Home
Read
Scripts &
Listen to Audio
2004 Broadcasts
2005 Broadcasts
2006 Broadcasts
Indiana
Historical Society
Indiana
Public
Broadcasting Stations
Radio Series Staff
|
Moment
of Indiana History: Scripts Edward
Eggleston
MP3
Audio
Teaching the world to speak “Hoosier”…Edward Eggleston…on
this Moment of Indiana History.
Edward Eggleston’s novel The Hoosier Schoolmaster is recognized
as a flagship of the regionalist literature that flourished in the United
States after the Civil War. Based on his brother’s teaching experiences,
Eggleston’s 1871 work was innovative for having documented the Hoosier
dialect of the mid-nineteenth century. His record of colloquial American
speech may be considered a precursor to such renowned works as Huckleberry
Finn.
The eldest son of a prominent Virginian, Edward Eggleston was born in
Vevay, Indiana on the Ohio River in 1837. A frail child whose upbringing
was somewhat disrupted by the early death of his father, Eggleston’s
formal education was intermittent. Stewarded by a charismatic high school
teacher and his Methodist stepfather, however, Eggleston undertook independent
study in language and literature, history, philosophy and religion. After
a year of schooling in Virginia, he quit the slave-holding state out of
moral indignation and rejected an offer to attend “Mr. Jefferson’s
university”. His brothers, on the other hand, renewed their paternal
roots, and went on to fight as Confederates during the Civil War. Edward,
meanwhile, pursued a life as a Methodist circuit rider in Minnesota and
Indiana, married, and had three daughters. Early forays into the world
of publishing were born of his activities as a preacher, and as a father.
His first editorships were at The National Sunday School Teacher and The
Little Corporal, a children’s paper to which he contributed stories.
It was as editor of Hearth and Home that Eggleston began serializing the
stories that would eventually comprise The Hoosier Schoolmaster. Although
originally hesitant to avail himself of the coarse language that had heretofore
appeared only in the work of the area’s “primitive humorists”,
Eggleston wrote the novel “in the dialect spoken in my childhood
by rustics on the north side of the Ohio River.” The serialized
results reportedly increased the magazine’s subscription five-fold,
and were syndicated in English-language papers around the world. The Hoosier
Schoolmaster subsequently appeared in French, German, and Danish language
versions, translators having gone to great lengths to come up with equivalents
for such expressions as "I'll be dog-on'd".
After this early success, Eggleston pursued work as a minister and an
editor, all the while continuing to write, with a focus on stories in
dialect, historical fiction, and children’s literature. Among the
latter are Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans and a series
of biographies of American Indians, which he undertook with his daughter
Lillie Seelye. In his later years, he devoted himself to the writing of
a cultural history of the United States, of which he completed two volumes,
and served as president of the American Historical Association. Edward
Eggleston died in 1902 at his home at Lake George, New York, where he’d
lived for the previous twenty years.
The Hoosier Schoolmaster may be seen in an pantheon of provincial American
regionalism that includes the stories of Sarah Orne Jewett and Bret Harte,
the poems of James Whitcomb Riley, and most notably, the novels of Mark
Twain.
This Moment of Indiana History is a production of the Indiana Public
Broadcasting Stations in association with the Indiana Historical Society.
More information is available on-line at “moment of Indiana history.org.”
Writer: Yaël Ksander
For more information:
|