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| 1830 | 1840 |
|
1860 | 1870 |
| 1880 | 1890 | 1900 | 1910 | 1920 |
Note: This brief and selective chronology is intended as a quick reference
for those working on Howells. It is by no means comprehensive. For
more biographical information, see Edwin Cady's two-volume biography of Howells
and John Crowley's The Black Heart's Truth, both of which served as sources
for the information below; Kenneth Lynn's 1971 biography; and other
works listed in the bibliography
of recommended works. For information on texts, see the Indiana edition
of Howells's works, William Gibson and George Arms's A Bibliography of William
Dean Howells (New York Public Library, 1948; Arno Press, 1971), American
Literary Realism (1969, 1972), and others from the bibliography.
| Year | Events | Works (Titles and dates of first American editions appear as listed in the University of California's Melvyl library system and checked against the Facts on File bibliography listing on Howells. . Please e-mail corrections to this chronology.) |
| 1837 top. |
March 1. William Dean Howells is born in Martin's Ferry, Ohio, to William Cooper and Mary Dean Howells, the second child and second son of their eight children | |
| 1840 top |
William Cooper Howells becomes editor of the Hamilton, Ohio, Intelligencer and publishes a Swedenborgian newspaper called The Retina on the side. | |
| 1848 |
Trying to gather support for the Free Soil party, William Cooper Howells quits the Intelligencer over a matter of principle. The family moves to Dayton, Eureka Mills, and other places in Ohio. | |
| 1851 top |
The Howells family moves to Columbus for 18 months and later to Ashtabula and Jefferson (in 1853); Howells works as a printer. According to Edwin Cady, Howells could "set type at six, was a useful hand at nine, and when he was eleven he could set five thousand ems a day, a man's work" (The Road to Realism 25). | |
| 1852 | Without William Dean Howells's knowledge, his father has one of WDH's poems published in the Ohio State Journal. | |
| 1853 | Howells's first published fiction, "A Tale of Love and Politics, Adventures of a Printer Boy," appears in the Ashtabula Sentinel | |
| 1856 | William Cooper Howells is elected Clerk of the State House of Representatives. | |
| 1857 | Howells begins to learn German and to admire the poet Heinrich Heine. He writes a column ("Letter from Columbus") for the Daily Cincinnati Gazette. | |
| 1858 | Autumn. Howells begins work for the Ohio State Journal, writing reviews, poems, and stories, and translating stories from French, German, and Spanish newspapers. | |
| 1860 top |
Howells meets Elinor Mead, his future wife. He travels to Boston and Concord (see Literary Friends and Acquaintance) where he meets J. T. Fields, Lowell, Holmes, Hawthorne, Thoreau, and Emerson. | |
| 1861 | Sails from New York to Liverpool and then Venice to take up consular appointment. | |
| 1862 | Christmas Eve. Marries Elinor Mead at the American embassy in Paris. | |
| 1863 | December 17. First child, Winifred, born to WD and Elinor Howells. | |
| 1864 | |
|
| 1865-66 | WDH lives in New York as a freelance journalist. | |
| 1866 | Meets James T. Fields on January 7; Fields offers Howells the assistant editorship of the Atlantic Monthly a few days later. Howells settles on Berkley St. in Cambridge, Mass. | Venetian Life |
| 1867 | Italian Journeys | |
| 1868 | August 14. The Howellses' second child, John Mead Howells, is born.
|
"No Love Lost: A Romance of Travel" (Putnam's, Dec. 1868) |
| 1869 | Howells meets Mark Twain in Fields's office, the beginning of a friendship that will last the rest of their lives. | |
| 1870 | "A Romance of Real Life" (Atlantic, March) | |
| 1871 top |
July 1. Howells becomes the Editor of the Atlantic Monthly, a post he will keep for the next ten years. | Suburban Sketches Their Wedding Journey. Howells's first novel.(Boston: Osgood, 1871) |
| 1872 |
|
|
| 1873 | A Chance Acquaintance Poems. Augmented edition: 1886. |
|
| 1874 | ||
| 1875 | A Foregone Conclusion Private Theatricals (published as Mrs. Farrell in 1921) serialized in the November, 1875 Atlantic. It is the only one of Howells's novels not immediately published in book form after serialization. |
|
| 1876
|
Some time before this summer, Howells attends a performance of Euripedes'Medea, an experience that inspires A Modern Instance. | |
| 1877 |
|
Out of the Question: A Comedy A Counterfeit Presentment (play) |
| 1879 | The Lady of the Aroostook | |
| 1880 top |
The Undiscovered Country | |
| 1881 | A Fearful Responsibility, and Other Stories Doctor Breen's Practice: A Novel |
|
| 1882 | |
A Modern Instance: A Novel A Fearful Responsibility and Tonelli's Marriage (stories) |
| 1883 | A Woman's Reason The Sleeping Car: A Farce |
|
| 1884 | August. Howells buys a house at 302 Beacon Street in Boston, two
doors away from Oliver Wendell Holmes.
