Birth of Thomas Wolfe

US #3444 was issued on Wolfe’s 100th birthday.

Novelist Thomas Clayton Wolfe was born on October 3, 1900, in Asheville, North Carolina.

Wolfe was the youngest of eight siblings.  His father was a stone carver and his mother ran a series of boarding houses, eventually becoming a successful real estate speculator.  Wolfe grew up in one of these boarding houses until he went to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1916.

There, Wolfe was a member of the Dialectic Society and edited the school newspaper, The Daily Tar Heel.  He won the Worth Prize for Philosophy for his essay, The Crisis in Industry.  Wolfe took playwriting courses and wrote two plays that were performed by the school’s acting troupe.

US #3444 – Classic First Day Cover

After graduating, Wolfe went on to attend Harvard, where he continued to study playwriting.  Two versions of one of his plays were performed there.  After graduating in 1922, Wolfe went to New York City to help raise money for the University of North Carolina and to try to sell some of his plays.  When he couldn’t sell any, likely because of their lengthy run-times, he accepted a teaching position at New York University.

Wolfe soon began to realize that his writing style was more geared toward fiction than plays, so he began writing his first novel, Look Homeward, Angel.  Set in a fictional small town based on his hometown of Asheville, the book was a largely autobiographical story of his childhood, reflecting a young man’s struggle in a small town.

US #3444 – Fleetwood Plate Block First Day Cover

The book was published just days before the stock market crash of 1929 and received positive reviews.  However, many people in Asheville, including his own family, were unhappy with how they were seemingly portrayed.  Because of this, Wolfe stayed away from his hometown for several years.  Instead, he traveled to Europe on a Guggenheim Fellowship.  Soon, Look Homeward, Angel was a bestseller in the United Kingdom and Germany.

Wolfe spent the next four years writing a sequel, Of Time and the River.  Published in 1935, it was an even greater success than his first book.  However, this time the people of Asheville were even more upset because they weren’t included in the story at all.

US #3444 – Mystic First Day Cover

Wolfe again returned to Europe after the publishing of his second book.  He greatly enjoyed spending time in Germany.  However, in 1936 he saw discrimination against Jewish people there and his feelings for the country quickly changed.  When he returned home, he wrote a short story that was critical of Germany, after which that country’s government banned his works and he wasn’t allowed to return.

Wolfe published a short story, Chickamauga, in 1937, set during the Civil War battle of the same name.  Shortly after, he returned back to Asheville for the first time since his first book was published.

US #3444 – Colorano Silk Cachet First Day Cover

The following year, Wolfe went on a tour of the American West.  After giving a lecture at Purdue University, he spent two weeks visiting 11 national parks.  While in Seattle, he became sick with pneumonia and he was later diagnosed with miliary tuberculosis.  Wolfe then went to Johns Hopkins Hospital, where it was discovered the disease had engulfed the whole right side of his brain.  Wolfe went into a coma and died on September 15, 1938, just weeks before his 38th birthday.

Moving tributes poured in following Wolfe’s sudden death, including one from Time, which wrote, “of all American novelists of his generation, he was the one from whom most had been expected.”  In the years following his death, Wolfe’s publisher released three books he’d written before his death: The Web and the Rock (1939), You Can’t Go Home Again (1940), and The Hills Beyond (1941).  Several authors have cited Wolfe as an inspiration, including Jack Kerouac and Ray Bradbury.

Click here to see what else happened on This Day in History.

Did you like this article? Click here to rate:
5/5 - (1 vote)
Share this Article

4 Comments

  1. Many years ago I lived in a boarding house just two blocks away from the home Thomas Wolfe grew up in. Unlike mine, the boarding house that figures promnently in Wolfe’s frst novel, “Look Homeward Angel” has been termed the most famous in American literature. The title which loosely refers to the dead looking back on the living also refers to a “real” angel, a stone carving now over 100 years old that can still be seen in Oakwood Cemetary in Hendersonville, North Carolna.

  2. I’ve often wondered if the more recent novelist Tom Wolfe (Bonfire of the Vanities, et al} was Thomas Wolfe’s son. I guess not, as this bio does not mention Thomas ever having a wife, but it is possible, as some men (and women) prefer not to mention their family or personal lives. Tom Wolfe died last year–he was around my age (early 80s), and spent a lot of time in Northern California, where I live. I would have liked to meet him, but never did.

  3. My cousin who recently moved to NC from Evansville, IN; where she worked as a realtor, stopped at Asheville to visit friends, on her way to Wilmington, NC. She is originally from Burlington, NC.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *