Birth of Edgar Rice Burroughs

US #4702 was issued in Tarzana, California. Click image to order.

Author Edgar Rice Burroughs was born on September 1, 1875, in Chicago, Illinois. 

The son of a Civil War veteran, Burroughs was descended from several Revolutionary War fighters.  He was also related to at least seven people that signed the Declaration of Independence, including John Adams, his third cousin, four times removed.

Burroughs attended the Michigan Military Academy but failed the entrance exam for the US Military Academy at West Point.  He then joined the 7th US Cavalry, but was found to have a heart problem and was discharged in 1897.  

For the next several years, Burroughs worked a variety of jobs – cowboy, a worker in a battery factory, managing an unsuccessful gold dredge, and selling pencil sharpeners.  Unhappy with all of these unfulfilling jobs, Burroughs began writing fiction in 1911.   He had been reading pulp-fiction magazines and started thinking that if people were getting paid to write such odd stories, he could write something even more entertaining. 

US #4702 – Fleetwood First Day Cover. Click image to order.

Burroughs’ first story, Under the Moons of Mars, was published in 1912 over a series of issues of The All-Story.  Because of the fantastic nature of his stories, Burroughs submitted his early works under the alias “Normal Bean,” to show that he was in his right mind. 

In 1912, Burroughs wrote the first of several Tarzan stories.  These stories, turned into novels, were wildly popular.  Burroughs recognized the story’s popularity and sought to capitalize on it, allowing it to be adapted to a variety of different media, including a comic strip, movies, and merchandise.  Some people cautioned him against this, saying that the other media would compete with his books.  But Burroughs proved them wrong, and Tarzan remained popular in every media he was adapted to. 

US #4702 – First Day Cover with Digital Color Postmark. Click image to order.

A few years later, Burroughs purchased a large ranch in California that he named Tarzana.  In 1927, the community surrounding the ranch officially became Tarzana, California.  A town in Texas was also named Tarzan that same year.

While he continued to write more Tarzan novels, Burroughs also wrote a number of popular science fiction and fantasy stories, many about people from Earth traveling to other planets.  Perhaps the most famous of these was John Carter of Mars.  He also wrote tales of people traveling to lost islands and the center of the Earth, as well as Westerns and historical romances.  In all, he wrote about 70 novels in his lifetime.

Lesotho #818 from a set of stamps honoring films about Africa.  Click image to order.

Burroughs was living in Honolulu when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941.  Though he was 66 years old, he applied to become a war correspondent and was accepted.  He was one of the oldest US war correspondents of the conflict.

After the war, Burroughs returned to California, but his health declined and he died on March 19, 1950.  Because of his many stories set on Mars (which he called Barsoom in his books) and his influence on the real-world exploration of the planet, a crater on Mars was named after Burroughs.  He was also inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.

Click here for more from the Edgar Rice Burroughs website.

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

Did you like this article? Click here to rate:
Share this Article

4 Comments

  1. Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees and I share his Birthday. I have read, re-read and re-read again his
    John Carter, Carson of Venus, Pellucidar, Caprona and other novels. Great reads.

  2. I look forward to reading your “This Day in History” emails …they are not only great and interesting but very highly informing. Thankyou for each and all. George Eliades Sept 1, 2019 4:07 PM

Leave a Reply

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