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Anderson, Sherwood (Sherwood Berton), 1876-1941

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1876 - 1941

Biographical Note

Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941) was born in the small town of Camden, Ohio to Irwin McClain Anderson (d.1919) and Emma Jane Smith (d.1895). While Anderson excelled as a student, he quit school at the age of 14 to help support his family, taking on a wide variety of jobs. After his mother’s death, he relocated to Chicago for the first time, working and taking a few night classes. He served briefly in Cuba during he Spanish-American War, but was sent there after combat had ended. A few months later, he returned to Clyde, then moved to Springfield, Ohio, in 1899, where he completed his senior year at Wittenburg Academy, a prep school. His graduation speech resulted in his being offered a job as an advertising solicitor and he moved to back to Chicago.

In 1903, work travels took him to Toledo, Ohio, where he met Cornelia Pratt Lane, his first wife. The couple married in 1904 and had three children: Robert Lane (1907-1951), John Sherwood (1908-1995) and Marion (Mimi) (1911-1996). In 1906, they relocated to Cleveland when Anderson became the president of the United Factories Company, a mail-order firm. The following year he departed the company, took his family to Elyria, Ohio, and started the Anderson Manufacturing Co., another mail order business.

In 1912, Anderson suffered a nervous breakdown. He returned to Chicago yet again and began work writing advertising copy and becoming part of the writer and artist scene of the city. In 1916, he divorced Cornelia Pratt and married Tennessee Mitchell, a sculptor. He also published his first novel, Windy McPherson’s Son, the first of three books in a deal with publisher John Lane. It was beginning of his writing career. 1919 saw the publication of his short story collection, Winesburg, Ohio, one of his most well-know works. In 1924, he divorced Tennessee Mitchell and marred Elizabeth Prall. They lived in New York and New Orleans, and traveled in Europe, too. With profits from his novel 1925 Dark Laughter, Anderson bought Ripshin Farm, later just Ripshin, as a summer home, in 1926. He also acquired both local newspapers, the Smyth County News and the Marion Democrat. His son, Robert, helped with, and eventually took over management of the newspapers in 1929. Around the same time, Anderson began a tour of the south and its factory towns with Eleanor Copenhaver, which shaped several of his later non-fiction publications.

In 1932, Anderson divorced Elizabeth Prall and the following year, married Eleanor Copenhaver (1896-1985). Southwest Virginia was a powerful influence on his later stories and novels. His life in around Marion and Troutdale, Virginia, was the focus of his writing for the newspapers, as well. At the same time, he was still writing novels and short stories for magazines. In 1941, Sherwood and Eleanor Anderson left for a trip to South America. During the trip, after ingesting a toothpick, Anderson developed peritonitis and was hospitalized in Panama, where he passed away on March 8, 1941. He is buried in Round Hill Cemetery in Marion, Virginia.

Over his lifetime, Anderson published 8 novels, 4 collections of short stories, 2 collections of poetry, 1 collection of plays, and 12 works of non-fiction. Following his death, publishers and scholars have produced memoirs, critical editions, and several volumes of his collected letters. During his life, he was influential on the careers of William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway, and maintained extensive correspondence and friendships with authors, artists, publishers, and critics (though he later wrote that he had given up reading reviews).

Found in 21 Collections and/or Records:

Jaffe-Lankes Family Correspondence

 Collection
Identifier: Ms-2019-014
Abstract

This collection contains two main sets of materials: Correspondence between Louis I. Jaffe and J. J. Lankes from 1930 to 1942 and correspondence between Alice Jaffe (Louis' widow) and J. B. Lankes (J. J.'s son) from 1980 to 1985. In addition, there is a small folder of notes and letter excerpts created by J. B. Lankes in the early 1980s.

Dates: 1930-1942, 1980-1985

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, c.1917

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1917

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, Chicago, Il., April 26, 1918

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1918_0426

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, Chicago, Il., July 27, 1916 (Ms2015-044)

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1916_0627

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, Chicago, Il., September 9, 1916

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1916_0909

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, New Orleans, La., December 14, 1924

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1924_1214

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, New Orleans, La., July 22, 1924

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1924_0722

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, New York, NY, likely 1922 or 1923

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1922or1923
Dates: likely 1922 or 1923

Letter, Sherwood Anderson to Llewellyn Jones, New York, NY, October 3, 1918

 Digital Record
Identifier: Ms2015-044_AndersonSherwood_Letter_1918_1003