Showing posts with label Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2020

Cross Creek by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings - 1942





A post in honour of the birth anniversary of my mother, January 3, 1921-No finer Floridian ever lived.

Florida Timeline

8000 BC - First Native American settlement, near Sarasota

1000 AD - there are nine distinct tribes 

1500 - estimated population of the state was 375,000- 150,000 speak Timuca

April 2, 1513 - Ponce de Leon lands somewhere between Melbourne and Jacksonville.  In time the  indigenous population will be reduced to near zero, from disease and warfare. 

1521 - first colony, from Spain, near St. Augustine

1579 - The cultivation of oranges, introduced from Spain begins.  By 1835 millions of oranges were being shipped north and to Europe, for the next hundred years oranges, cattle and timber were the major sources of cash

1624 - First African American born, in St. Augustine

1763 to 1765- England Owns west Florida panhandle area

Based on research by others in the family and history, I conjecture my maternal ancestors first entered Florida, coming from. Georgia where they arrived around 1650, about 1815.


1808 - importation of slaves into USA is banned, a very large trade in slaves smuggled in from Cuba begins 

1821 - USA acquired Florida from Spain.  

1822 - Tallahassee is chosen as the territory capital, being half way between the then major population centers of St. Augustine and Pensacola

1835 Second Seminole War begins, by 1842 most Seminoles were shipped west but some escaped into the Everglades.  The 
make up of the Seminoles was largely not Native originally to Florida but a mixture of escaped slaves and Creeks from Georgia and South Carolina.


March 3, 1845 - Florida becomes a state, slavery legal.

1859 - by the end of the third Seminole War the around four hundred survivors retreat to the Everglades


Population of Florida 1861. - 154,494 - 92,741 Free, 61,75 enslaved

January 10, 1861 Florida suceeds from The Union.  Per capita, Florida sent The most men into war, 15000.  It was then the  least populated southern state.

1896- Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, born in Washington,DC.  She wins the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for The Yearling, set in Rural north Florida.In 1928 she moves to Hawthorne, Florida.  She died December 14, 1953.  She is the author of Cross Creek.
,
. 1898 - lead by Theodore Roosevelt, based in Florida, the Rough Riders invade Cuba as part of the Spainish American war.  Through this the USA acquired the Philippines and took a place as a world class international power.  This helped him become president just as Zachary Taylor's role in the Seminole Wars did for Taylor.

1914 - World War One begins

January 3, 1921 - my Mother was born in Highsprings Florida, then population 1795. 

Population of Florida 1921 - 997,000
Population of Texas 4.8 Million
Population of California 3.75 million

Last January, in consultation with Max u, it was decided that there will be an annual post in observation of the birth anniversary of our Mother.  This year I selected Cross Creek by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, author of The Yearling set in rural north Florida in the 1920s.  I saw the setting was very much like my mother's birthplace
in Highsprings, Florida, which motivated my choice. I found this book quite disappointing.  It has no real plot,the African American characters are condescending racist charactures.  The descriptions of natural beauty were wonderful, the only thing that gives this book value. 















Friday, July 18, 2014

"Gal Young Un" by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (1932, by the author of The Yearling)

Winner of the 1933 O Henry Prize for Best American Short Story


Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (1896 to 1953, USA) won the Pulitzer Prize in 1939 for her novel set in rural northern Florida, The Yearling.  "Gal Young Un" was her first widely successful work of fiction.  It won the O Henry Prize for best short story in 1933 and was originally published in Harper's Magazine.  This was my first contact with Rawlings, other than seeing the movie based on her famous novel.  I really liked this story and I came close to cheering at the great everybody will love it ending of the story where a much abused country woman rises up and turns the tables on her oppressive cheating husband.  I guess this story falls in the category of Southern Gothic. 

The story is set in rural northern Florida, where Rawlings lived.  We meet an unmarried woman living alone on some land she inherited.  A big talking man begins to court her.  Against all advise the very lonely woman marries him.  He sets up a big " moonshine" (alcohol was illegal in the U S A in 1933) still and begins making good money.  He takes all the money the woman had from in inheritance and bought himself a big beautiful car.  Whenever the woman complains he threatens to leave her and she backs down.  When he brings hope a cheap looking young girl and tells his wife she will be staying at the house and has her wait on the girl he heart begins to break.  I won't spoil the absolutely great close of this story.

I read this story in this very interesting anthology (which I received free from the publisher) 


I hope to read The Pultizer this year.

Mel u

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