Burton Rascoe | |
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Born |
Fulton, Kentucky |
October 22, 1892
Died | March 19, 1957 New York City |
(aged 64)
Occupation | Editor and literary critic |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of Chicago |
Notable works | Theodore Dreiser (1925), A Bookman's Daybook (1929), Titans of Literature: From Homer to the Present (1932), The Joys of Reading: Life's Greatest Pleasure (1937), Before I Forget (1937), Belle Starr: The Bandit Queen (1941) |
Spouse | Hazel Adelaide Luke (m. 1913) |
Children | Alfred Burton Rascoe Ruth Helen Rascoe |
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Signature |
http://www.library.vcu.edu/jbcdocs/speccoll/images/scjaa209.jpg From left to right: Burton Rascoe, Ellen Glasgow, James Branch Cabell, Priscilla Bradley Shepherd Cabell and Elliott White Springs, 1928. | |
http://www.philipwildenstam.se/wp-content/uploads/burtonrascoe.jpg Undated image of Burton Rascoe, probably 1930s or 1940s. |
Arthur Burton Rascoe (October 22, 1892 - March 19, 1957), was an American journalist, editor and literary critic of the New York Herald Tribune.
Born in Fulton, Kentucky to Matthew L. Rascoe and Elizabeth Burton Rascoe, his father chose to investigate business prospect in Oklahoma Territory. The family eventually settled in Shawnee, Oklahoma, which despite fears planted by friends in Fulton. was a thriving community. Housing had not kept up with the influx of citizens and the Rascoe family was left to small dismal accommodations, something Mrs. Rascoe was never overcome. Burton, however, grabbed at every opportunity to find work and educate himself outside the school system. While serving as a class officer at Shawnee High School he played baseball and played quarterback on the football team after earning 30 dollars digging potatoes to purchase his uniform. He began a paper route for the Shawnee Herald but soon had put himself in charge of all the other newsboys. He also worked as assistant librarian at the town's Carnegie Library, was a ghost writer for citizens who were called on to make speeches or publish articles, a stringer for the Oklahoma City Times and writing articles for the Herald . . . all this while attending classes. His father continued to struggle supporting his family and by 16 Burton was supporting himself. Feeling ready and recognizing his more open-minded views he left school before graduation and moved to Chicago. From 1911 until 1913, he attended the University of Chicago where he joined Sigma Nu. While still a student, he started writing for the Chicago Tribune and continued working there until 1920.
In 1922, he became literary editor of the New York Tribune. He continued in that position until a merger turned the paper into the New York Herald Tribune in 1924. The writing and editorial staff he assembled included writers who became well-respected: Isabel Paterson and Will Cuppy.