North Carolinians of note Writing to paint a portrait of N.C. life

By Rylan Miller Thomas Wolfe said during a speech he gave When he completed “The Return of Buck as a student at the University of North Carolina Gavin,” he insisted on taking the lead role. He that his portrait would one day hang beside for- refused to use typewriters, and wrote in pencil mer Gov. Zebulon Vance’s in the university’s Old so intensely that he developed a large callous West building. on his finger. Even his looks distinguished him His prediction came true. Because of his suc- from others. His dark mane of hair and 6-foot-6 cess as a 20th century author, Wolfe’s portrait stature made him easily recognizable on campus. hangs today in Old West. Life beyond N.C. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs A quiet childhood in Asheville Wolfe attended Harvard University as a gradu- Division, Carl Van Vechten Collection Wolfe was born Oct. 3, 1900, in Asheville, the ate school student in 1920-22. He continued to Johns Hopkins Hospital 18 days before his 38th eighth child of William Oliver and Julia West- write plays and stories, but he could not earn birthday. He left his final publisher, Edward As- fall Wolfe. Before the Great Depression when enough money to support himself, so he moved well, an 8-foot stack of manuscripts. Asheville’s population was booming, his father to New York City and taught writing classes at Today, reminders of Wolfe’s success appear worked as a stone carver and had a gravestone New York University for seven years. across the state. The Old Kentucky Home in business. Noting the influx of tourists to Ashe- Wolfe journeyed to Europe in 1924 and, on the Asheville is now the Thomas Wolfe Memorial. ville, his mother invested in real estate and return voyage, fell in love with , It contains a museum about his life and work, bought a boardinghouse, known as the Old Ken- a theatrical set designer, married woman and and several rooms in the house look like they did tucky Home. mother, who was 18 years older than he. Though when the author lived there from 1900-15. Wolfe spent much of his childhood in the Old the two never married, his relationship with Ber- UNC has an 850-pound brass sculpture of an Kentucky home, a house painted sunny-yellow nstein lasted over five years, one of many intense on campus that pays tribute to Wolfe’s first and located at 48 Spruce Street, observing the relationships that shaped Wolfe’s work. novel. The Thomas Wolfe Prize and Lecture and tenants, reading and writing. He attended the Wolfe’s writing career took off in 1929 with the the English department’s Thomas Wolfe Scholar- North State Fitting School, a prep school where publication of his first novel, “Look Homeward, ship acknowledge excellent writers. The scholar- his teachers marveled at his advanced writing Angel.” The story follows the life of Eugene ship provides full four-year tuition for recipients. skills. Gant, a character that Wolfe based on himself. Wolfe knew that he would return to UNC one Gant grows up in a fictionalized version of Ashe- day, if only in a portrait adorning a wall in a cam- Learning his craft at UNC ville called Altamont. The novel features over pus building. But even during his hiatus from In 1916, the 15-year-old Wolfe left his home- 200 characters that Wolfe created from people he his native state, he kept North Carolina close town and enrolled as a freshman at UNC-Chapel knew during his childhood in Asheville. through his writings. Hill. Studying drama under famed Professor The novel caused a stir in Wolfe’s hometown. “What merit the book has, I do not know,” Frederick H. Koch, he wanted to become a play- Many of his family, friends and neighbors criti- Wolfe once wrote in a letter about “Look Home- wright. Koch taught Wolfe how to explore his cized him. He returned to Europe for eight years ward, Angel.” personal experiences and relationships to write and avoided their negative reactions. In a tele- “But it sometimes seems to me that it presents folk plays. graph to his sister Mabel, Wolfe wrote that he a picture of American life that I have never seen During his four years in Chapel Hill, Wolfe dis- had only the best intentions when writing it. elsewhere.” played his talent for writing. Two plays, “The Re- “No novel should ever be judged by line and www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/ref/tw/bio.html turn of Buck Gavin” and “Third Night,” debuted detail but only as a whole,” Wolfe told his sister. www.wjcash.org/WJCash2/Prophet.Reader/She. on the UNC Playmakers Repertory Company “And when you look at it that way, you will see Knew.Tom.Wolfe.Well.htm stage. He also worked as an editor at The Daily that I have painted all of you, all the Wolfes and Cash, Wiley “What Do Charles W. Chestnutt and Tar Heel, the university’s student newspaper, all of Asheville, as a great people.” Thomas Wolfe Have to Tell Us about North Carolina?” and published poetry in the University of North Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Carolina Magazine. Returning to his roots http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ (search) Wolfe’s classmates and professors saw him “Look Homeward, Angel” and Wolfe’s second www.wolfememorial.com/life.html as an eccentric but likeable student, tending to novel, “Of Time and the River,” brought him in- www.learnnc.org/lp/editions/nchist-newcentu- move quickly from one activity to another and ternational recognition. Published in 1935, “Of ry/5752 always working with passion. Time and the River” records Wolfe’s life in the “He can do more between 8:25 and 8:30 a.m. character of Eugene Gant, after he has left Al- Profile written by a student in the School than the rest of us do all day,” a caption under tamont for Harvard and New York. of Journalism and Mass Communication, Wolfe’s picture in his 1920 yearbook said. Wolfe died from tuberculosis of the brain at UNC-CH. Provided by the N.C. Press Foundation, www.ncpress.com.