Corra Mae Harris (March 17, 1869 – February 7, 1935), was an American writer and journalist. She was one of the first women war correspondents to go abroad in
World War I
World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
.
Biography
Corra Mae White was born in
Elbert County, Georgia
Elbert County is a county located in the northeastern part of the U.S. state of Georgia. As of the 2020 census, the population was 19,637. The county seat is Elberton. The county was established on December 10, 1790, and was named for Samue ...
, March 17, 1869, the daughter of Tinsley Rucker White and Mary Elizabeth Matthews. Her grandfather was a State senator (1853 – 54) named William Bowling White. He owned 46 enslaved women, children and men in the 1830 U.S. census and 33 in 1860. Her father, at age 17, owned five enslaved human being, who were emancipated three years later.
A stone monument marks her birthplace, the ancestral plantation of the White Family, who arrived November 11, 1792, and began growing tobacco, later switching to cotton. The marker, on Highway 72 to the east of
Elberton and south of
Ruckersville, reads: "Farm Hill: Girlhood Home of Corra Harris."
Her great-great-grandfather, Thomas White, and his second wife, came from a
tobacco plantation along the
Rapidan River at White's Ford, near the intersection today of
Greene and
Orange Counties in
Piedmont
Piedmont ( ; ; ) is one of the 20 regions of Italy, located in the northwest Italy, Northwest of the country. It borders the Liguria region to the south, the Lombardy and Emilia-Romagna regions to the east, and the Aosta Valley region to the ...
Virginia.
Her formal education was limited to teacher training at nearby female academies, though she never graduated from any of the schools she attended.
In 1887 she married
Methodist
Methodism, also called the Methodist movement, is a Protestant Christianity, Christian Christian tradition, tradition whose origins, doctrine and practice derive from the life and teachings of John Wesley. George Whitefield and John's brother ...
minister and educator Lundy Howard Harris (1858–1910). They had one child survive to adulthood, a daughter named Faith (1887–1919). For roughly two decades Harris struggled through various personal tragedies, including a troubled marriage; the death of two infant sons; scandal and humiliation surrounding the abandonment, betrayal, and return of her husband in 1898 and his public confessions of adultery; the financial destitution resulting from the loss of his teaching position at Emory College; his suicide in 1910; her daughter's death in 1919; and her sister's death shortly after that. Harris remained a widow until her death 25 years later.
Harris was, for a time, the most widely known woman from the state of Georgia. Her literary reputation during her life and legacy since are connected with ''A Circuit Rider's Wife'' published in 1910. Reputedly autobiographical, the novel is at most a spiritual autobiography, with little else that resembles her actual life.
She wrote more than two dozen books, nineteen of which were published. Two were autobiographies, one a travel journal, and two became feature-length movies, the best known was ''
I'd Climb the Highest Mountain'', released in 1951 and inspired by, ''A Circuit Rider's Wife''. The other was the 1920 film
''Husbands and Wives''. She published over 200 articles and short stories, and well over a thousand book reviews.
She was one of the first women
war correspondent
A war correspondent is a journalist who covers stories first-hand from a war, war zone.
War correspondence stands as one of journalism's most important and impactful forms. War correspondents operate in the most conflict-ridden parts of the wor ...
s to go abroad in World War I. She lived the last two decades of her life at
the place she named In the Valley in Bartow County, Georgia. She wrote lovingly of "The Valley" where she lived as early as 1914.
A plaque erected in 1997 by Georgia Department of Natural Resources commemorates her life, located near
Pine Log, on Mount Pleasant Road, at her "In the Valley" property, where she lived between 1913 until 1935.
Legacy
Although she became famous for her fiction, Harris's reputation for
reactionary
In politics, a reactionary is a person who favors a return to a previous state of society which they believe possessed positive characteristics absent from contemporary.''The New Fontana Dictionary of Modern Thought'' Third Edition, (1999) p. 729. ...
conservatism lasted throughout her life and became part of her contradictory legacy. Such a reputation resulted in part from her first nationally published piece in 1899. After the lynching of Thomas Wilkes, alias
Sam Hose, near
Newnan, Georgia
Newnan is a city in and the county seat of Coweta County, Georgia, United States, about southwest of Atlanta. Its population was 42,549 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census, up from 33,039 in 2010 United States census, 2010.
