Willa Cather

Willa Cather - Author, Timeline and Family

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Willa Cather's Personal Details

Willa Cather was a Pulitzer Prize winning American author, known for her war classic ‘One of Ours’

InformationDetail
BirthdayDecember 7, 1873
Died onApril 24, 1947
NationalityAmerican
FamousWriters, Novelists, Author
SiblingsRoscoe Cather - Douglass Cather - James Cather - John Cather - Jessica Cather - Elsie Cather -
Known asWilla Sibert Cather
Universities
  • Red Cloud High School
  • Red Cloud - University of Nebraska (1895)
Birth PlaceWinchester
ReligionAnglican
GenderFemale
FatherCharles Fectigue Cather
MotherMary Virginia Boak
Sun SignSagittarius
Born inWinchester
Famous asAuthor
Died at Age73

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Willa Cather's photo

Who is Willa Cather?

Willa Sibert Cather was a Pulitzer Prize winning American writer who spent most of her life writing for various American journals, magazines and publishing her individual works. With Henry James as one of her solid inspirations, Cather wrote about human emotions with utmost emotional sensitivity, merging it with the depiction of the platonic relationship between man and his landscape. She won international fame with her war classic ‘One of Ours’, a novel inspired by the death of her cousin. She was born in Virginia and brought up in Nebraska by her businessman father and schoolteacher mother. It was in Nebraska that she did her formal schooling and eventually graduated from University of Nebraska. Soon after, her essays and fictional stories started getting published in big publications like Nebraska State Journal, The Mahogany Tree, The Hesperian, etc. She became the literary editor of The Hesperian and started her weekly column in Nebraska State Journal for years. She became one of the editorial staffs of the McClure, eventually becoming the managing editor of the firm. A lot of her stories were published in McClure in the form of series of stories before they were published as books.

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Childhood & Early Years

Willa Cather was born on December 7, 1873 to Charles Fectigue Ctaher and Mary Virginia Boak in her maternal grandmother’s farm in Back Creek valley, Winchester, Virginia. Her mother was a schoolteacher and right after Willa’s birth the family moved to Willow Shade.

IN 1883, when Cather was 9 years old, her family moved to Nebraska where her father tried his hand at farming but gave up on it and move to Red Cloud and established a real estate and insurance agency instead. It was during this period that the children attended school for the first time.

The time that Cather spent in Nebraska was a deeply formative experience for her as she was intensely moved by the environment, weather, and the various cultures of the European-American, immigrant and Native American families in the area.

She had six more siblings and it is said that she had always been closer to her brothers than her sisters.

In 1890, she graduated from the high school and went to Lincoln, Nebraska, where she entered a Latin School that prepared her for the university admission.

She matriculated from the University of Nebraska in 1891 and her teacher submitted her ‘Essay on Carlyle’ in the Nebraska State Journal without her knowledge. Later, her ‘Essay on Hamlet’ appeared in the same journal.

Career

In 1892, she became the literary editor of ‘The Hesperian’ and her writings kept getting published - her story ‘Peter’ got published in The Mahogany Tree, which became her first published fiction.

While still being the literary editor at the Hesperian, she contributed her writings to the ‘Nebraska State Journal’ on a regular basis and also wrote a regular Sunday column in the journal throughout 1893.

In 1895 she was still getting published in the ‘Nebraska State Journal’, also contributing to the various publications in her university and graduated from the University of Nebraska in the same year.

She had her fiction published in ‘Overland Monthly’ and ‘Nebraska Literary Magazine’ in 1896. She moved to Pittsburg in the same year to become editor of a family magazine called the ‘Home Monthly’.

She moved back to the Red Cloud and kept making contributions to the ‘Nebraska State Journal’ and wrote for her column, ‘The Passing Show’, all through 1897. In the same year she was offered a job in the ‘Pittsburgh Leader’.

In 1900, Cather left the ‘Pittsburg Leader’ and her writings, mainly poetry, started to appear in national magazines. She was involved with ‘The Library’ for a short while and ‘Eric Hermannson’s Soul’ was published in ‘Cosmopolitan’.