|
|
| 1885 | |
|
| 1886 | May 4. During an Anarchist meeting in Haymarket Square, Chicago, bombs explode, killing one man and injuring seven more. In the absence of suspects, eight Anarchists are charged with murder and seven are sentenced to hang. Outraged at the injustice, WDH writes a letter to the New York Tribune in protest, and, after the men are hanged on November 11, an editorial letter called "A Word for the Dead." |
|
| 1887 | |
The Minister's Charge Modern Italian Poets: Essays and Versions (derived from the Lowell Lectures delivered at Harvard in 1870) |
| 1888 | |
|
| 1889 | Hoping to cure his daughter Winnie's persistent and mysterious illness, Howells puts her under the care of Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, originator of the "rest cure" made famous in Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper." Howells writes to Mark Twain, "If she could have been allowed to read, I think the experiment might have succeeded, but I think the privation has thrown her thoughts back upon her, and made her morbid and hypochondriacal" (Crowley 116). Mitchell and others have diagnosed Winnie's illness as psychological in origin, but after she dies on March 3, an autopsy reveals physical disease. The death devastates WD and Elinor Howells. | |
| 1890 top |
An "Editor's Study" column criticizes Harold Frederic's In the Valley but praises Seth's Brother's Wife (1887) and The Lawton Girl (1890). In 1899, Howells lists Frederic's masterpiece, The Damnation of Theron Ware (1896), as one of the country's major serious novels. | |
| 1891 | Howells moves to New York, and, according to Edwin Cady and others,
brings the "literary center of the country" with him. Assumes editorship of Cosmopolitan and writes Altrurian Sketches for it. |
Criticism and Fiction |
| 1892 | March. Howells's last column for the "Editor's Study" | |
| 1893 | March. Stephen Crane sends Howells a copy of Maggie. He writes to Howells on 28 March asking why he has received no response; Howells replies immediately, saying that he has not yet read the book. According to The Crane Log, Crane again writes to Howells on 8 April "asking for a recommendation to Edwin L. Godkin, editor of the New York Evening Post. Howells replies on the same day, advising Crane to show Godkin a letter from Howells to Crane that praised Maggie" (91). According to Edwin Cady's The Realist at War, Howells "used the convenient outlet of a newspaper interview to announce his discovery of 'a remarkable writer' and to praise Maggie" (214). WDH reads the manuscripts of George's Mother, Crane's poems, and The Third Violet, but not The Red Badge of Courage. | The World of Chance: A Novel (serial
version at MOA) My Year in a Log Cabin (essay and memoir; reprinted from 1887 article for Youth's Companion) The Coast of Bohemia: A Novel "The Man of Letters as a Man of Business" Scribner's 14 (October 1893): 429-446. Evening Dress: Farce |
| 1894 | Howells's father dies. WDH visits his son, John, who is studying architecture in France. |
|
| 1895 | Begins "Life and Letters" essay review column for Harper's Weekly (March 30, 1895-February 26, 1898) | |
| 1896 | On the recommendation of James Herne, WDH reads Paul Laurence Dunbar's privately printed Majors and Minors and praises it in his Harper's Weekly "Life and Letters" column. He persuades literary agent Ripley Hitchcock to place Dunbar's work and writes an introduction for Dunbar's next volume, Lyrics of Lowly Life. | |
| 1897 | WDH goes to Germany. |
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| |
|
The Story of a Play: A Novel |
| 1899 | Failure of Harper & Brothers. Col. George Harvey is placed in charge, and WDH begins to write a monthly column, the "Editor's Easy Chair," for Harper's New Monthly Magazine. | Their Silver Wedding Journey Ragged Lady, a Novel |
| 1900 top |
Howells begins to write the "Editor's Easy Chair" column for Harper's (Anesko 318) | |
| 1901 | Heroines of Fiction The Niagara Book (with Mark Twain and Nathaniel Southgate Shaler) A Pair of Patient Lovers |
|
| 1902 | WDH purchases summer home at Kittery Point, Maine (Anesko 319) | |
| 1903 | |
Letters Home (novel) Questionable Shapes Evening-Dress (farce) |
| 1904 | WDH receives a Litt. D. from Oxford. | The Son of Royal Langbrith |
| 1905 | |
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| 1906 | |
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| 1907 | |
|
| 1908 | Elected first president of the American Academy of Arts and
Letters. Travels to Italy. |
|
| 1909 | Trip to Wales, Ireland,and the Continent (Anesko 320). | Seven English Cities The Mother and the Father: Dramatic Passages Boy life; stories and readings selected from the works of William Dean Howells, and arranged for supplementary reading in elementary schools (ed. Percival Chubb) |
| 1910 top |
|
|
| 1911 | Howells joins with Edith
Wharton and others in an attempt to get the Nobel Prize in literature
for Henry James. The attempt is unsuccessful. |
The Writings of William Dean Howells (edition) Parting Friends: A Farce |
| 1912 | House of Harper stages an elaborate birthday celebration for WDH's 75th birthday. Among those sending or reading tributes are Henry James, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, and Franklin Sanborn. | |
| 1913 | New Leaf Mills: A Chronicle (based on the Howells family's
Eureka Mills experiment) Familiar Spanish Travels |
|
| 1914 | The Seen and Unseen at Stratford-on-Avon: A Fantasy (story) | |
| 1915 | Harper's agrees to pay Howells $5,000 a year for the "Editor's Easy Chair"
and occasional introductions to books. WDH buys a Model T Ford. American Academy of Arts and Letters establishes the Howells Medal for Fiction; WDH is the first recipient. |
|
| 1916 | Death of Henry James on February 28. | The Leatherwood God (novel) Years of My Youth (autobiography to 1860) The Daughter of the Storage and Other Things in Prose and Verse (poems) The Book of the Homeless, ed. Edith Wharton (contributors: Wharton, Edith; Brooke, Rupert; Conrad, Joseph; Galsworthy, John; Hardy, Thomas; James, Henry; Howells, William Dean;Yeats, W. B.) Buying a Horse |
| 1917 | ||
| 1918 | ||
| 1919 | Eighty Years and After | |
| 1920 top |
May 11. In New York, Howells dies in his sleep of pneumonia and is buried in the Cambridge Cemetery near Henry James. | The Vacation of the Kelwyns, an Idyl of the Middle Eighteen-Seventies (published posthumously) |
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