History
N ...
,
William Hayes Ward
William Hayes Ward (June 25, 1835 – August 28, 1916) was an American clergyman, editor, and Orientalist.
Biography
William Hayes Ward was born in Abington, Massachusetts on June 25, 1835.
After attending Berwick Academy in Maine, adjacent ...
, editor-in-chief at the
''Independent'', published an editorial denouncing the act. Harris wrote, and the ''Independent'' published, "A Southern Woman's View", a reply upholding the peculiar and brutal Southern practice, with the reasoning that lynching was a deterrent, and protected innocent white women from malevolent black men. The anti-lynching activist Ida B. Wells-Barnett (
Ida B. Wells
Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 – March 25, 1931) was an American investigative journalist, sociologist, educator, and early leader in the civil rights movement. She was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advance ...
) called the reasoning "threadbare."
Editors at the ''Independent'' asked Harris for more, which launched her writing career. One editor called her writing "a degree of masculinity combined with homespun and relatable ease." Afterward, she wrote several non-fiction essays on southern identity that furthered conventional images of Southerners during the first decade of the century. They also tied her reputation then and after to regional apologia (
apologists), an image that belies the complexity of her body of work.
After ''A Circuit Rider's Wife'' was published in 1910, Harris wrote and published prolifically, both fiction and non-fiction, throughout the nineteen-teens. During the 1920s, her most successful works were two autobiographies published in the middle of the decade. By the early 1930s Harris's publishing was limited largely to local areas. The last four years of her life, from 1931 to 1935, she published what critics have called some of her best writing in a tri-weekly "Candlelit Column" in the ''Atlanta Journal''. Some critics have dismissed Harris's fiction as domestic or sentimental, but others find nuanced social and cultural critique in her works, especially of the South's gender and racial mores.
Harris died in
Atlanta
Atlanta ( ) is the List of capitals in the United States, capital and List of municipalities in Georgia (U.S. state), most populous city in the U.S. state of Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia. It is the county seat, seat of Fulton County, Georg ...
, February 7, 1935.
["Mrs. Corra Harris, Writer, Dead at 65," '']The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', February 10, 1935.
Works
* (1904). ''The Jessica Letters'', in collaboration with
Paul Elmer More
Paul Elmer More (December 12, 1864 – March 9, 1937) was an American journalist, critic, essayist and Christian apologist.
Biography
Paul Elmer More, the son of Enoch Anson and Katherine Hay Elmer, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He was edu ...
.
* (1910). ''A Circuit Rider's Wife''.
* (1910). ''Eve's Second Husband''.
* (1912). ''The Recording Angel''.
* (1913). ''In Search of a Husband''.
* (1915). ''The Co-Citizens''.
* (1915). ''Justice''.
* (1916). ''A Circuit Rider's Widow''.
* (1918). ''Making Her His Wife''.
* (1919). ''From Sunup to Sundown''.
* (1919). ''In Search of a Husband''.
* (1920). ''Happily Married''.
* (1921). ''My Son''.
* (1922). ''The Eyes of Love''.
* (1923). ''A Daughter of Adam''.
* (1923). ''The House of Helen''.
* (1924). ''My Book and My Heart''.
* (1925). ''As a Woman Thinks''.
* (1926). ''Flapper Anne''.
* (1927). ''The Happy Pilgrimage''.
Selected articles
* (1914)
"New York as Seen from a Georgia Valley: In the Valley,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 97–99.
* (1914)
"The Abomination of Cities,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 129–131.
* (1914)
"Men and Women: And the 'Woman Question',"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 164–165.
* (1914)
"Marriage: New Profession or Old Miracle?,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 234–235.
* (1914)
"The Streets of the City,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 306–308.
* (1914)
"How New York Amuses Itself,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 374–376.
* (1914)
"The Literary Spectrum of New York,"''The Independent'' 77, pp. 441–443.
* (1914)
"If You Must Come to New York,"''The Independent'' 78, pp. 29–32.
* (1914)
"The Valley: After New York,"''The Independent'' 79, pp. 63–65.
* (1915)
"From the Peace Zone in the Valley,"''The Independent'' 81, pp. 190–192.