She traveled abroad and sent writings about her experience for her weekly column in the ‘Nebraska State Journal’. Her stories ‘The Professor’s Commencement’ and ‘The Treasure of Far Island’ were published in ‘New England magazine’ in 1902.

Cather moved to New York and joined the editorial staff of the ‘McClure’ in 1906, for which she spent most of her time in Boston, working on a story on Mary Baker Eddy.

In 1908, she was given a promotion and made the managing editor of ‘McClure’ and her story ‘On the Gulls’ Road’ got published in the magazine. She also travelled to London for magazine’s work.

Cather’s story ‘Alexander’s Bridge’ got published in serials under the title of ‘Alexander’s Masquerade’ in 1912. In the same year, she got the same story published in a form of book under Houghton Mifflin publications.

Another of her books, ‘O Pioneers!’ got published by Houghton Mifflin Company in 1913. Two thousand copies of the book were printed at first. She also interviewed Olive Fremstad for ‘Three American Singers’.

In 1914, her story ‘My Autobiography’ was published in ‘McClure’ in a series and in the same year it was published in the form of a book, at a cost of 1.75 US dollars per book. She also wrote ‘The Song of Lark’.

‘My Antonia’ was published by Houghton Mifflin Company in 1918. At first, 3,500 copies were published and she signed a contract with the company on the royalty terms that 15% of 25,000 copies will go to her but later it was raised to 20%.

In 1920, ‘Youth and the Bright Medusa’ was published and first 35,000 copies were printed. She went to Naples in the same year but returned to United States after a few months.

‘One of Ours’ was published with Knopf but very limited copies were printed of the novel–– only 345 copies in 1922. In the same year, she helped her parents celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary.

She got ‘Alost Lady’ published with Knopf. The screen rights of the novel were bought by Warner Brothers in 1923. The movie had Irene Rich and George Fawcett in the main lead.

In 1925, Cather published ‘The Professor’s House’ in ‘Collier’s’ magazine. The same story was published as a book with Knopf - 20,000 copies were published and in the next year ‘My Mortal Enemy’ was published with Knopf.

‘Death Comes for the Archbishop’ was published with Knopf in 1927. In the same year, she moved from her house in the Bank Street to Grosvenor Hotel in New York because her house was getting demolished for a new subway.

She got ‘Shadows on the Rock’ published with Knopf in 1931 and got ‘Obscure Destinies’, a collection of short stories, published the next year.

From 1935 to 1937, she got ‘Lucy Gayheart’ published with Knopf and ‘Not Under Forty’, a collection of essays, was also published during the same time.

In 1940, Cather wrote ‘Sapphira and the Slave Girl’ while she was spending time at Grand Manan Island. The novel got published by Knopf in the same year and 50,000 copies of the book were printed at first.

Awards & Achievements

Cather received a Pulitzer Prize for her novel ‘One of Ours’ in 1923. The novel is set around the time of war in Nebraska. The main protagonist is shown going through moral confusion and a deep seated melancholy.

In 1944, Cather received a gold medal from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. It is institute’s highest award and is only given to the literary figures who have done great work over the years.

Personal Life & Legacy

Throughout her life, Cather was friends with women and used to be constantly in their company. Her sexual orientation is still a point of speculation for historians and intellectuals. She lived with a woman for 39 years of her life.

She started living with Edith Lewis, an editor, in 1900 and they both lived together in New York from 1908 until her death. She chose Edith Lewis as her literary trustee for her personal estate.

Cather died in 1947 due to cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 73. She is buried at a spot that she selected for herself before she died––on a hillside spot in New Hampshire.

Trivia

She lived in 5 Bank Street for 15 years of her life with her partner Edith Lewis and the first time she moved into this apartment in 1912, she began writing on her autobiography.

She received an honorary degree from the University of Nebraska in 1917.

She visited Red Cloud in 1918 and read letters that her cousin G.P.Cather had written to his mother before he died at Cantigny. She made him the subject of her novel ‘One of Ours’.

She had her tonsils removed and a hemorrhage treated in 1921 and was very ill at the time. She was sent to a sanatorium in Pennsylvania to recover.

She met with Frieda and D.H. Lawrence when she was in New York in 1924.

In 1928, she received an honorary degree from the Columbia University and in 1929, from the Yale University.

