John Wilson | |
Birth Name: | John Fleming Wilson |
Birth Date: | 22 February 1877 |
Birth Place: | Erie, Pennsylvania, US |
Death Place: | Venice, California, US |
Occupation: | Writer |
Notable Works: | The Man Who Came Back |
Spouse: | Elena Burt |
John Fleming Wilson, (February 22, 1877 – March 5, 1922), was an American author, newspaperman, and prolific writer of short stories and adventure novels, best known for his travel books about sea life. Many of his books and short stories were made into films during the 1910s through the 1930s.
Wilson was born on February 22, 1877, in Erie, Pennsylvania. He received his education at Parsons College in Iowa, and at Princeton University. He studied classical and modern literature, particularly subjects that related to oceans, bays, rivers, and ports. He spent much of his boyhood at sea. He married Elena Burt in July 1906, in Newport, Oregon. He was later divorced and had no children.
He was a deep-sea sailor, a ship's officer in the merchant marine, wireless operator, and lived for a time in Japan. His study of nautical books and the trips out to sea gave him the opportunity to write sea stories.[1]
Wilson was a schoolteacher from 1900 to 1902 at the Portland Academy. He then worked with a newspaper company from 1902 to 1905. He was the author of several books and contributed to short stories for both American and European magazines.
In 1905, Wilson lived in Honolulu, Hawaii on the writing staff of The Honolulu Advertiser. A number of his stories were published in The Advertiser, in 1907 and 1908. In 1906, he was editor of the San Francisco The Argonaut.
In 1907, he founded the Newport Signal, of Newport, Oregon.[2] He was also associated with The Oregonian and The Pacific Monthly.
In 1907, Wilson corresponded by letters to author and editor Charles Warren Stoddard (1843–1909), when Stoddard was living in Monterey, California.[3]
In 1912, Wilson sold the studio to realtor Philip Wilson Sr. (1862–1944) (not a relative) who also owned the Philip Wilson Building downtown, and developed the first and only Carmel Golf Course.[4] [5] [6]
Wilson served overseas in France with the 7th infantry battalion of the Canadian Army during World War I from 1917 to 1919. He was gassed by German shells. After the war he returned as a patient in a government hospital at Arrowhead Springs, San Bernardino. He then went to Martin's Sanitarium in Venice, California.
Wilson died, from burns caused by a gas heater, on March 5, 1922, at his home in Venice, at the age of 55.[7] His remains were brought to Hemet, California and funeral services were head at the San Jacinto Valley Cemetery in San Jacinto, California.[8]
Writer Herbert Heron wrote about Wilson in the Carmel Pine Cone in 1966. He said
Raymond Blathway wrote of him and said: