Henry F. Urban Explained

Henry F. Urban
Birth Date:13 February 1862
Birth Place:Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
Death Place:New York City, United States
Occupation:Journalist, author, playwright

Henry F. Urban (February 13, 1862 – May 13, 1924) was a German American journalist, author, and playwright.

Biography

Reportedly a descendant of Johann Heinrich Voss,[1] Urban was raised in Berlin and emigrated to the United States in 1887. He was naturalized as a U.S. citizen in 1899 in New York. In the following years, he reported on life in America, often in a critical vein, as a freelance correspondent for the newspapers Berliner Tageblatt and Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger as well as for the weekly magazines Jugend and Simplicissimus. His comedy Der Froschkönig, loosely derived from the Brothers Grimm fairy tale "The Frog Prince", was staged at the Irving Place Theatre in 1918.[2] An outspoken critic of the women's suffrage movement,[3] he was primarily known in Germany for a satirical novel about naive German immigrants eager to strike it rich in "Dollarland" America and for collections of his humorous narratives,[4] a number of which have been reissued in the twenty-first century.

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://archivaria.com/BdDA/BdDA7.html Max Henrici, ed., Das Buch der Deutschen in Amerika (Philadelphia, 1909), p. 393.
  2. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1918/04/04/102979392.pdf "Germans in 'The Frog King'", New York Times, 4 April 1918.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=3qt0m5_vwKIC&dq=Henry+F.+Urban&pg=PA165 Claudia Bruns, "The Politics of Eros. The German Männerbund Between Anti-Feminism and Anti-Semitism in the Early Twentieth Century", in Masculinity, Senses, Spirit, ed. Katherine M. Faull (Lewisburg, 2011), p. 165.
  4. http://archivaria.com/BdDA/BdDA7.html Henrici, Das Buch der Deutschen in Amerika, p. 393.