator for The New Yorker Quillen thought it shameful that people waited until "it was too late to say nice things about those they loved and admired. "
  10. ^ Moore, xix; Springfield Republican (November 30, 1924), 7. The Republican is a newspaper based in Springfield Massachusetts.
  11. ^ Moore, xix.
  12. ^ Moore, xvii.
  13. ^ Moore, xix-xx. The buyback after the dollar sale apparently cost Quillen about two thousand dollars.
  14. ^ "Concerning Me," October 17, 1929 (Moore, 85).
  15. ^ Moore, xi.
  16. ^ Moore, xviii-xix, xxi.
  17. ^ Moore, xix.
  18. ^ Moore, xvii; MeasuringWorth.com.
  19. ^ Moore, 249; "Correction," October 18, 1934, in Moore, 276-77. "That was all that happened. I spent four pleasant afternoons with two pleasant gentlemen and got paid for it, and that's as near as I'll ever come to bein 'in the movies. '"
  20. ^ Moore, xvi.
  21. ^ Moore, xiii, 263, 147-48, 260-61, 154-55, 262-63, 317.
  22. ^ Moore, xvii, xxi. In 1984, a friend, Lois Woods, told a reporter that if "a child found an empty stocking on Christmas morning, it was because Quillen and his wife Marcelle didn't know about it. " [Greenville] County Fare (October 17, 1984), 3.
  23. ^ Moore, xviii-xix.
  24. ^ In 1932, when he was 45, Quillen signed a photo of himself smoking with the words, "from an old wreck. " [Greenville] County Fare (October 17, 1984), 3.
  25. ^ Moore, xviii; Greenville News, December 9, 1948.
  26. ^ "Obituary," March 24, 1932, in Moore, 181-82. The "obituary continued, "When the last clod had fallen, workmen covered the grave with a granite slab bearing the inscription: 'Submitted to the Publisher by Robert Quillen. '"

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