It is not known if she was a lesbian but she spent most of her time in the company of various women, who influenced her life and her writings.

Cather was very influenced by the literary works of Henry James.

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Willa Cather's awards

YearNameAward

Other

0- American Academy of Arts
0

Willa Cather biography timelines

  • // 7th Dec 1873
    Willa Cather was born on December 7, 1873 to Charles Fectigue Ctaher and Mary Virginia Boak in her maternal grandmother’s farm in Back Creek valley, Winchester, Virginia. Her mother was a schoolteacher and right after Willa’s birth the family moved to Willow Shade.
  • // 1883
    IN 1883, when Cather was 9 years old, her family moved to Nebraska where her father tried his hand at farming but gave up on it and move to Red Cloud and established a real estate and insurance agency instead. It was during this period that the children attended school for the first time.
  • // 1890
    In 1890, she graduated from the high school and went to Lincoln, Nebraska, where she entered a Latin School that prepared her for the university admission.
  • // 1891
    She matriculated from the University of Nebraska in 1891 and her teacher submitted her ‘Essay on Carlyle’ in the Nebraska State Journal without her knowledge. Later, her ‘Essay on Hamlet’ appeared in the same journal.
  • // 1892
    In 1892, she became the literary editor of ‘The Hesperian’ and her writings kept getting published - her story ‘Peter’ got published in The Mahogany Tree, which became her first published fiction.
  • // 1893
    While still being the literary editor at the Hesperian, she contributed her writings to the ‘Nebraska State Journal’ on a regular basis and also wrote a regular Sunday column in the journal throughout 1893.
  • // 1895
    In 1895 she was still getting published in the ‘Nebraska State Journal’, also contributing to the various publications in her university and graduated from the University of Nebraska in the same year.
  • // 1896
    She had her fiction published in ‘Overland Monthly’ and ‘Nebraska Literary Magazine’ in 1896. She moved to Pittsburg in the same year to become editor of a family magazine called the ‘Home Monthly’.
  • // 1897
    She moved back to the Red Cloud and kept making contributions to the ‘Nebraska State Journal’ and wrote for her column, ‘The Passing Show’, all through 1897. In the same year she was offered a job in the ‘Pittsburgh Leader’.
  • // 1900
    In 1900, Cather left the ‘Pittsburg Leader’ and her writings, mainly poetry, started to appear in national magazines. She was involved with ‘The Library’ for a short while and ‘Eric Hermannson’s Soul’ was published in ‘Cosmopolitan’.
  • // 1900 To 1908
    She started living with Edith Lewis, an editor, in 1900 and they both lived together in New York from 1908 until her death. She chose Edith Lewis as her literary trustee for her personal estate.
  • // 1902
    She traveled abroad and sent writings about her experience for her weekly column in the ‘Nebraska State Journal’. Her stories ‘The Professor’s Commencement’ and ‘The Treasure of Far Island’ were published in ‘New England magazine’ in 1902.
  • // 1906
    Cather moved to New York and joined the editorial staff of the ‘McClure’ in 1906, for which she spent most of her time in Boston, working on a story on Mary Baker Eddy.
  • // 1908
    In 1908, she was given a promotion and made the managing editor of ‘McClure’ and her story ‘On the Gulls’ Road’ got published in the magazine. She also travelled to London for magazine’s work.
  • // 1912
    Cather’s story ‘Alexander’s Bridge’ got published in serials under the title of ‘Alexander’s Masquerade’ in 1912. In the same year, she got the same story published in a form of book under Houghton Mifflin publications.
  • // 1912
    She lived in 5 Bank Street for 15 years of her life with her partner Edith Lewis and the first time she moved into this apartment in 1912, she began writing on her autobiography.
  • // 1913
    Another of her books, ‘O Pioneers!’ got published by Houghton Mifflin Company in 1913. Two thousand copies of the book were printed at first. She also interviewed Olive Fremstad for ‘Three American Singers’.
  • // 1914
    In 1914, her story ‘My Autobiography’ was published in ‘McClure’ in a series and in the same year it was published in the form of a book, at a cost of 1.75 US dollars per book. She also wrote ‘The Song of Lark’.
