Wilma Dykeman
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Wilma Dykeman Stokely (born May 20, 1920 – died December 22, 2006) was an American writer of fiction and nonfiction whose works chronicled the people and land of Appalachia.
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[edit] Biography
Dykeman grew up in the Beaverdam community of Buncombe County, North Carolina, now part of Asheville. She was the only child of Bonnie Cole Dykeman and Willard Dykeman. Her father had relocated to the Asheville area from New York as a widower with two grown children, and had met and married her mother in Asheville. He was 60 years old when Wilma was born and died when Wilma was 14 years old. In later life, she credited both of her parents for giving her a love of reading and her father for giving her a love of nature and a curiosity about the world around her.[1]
She attended Biltmore Junior College (now the University of North Carolina at Asheville), graduating in 1938, and Northwestern University, where she was elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa and graduated in 1940 with a major in speech.
In August 1940, shortly after her graduation from Northwestern, she was introduced to her future husband, James R. Stokely, Jr., by Mabel Wolfe, the sister of Asheville writer Thomas Wolfe. Stokely, of Newport, Tennessee, was a son of the president of Stokely Canning Company (which later merged with Van Camp's and is now a brand of Seneca Foods). The couple married just two months after they met. They had two sons, Dykeman Stokely and James R. "Rory" Stokely III. The couple maintained homes in Asheville and Newport, and Dykeman continued to divide her time in both homes after Stokely died in 1977. Dykeman and Stokely wrote several books together. After Dykeman died in 2006, Appalachian writer Jeff Daniel Marion called the couple's marriage a "partnership in every sense of the word," describing Dykeman and Stokely as "partners in writing, partners in marriage and partners in having similar points of view."[2]
Dykeman died December 22, 2006after suffering complications from a fractured hip and subsequent hip replacement surgery. She is buried in the Beaverdam Baptist Church Cemetery in Asheville, near her childhood home.
[edit] Works
[edit] Books
Dykeman wrote a total of eighteen books, including both nonfiction and fiction.
Her first book, The French Broad, was published in 1955 as part of the Holt Rinehart Rivers of America Series.
Dykeman wrote three novels: The Tall Woman (1962), The Far Family (1966), and Return the Innocent Earth (1973). The main character in The Tall Woman is a mountain woman who works to bring a community together after the Civil War. The Far Family continued the story of that same woman's family, generations later. Return the Innocent Earth recalled the Stokely family's legacy, examining modern industry through a fictionalized Tennessee canning company. The book portrayed the Clayburns, a poor but enterprising family that went into the canning business in a small mountain town called Churchill around 1900.
Her 1975 book Too Many People, Too Little Love is a biography of Edna Rankin McKinnon, a pioneer in family planning.
[edit] Newspaper columns and magazine articles
From 1962 to 2000, she was a columnist for the Knoxville News Sentinel newspaper, contributing as many as three columns each week. When introducing her as a new columnist, the paper's editor announced that Dykeman would write under the title "The Simple Life," which would be "a momentary turning aside, a glimpse down a different path, to see, hear, feel, ponder the common uniqueness of our lives" and communicate "the salt of humor, gnarled strength of old ideals, the variety of new ideas and the friendship of people well-known and little-known along the way." Two collections of her columns were published in book form: The Simple Life and Explorations (1984). [3] She also contributed regular columns to The Newport Plain Talk newspaper. Dykeman's writings also appeared in magazines including the New York Times magazine, U.S. News & World Report, Harper's, and Reader's Digest.[4]
[edit] Public speaking and education activities
Dykeman was popular as a public speaker, giving 50 to 75 lectures a year by her own estimate. She also taught classes at Berea College and the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. She was a member of Board of Trustees for Berea College and the advisory board of the University of North Carolina. During the period 1978 to 1982 she served as a consultant to the Children's Museum of Oak Ridge for its "An Appalachian Experience" public education project, of which her son James R. Stokely III was executive director. The project resulted in the development of teaching materials on Appalachia and the 1982 publication of An Encyclopedia of East Tennessee, edited by James R. Stokely III and Jeff D. Johnson (ISBN 10: 0960683208, ISBN 13: 978-0960683208).[5]
[edit] Awards and honors
Dykeman received many awards and other recognitions. In 1981, Tennessee governor Lamar Alexander named her official state historian, an honorary role that she filled until 2002. In 1985 she received the North Carolina Award for literature. In 1957 she shared the Sidney Hillman Award with her husband, James Stokely, for their book Neither Black Nor White,[6] which was recognized as the best book of the year on world peace, race relations or civil liberties. In 1994, she received the Pride of Tennessee Award from Governor Ned Ray McWherter, honoring her commitment to community, education, and advancement of the humanities. McWherter said, "She has managed to capture and truthfully portray the people, places, and events that make East Tennessee and Appalachia a unique place in world culture."[7] Other awards she received include the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Trophy, a Guggenheim Fellowship (in 1956), a National Endowment for the Humanities Senior Fellowship, and the Tennessee Conservation Writer of the Year Award. She also was inducted into the North Carolina Hall of Fame and received honorary degrees from several colleges and universities.
[edit] Legacy
The Appalachian Writers Guild's Wilma Dykeman Award for Essay is named in her honor. This recognition is awarded each year for the best essay on Appalachian life and literature, religion, folklore, culture, or values.[8] The East Tennessee Historical Society also has given a Wilma Dykeman Award for Regional Historical Literature.
[edit] References
- ^ Ina Hughs, "Natural Woman," Knoxville News Sentinel, August 25, 2002 (accessed December 24, 2006).
- ^ Quintin Ellison, "Dykeman leaves tall literary, civic legacy" Asheville Citizen-Times, December 24, 2006.
- ^ Wilma Dykeman, "After nearly 40 years, a new direction," Knoxville News Sentinel, September 10, 2000.
- ^ David Popiel, Appalachian writer Dykeman dies; Former state historian and acclaimed novelist, The Newport Plain Talk, December 26, 2006
- ^ John Huotari, Remembering Dykeman, The Oak Ridger, January 2, 2007
- ^ The Sidney Hillman Foundation, Journalism Awards: Past Honorees
- ^ David Popiel, Appalachian writer Dykeman dies; Former state historian and acclaimed novelist, The Newport Plain Talk, December 26, 2006
- ^ Appalachian Writers Association website
- Fred Brown, "Appalachian Journal: Author captures land's grace on paper," Knoxville News Sentinel, April 18, 2004.
- Quintin Ellison, "Dykeman leaves tall literary, civic legacy" Asheville Citizen-Times, December 24, 2006.
- Reporting Civil Rights: brief bio
- Carroll Van West, "Wilma Dykeman" in the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture.