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American poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maxwell Struthers Burt (October 18, 1882 Baltimore, Maryland – August 29, 1954, Jackson Hole, Wyoming), was an American novelist, poet, and short-story writer.
Maxwell Struthers Burt | |
---|---|
Born | Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. | October 18, 1882
Died | August 29, 1954 71) Jackson Hole, Wyoming, U.S. | (aged
Occupation | Writer, poet |
Struthers Burt grew up in Philadelphia, where he attended private schools and worked at a city newspaper.[1] He graduated from Princeton University in 1904, then attended the University of Munich, and Merton College at Oxford University.[1] Following his return to the United States, he taught English at Princeton.[1]
In 1908, he moved to Wyoming and co-founded the JY Ranch with Louis Joy, which would later become the famous Rockefeller ranch of the same name. In 1912, following a dispute with Joy, he established his own dude ranch, the Bar B C Ranch. That same year, he met and married his wife, Katharine Newlin Burt, an author of Western novels. They had two children: Nathaniel Burt (1913-2003) and Julia Bleecker Burt Atteberry (1915-1986).[1]
Burt served in the U.S. Army Air Service Signal Corps during World War I.[2] After the war, he and his family began wintering in North Carolina.[1]
Burt helped in the establishment of Grand Teton National Park when, in 1923, he met with other like-minded individuals at Maud Noble's cabin and began the process of gathering support to have the area come under protection by the Federal Government. He was also a fierce supporter of the Jackson Hole National Monument before it eventually formed the larger Grand Teton National Park.[3]
The premise of Burt's fifth novel, Along these Streets, is a Westerner who inherits a large Philadelphia fortune, with the stipulation that he must move East and live in the city. Felix Bartain Macalister experiences the city's cultural traditions, and encounters various characters who attempt to guide or exploit him. Compared with contemporaneous novels, sociologist E. Digby Baltzell found it "… a far more sensitive portrait of Proper Philadelphia."[4] This portrait, however, is painted in opposition to Proper Philadelphia's conservatism, which the main character readily acknowledges: "… I think I'm what might be called a radical liberal, but I'm for evolution, not revolution."[5] At the end of the novel, Felix escapes and finds himself on horseback in … Wyoming.
Burt's papers are housed at Princeton University and the University of Wyoming's American Heritage Center.
His son Nathaniel was also a published author,[6] as is his grandson, Christopher C. Burt (b. 1954).
Nathaniel Burt wrote of his late father's novels: "There is always a love story, there is always a certain strict plotting of acceptance, withdrawal, misunderstanding, and final clinch that leads to much amusing discussion of the difference between men and women, but which does not escape a sort of artificiality."[7]
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