  • // 1917
    She received an honorary degree from the University of Nebraska in 1917.
  • // 1918
    ‘My Antonia’ was published by Houghton Mifflin Company in 1918. At first, 3,500 copies were published and she signed a contract with the company on the royalty terms that 15% of 25,000 copies will go to her but later it was raised to 20%.
  • // 1918
    She visited Red Cloud in 1918 and read letters that her cousin G.P.Cather had written to his mother before he died at Cantigny. She made him the subject of her novel ‘One of Ours’.
  • // 1920
    In 1920, ‘Youth and the Bright Medusa’ was published and first 35,000 copies were printed. She went to Naples in the same year but returned to United States after a few months.
  • // 1921
    She had her tonsils removed and a hemorrhage treated in 1921 and was very ill at the time. She was sent to a sanatorium in Pennsylvania to recover.
  • // 1922
    ‘One of Ours’ was published with Knopf but very limited copies were printed of the novel–– only 345 copies in 1922. In the same year, she helped her parents celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary.
  • // 1923
    She got ‘Alost Lady’ published with Knopf. The screen rights of the novel were bought by Warner Brothers in 1923. The movie had Irene Rich and George Fawcett in the main lead.
  • // 1923
    Cather received a Pulitzer Prize for her novel ‘One of Ours’ in 1923. The novel is set around the time of war in Nebraska. The main protagonist is shown going through moral confusion and a deep seated melancholy.
  • // 1924
    She met with Frieda and D.H. Lawrence when she was in New York in 1924.
  • // 1925
    In 1925, Cather published ‘The Professor’s House’ in ‘Collier’s’ magazine. The same story was published as a book with Knopf - 20,000 copies were published and in the next year ‘My Mortal Enemy’ was published with Knopf.
  • // 1927
    ‘Death Comes for the Archbishop’ was published with Knopf in 1927. In the same year, she moved from her house in the Bank Street to Grosvenor Hotel in New York because her house was getting demolished for a new subway.
  • // 1928 To 1929
    In 1928, she received an honorary degree from the Columbia University and in 1929, from the Yale University.
  • // 1931
    She got ‘Shadows on the Rock’ published with Knopf in 1931 and got ‘Obscure Destinies’, a collection of short stories, published the next year.
  • // 1935 To 1937
    From 1935 to 1937, she got ‘Lucy Gayheart’ published with Knopf and ‘Not Under Forty’, a collection of essays, was also published during the same time.
  • // 1940
    In 1940, Cather wrote ‘Sapphira and the Slave Girl’ while she was spending time at Grand Manan Island. The novel got published by Knopf in the same year and 50,000 copies of the book were printed at first.
  • // 1944
    In 1944, Cather received a gold medal from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. It is institute’s highest award and is only given to the literary figures who have done great work over the years.
  • // 1947
    Cather died in 1947 due to cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 73. She is buried at a spot that she selected for herself before she died––on a hillside spot in New Hampshire.

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Willa Cather's FAQ

  • What is Willa Cather birthday?

    Willa Cather was born at 1873-12-07

  • When was Willa Cather died?

    Willa Cather was died at 1947-04-24

  • Where was Willa Cather died?

    Willa Cather was died in New York City

  • Which age was Willa Cather died?

    Willa Cather was died at age 73

  • Where is Willa Cather's birth place?

    Willa Cather was born in Winchester

  • What is Willa Cather nationalities?

    Willa Cather's nationalities is American

  • Who is Willa Cather siblings?

    Willa Cather's siblings is Roscoe Cather - Douglass Cather - James Cather - John Cather - Jessica Cather - Elsie Cather -

  • What was Willa Cather universities?

    Willa Cather studied at Red Cloud High School, Red Cloud - University of Nebraska (1895)

  • What is Willa Cather's religion?

    Willa Cather's religion is Anglican

  • Who is Willa Cather's father?

    Willa Cather's father is Charles Fectigue Cather

  • Who is Willa Cather's mother?

    Willa Cather's mother is Mary Virginia Boak

  • What is Willa Cather's sun sign?

    Willa Cather is Sagittarius

  • How famous is Willa Cather?

    Willa Cather is famouse as Author