* (1915)
"War and Bride in June,"''The Independent'' 81, p. 506.
* (1916)
"Why We Should Read Books,"''The Independent'' 85, pp. 117–118.
* (1916)
"What Men Know About Women,"''The Independent'' 85, p. 379.
* (1916)
"June Brides,"''The Independent'' 85, p. 377.
* (1916)
"The Woman of Yesterday,"''The Independent'' 85, pp. 484.
* (1916)
"In the Valley,"''The Independent'' 87, pp. 123–124.
* (1916)
"Politics and Prayers in the Valley,"''The Independent'' 87, pp. 135–136.
* (1917)
"War Time in the Valley,"''The Independent'' 91, p. 471.
* (1919)
"Was Eve a Feminist?,"''The Independent'' 97, p. 338.
Short stories
* (1912)
"Jeff,"''The Independent'' 73, pp. 714–724.
* (1913)
"On the Instalment Plan,"''Harper's Monthly Magazine'', Vol. CXXVII, pp. 342–353.
* (1915)
"The Other People,"''Harper's Monthly Magazine'', Vol. CXXVII, pp. 54–57.
See also
*
Corra White Harris House, Study, and Chapel, her home "In the Valley", which is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places
The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the Federal government of the United States, United States federal government's official United States National Register of Historic Places listings, list of sites, buildings, structures, Hist ...
References
* Oglesby, Catherine (2007). "Corra Harris," in Ruppersburg, Hugh & Inscoe, John C. (Eds), ''The New Georgia Encyclopedia Companion To Georgia Literature''. Athens: University of Georgia Press, pp. 201–203. Online version: .
* Oglesby, Catherine (2008). ''Corra Harris and the Divided Mind of the New South''. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
* Talmadge, John E. (1968). ''Corra Harris: Lady of Purpose''. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
Further reading
* Blackstock, Walter (1955). "Corra Harris: An Analytical Study of Her Novels," ''Florida State University Studies'' 19, pp. 39–92.
* Coffing, Karen (1995). "Corra Harris and the Saturday Evening Post: Southern Domesticity Conveyed to a National Audience, 1900-1930," ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 79, pp. 367–93.
* Edwards, C. H. (1963). "The Early Literary Criticism of Corra Harris," ''The Georgia Review'', Vol. 17, No. 4, pp. 449–455.
* Mathews, Donald (2009). "Corra Harris: The Storyteller as Folk Preacher," in ''Georgia Women: Their Lives and Times'', Vol. 1, ed. Ann Short Chirhart and
Betty Wood
Betty C. Wood (23 February 1945 – 3 September 2021) was a British historian and academic, who specialised in early American history, Atlantic history, social history, and slavery in eighteenth and early nineteenth century. She was a Fellow of ...
. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
* Mixon, Wayne (1988)
"Traditionalist and Iconoclast: Corra Harris and Southern Writing 1900-1920,"in ''Developing Dixie: Modernization in a Traditional Society'', ed. Winfred B. Moore Jr., ''et al''. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
* Overton, Grant M. (1922)
"Corra Harris,"in ''The Women who Make our Novels''. New York: Moffat, Yard & Company.
* Reeves, Ruby (1937). ''Corra Harris: Her Life and Works'' (master's thesis, University of Georgia).
* Simms, Jr., L. Moody (1979). “Corra Harris on the Decline of Southern Writing,” ''Southern Studies'' 18, pp. 247–50
* Tate, William (1951). "A Neighbor's Recollections of Corra Harris," ''The Georgia Review'', Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 22–33.
* Williams, E. Virginia (1930). ''Religion and the Church as Motifs in American Fiction'' (master's thesis, Vanderbilt University).
External links
*
*
Corra Harris (1869-1935)Harris, Corra Mae WhiteCensoring Art and HistoryCorra Harrishistorical marker
In the Valley Collection (Corra Harris Historic Homestead, Bartow County, Georgia) 1902–2004, from th
Kennesaw State University Archives
Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harris, Corra Mae
20th-century American novelists
American women novelists
1869 births
1935 deaths
Novelists from Georgia (U.S. state)
American women journalists
20th-century American women writers
Journalists from Georgia (U.S. state)
People from Elbert County, Georgia
20th-century American non-fiction writers