Harold Sinclair (novelist)

Harold Sinclair (1907–1966) was an Illinois writer who produced several historical novels, including some about settler life in the Midwest. He was also a musician, and wrote about jazz and New Orleans. He was born on May 8, 1907, in Chicago.[1] At the age of eight he moved to Bloomington, Illinois. He dropped out of high school and traveled around the country, but eventually returned to live in Bloomington.[2] While working in a hardware store in Chicago, he wrote his first book (Journey Home, 1936).[3] The New York Times and Newsweek both published positive reviews of his second novel, American Years, in 1938.[4][5] It was the first of a trilogy about the town of Everton, Illinois, a fictional name for real-life Bloomington. Roy W. Meyer said, "[Although n]ot properly a farm novel at all ... [t]here is a sense of authenticity in the account of the daily lives and concerns of these small town Illinois people".[6] In 1939 he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in creative writing.[3]

Harold Sinclair; by Riegger
Writer / author Harold Sinclair, center, with starring actor John Wayne, left, and film director John Ford during the making of the 1959 movie "The Horse Soldiers"; courtesy of the McLean County Museum of History

His most well-known book, The Horse Soldiers (1956), was adapted and made into a film of the same name, by noted director John Ford and starring John Wayne, William Holden and Constance Towers.[7] About the famous Grierson's Raid of April-May 1863, of Union Army Cavalry commander Col. Benjamin Grierson's (1826-1911) long raid southward from LaGrange, Tennessee through Confederate heartland of Mississippi to Federal-occupied Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and going around the besieged Confederacy's important vital Mississippi River fortress of Vicksburg, Mississippi during the Vicksburg Campaign in the American Civil War. Because The Horse Soldiers was such a commercial success in the 1960s (and remains popular 70 years later),[citation needed] shortly before his 1966 death, Sinclair signed an option to have the 1958 sequel Civil War book that he wrote, The Cavalryman, become a made-for-television series. (It was unfortunately however never produced.) He passed away on May 24, 1966, in Bloomington.[3]


Bibliography

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  • Journey Home, 1936[8]
  • Westward the Tide, 1940
  • The Port of New Orleans, 1942[9]
  • Music Out of Dixie, 1953[10]
  • Mrs. Ives of Illinois
  • Daily Pantagraph, 1846-1946

Everton Trilogy

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  • American Years, 1938[4]
  • Years of Growth, 1940
  • Years of Illusion, 1941[11]
  • The Horse Soldiers, 1956[12]
  • The Cavalryman, 1958

Further reading

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  • Gary Heath, Harold Sinclair of Illinois: Letters, Biography, AuthorHouse, 2007
  • Bill Kemp, Harold Sinclair Papers, Milner Library, Illinois State University

References

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  1. ^ Ehrlich, Eugene and Gorton Carruth (1982). The Oxford Illustrated Literary Guide to the United States. New York: Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ "Harold Sinclair". Goodreads. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  3. ^ a b c Obituary. New York Times. 25 May 1966. p. 47.
  4. ^ a b Young, Stanley (5 June 1938). "A Rich Panorama of Pioneering". New York Times.
  5. ^ Rascoe, Burton (23 May 1938). "Our History in Fiction". Newsweek, p. 28.
  6. ^ Meyer, Roy W. (1965). The Middle Western Farm Novel in the Twentieth Century. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. p. 233.
  7. ^ Schenker, Charlie (7 December 2021). "McHistory: Noted author Harold Sinclair of Bloomington". WGLT.org. Illinois State University. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  8. ^ Sherman, Beatrice (6 Sep 1936). "p. 13". New York Times.
  9. ^ Reynolds, Horace (2 Aug 1942). "New Orleans, City of Memories". New York Times.
  10. ^ Kane, Harnett T. (25 May 1952). "The Birth of the Blues". New York Times.
  11. ^ Walton, Edith H. (9 Nov 1941). "Midwest Town". New York Times.
  12. ^ Kane, Harnett T. (19 Feb 1956). "Yankee Raiders Deep in Dixie". New York Times.