Kathryn Tucker Windham

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Kathryn Tucker Windham
Born 2 June 1918
Selma, Alabama
Occupation Journalist, short story writer, storyteller, photographer
Nationality American
Subjects Fiction, Non-fiction

Kathryn Tucker Windham (born June 2, 1918) is a storyteller, author, photographer, and journalist. She was born in Selma, Alabama and was raised in nearby Thomasville.

Windham got her first writing job at the age of 12, reviewing movies for her cousin's small town newspaper, The Thomasville Times. She earned a B.A. degree from Huntingdon College in 1939. Soon after graduating she became a reporter for the Alabama Journal. Starting in 1944 she worked for The Birmingham News. In 1946 she married Amasa Benjamin Windham with whom she had 3 children. In 1956 she went to work at the Selma Times-Journal where she won several Associated Press awards for her writing and photography. A collection of her photographs is on display at the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. She currently can be heard each Friday morning on Alabama Public Radio, where she has been writing weekly commentaries for the past 25 years. On August 18, 2003, she was inducted into the Alabama Academy of Honor, having been nominated by fellow Alabamian, novelist Harper Lee.[1]

The 2004 documentary film, Kathryn: The Story of a Teller, directed by Norton Dill, chronicles Windham's life and varied careers.

Contents

[edit] Ghost Stories

Kathryn Tucker Windham wrote a series of books of "true" ghost stories, starting with 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey (1964). Other titles were Jeffrey Introduces 13 More Southern Ghosts (1971), Thirteen Georgia Ghosts and Jeffrey (1973), Thirteen Mississippi Ghosts and Jeffrey (1974), Thirteen Tennessee Ghosts and Jeffrey (1976), and Jeffrey's Latest Thirteen: More Alabama Ghosts (1982).

In 2004, she wrote Jeffrey's Favorite 13 Ghost Stories: From Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, and Mississippi, which was a collection of featured stories from the previous books.

[edit] Jeffrey

Jeffrey is the friendly ghost that took up residence in the Windham house in 1966. According to a letter printed in the foreword to 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey, Windham became interested in ghost stories after a ghost named Jeffrey began to haunt her family. At first, the family heard footsteps in rooms that would later be found empty. Jeffrey especially spooked the family cat, Hornblower.

Jeffrey was also known to move objects. On one occasion, he moved a heavy chest of drawers three or four inches along a wall, blocking the only door to the room. The door was only opened after pushing hard against the door to move the chest. Another time, Jeffrey almost toppled a cake which was placed on the Windhams' dining room table during a frantic search for some missing car keys. During the search, Jeffrey pushed the cake to the edge of the table, so that it was teetering, when the keys were finally found and the cake was collected.

There is a picture of "Jeffrey," taken inside the Windham home. On the night the picture was made, some young people visiting the Windham home decided to play with a Ouija board, trying to contact Jeffrey. When they later developed pictures taken that night, Jeffrey appeared in one of the shots. Jeffrey appears in the picture as a dark, shadowy blot in a vaguely human-like shape, "standing" next to a girl in the picture.

Soon after this picture was taken, Windham contacted Figh, who was a noted collector of ghost stories, to ask about Jeffrey. Out of that meeting, the idea for 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey was born.

[edit] Storytelling

Following an invitation to speak at The National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee she began to gain attention for what some consider her greatest gift, storytelling. She often appears at storytelling events, historical meetings and classrooms. Her stories about ghosts and growing up and living in the Southern United States have earned her a place on National Public Radio's All Things Considered which has brought her national attention and praise.

Kathryn Tucker Windham is the founder of the Alabama Tale Tellin' Festival, which has been held annually in Selma, Alabama since 1978.

[edit] They Call Me Julia

Kathryn Tucker Windham also appears on stage in a one woman play about Julia Tutwiler. The play is named They Call Me Julia and is based on Kathryn Tucker Windham's book of the same name.

[edit] Kathryn Tucker Windham Museum

The Thomasville campus of Alabama Southern Community College is home to the Kathryn Tucker Windham Museum.[2]

[edit] Personal papers and manuscripts

Kathryn Tucker Windham's personal papers and manuscripts from 1939-1995 were donated to the Special Collections department of the Auburn University Libraries.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] References

  1. ^ Windham, Ben, "Ben Windham: An Encounter with Harper Lee," The Tuscaloosa News 24 August 2003.
  2. ^ Kathryn Tucker Windham Museum. Retrieved on 2006-08-25.

[edit] External Links

  1. "Kathryn Tucker Windham". Retrieved on January 5, 2006.
  2. "A Southern Treasure". Expression. Retrieved on January 5, 2006.
  3. Kathryn: The Story of a Teller DVD at The Documentary Depot
  4. Kathryn Tucker Windham Museum. Retrieved on 2006-08-25.