Birth of Joel Chandler Harris 

US #980 was issued on Harris’ 100th birthday.

Author Joel Chandler Harris was born on December 9, 1848, in Eatonton, Georgia.

Harris never knew his father and was raised by his mother who worked as a seamstress and gardener to support herself.  She instilled Harris with a love of literature from a young age.  He once said that, “My desire to write—to give expression to my thoughts—grew out of hearing my mother read The Vicar of Wakefield.”

In school Harris did well in reading and writing, but was more known among his classmates for his jokes and pranks.  Harris ended up leaving school at an early age to work.  He was hired as a “printer’s devil,” a young boy whose position was apprentice or lower, for The Countryman newspaper.  With a circulation of about 2,000, the paper was one of the largest to serve the Confederacy during the Civil War.

US #980 – Classic First Day Cover.

The editor, Joseph Addison Turner, allowed Harris to publish his own work in the paper and include humor in his journalism.  Turner also let Harris live at his Turnwold Plantation, where the youngster spent hundreds of hours in the slave quarters during his time off, developing a close connection with the slaves and learning their stories and language.  Harris later incorporated their African-American animal tales in his famous Uncle Remus tales.

US #3502g – A.B. Frost’s illustration of the Brer Rabbit.

After The Countryman shut down in 1866, Harris worked for other papers, but found a home with the Monroe Advertiser.  His humorous writing was popular and reprinted in other papers around the state.  This success led to an even better job offer – associate editor of the Savannah Morning News, where he quickly became the state’s most popular humor columnist.

Then in 1876, Harris took a job with the Atlanta Constitution, where he would remain for 24 years.  During that time he also wrote for Scribner’s, Harper’s and The Century.  The same year he began working for the Constitution, Harris began writing his Uncle Remus stories “preserve in permanent shape those curious mementoes of a period that will no doubt be sadly misrepresented by historians of the future.”  The stories were serialized in newspapers across the country.

US #3502g – Brer Rabbit First Day Cover.

Harris’ Uncle Remus stories were so popular, he was approached to have them compiled and published into a book, which he did in 1880.  Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings received hundreds of positive reviews and was a best seller.

Item #MDS210 – Disney stamps picturing scenes from the Uncle Remus tales.

Harris retired from the Constitution in 1900, but continued to write for The Saturday Evening Post and his own novels.  He preferred to stay home and work, despite being offered several honorary degrees.  However, he did travel to Washington, DC, after President Theodore Roosevelt invited him.  Roosevelt had said, “Presidents may come and presidents may go, but Uncle Remus stays put.  Georgia has done a great many things for the Union, but she has never done more than when she gave Mr. Joel Chandler Harris to American literature.”

Harris died on July 3, 1908, in Atlanta, Georgia.

Click here to read some of Harris’ work.

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6 Comments

  1. When I was little I had books that he wrote namely Brer Rabbit, They were great stories for everybody. Thank you for your wonderful article.

  2. “a period that will no doubt be sadly misrepresented by historians of the future.”
    As well as a good writer, Mr. Harris was also rather prescient.

    1. I have a movie of The Song of The SOUTH that I tried to have switch to a CD
      but the store manager said he could not do it because, the movie is BAND from the public,(what a shame) It is a great movie made by Walt D

      1. It is because it is falsely represented. It us banned because it supposedly shows happy Slaves singing and dancing. Problem is Mr. Chandler wrote his stories POST Civil War and so the people were not slaves but free Blacks. People are very thin skinned today and perceive most of the late 19th century as still having Slavery.

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