Wilbur Daniel Steele

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Wilbur Daniel Steele (1886 - 1970)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Greensboro, Guilford County, North Carolina, United States
Death: May 26, 1970 (84)
Stamford, Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States
Place of Burial: Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Dr. Wilbur Fletcher Steele and Rose Beulah Steele
Husband of Norma Stafford Steele and Margaret Orinda Steele
Father of Thurston Steele and Peter Steele
Brother of Arthur Brainerd Steele; Beulah Wood Jenness and Private

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Wilbur Daniel Steele

Wilbur Daniel Steele

Steele was born in Greensboro, the third of four children (Arthur, Beulah, Wilbur Daniel, and Muriel) of Rose Wood and Wilbur Fletcher Steele, both of New England ancestry. His father, a clergyman and then principal of Bennett Seminary, a Methodist Episcopal school for African American girls, took the family to Germany in 1889 for additional study, and there the boy attended kindergarten. In 1892 Steele's father joined the faculty of the University of Denver, where his son was a student from 1903 to 1907, majoring in history and economics, with heavy participation in athletics and fraternity affairs. Thinking he wished to become a painter, young Steele enrolled at the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts and went on a sketching trip to Italy, but an interest in writing gradually thwarted his plans for a career as an artist.

His first short story was published in 1910. During the summer of 1913 in Provincetown, Massachusetts, he shared quarters with Sinclair Lewis. There he was a close friend of Eugene O'Neill, and the two of them were among the original playwrights for the Provincetown Players. Meanwhile, encouraged by his success as a writer of short stories, he married the painter Margaret Thurston, by whom he had two sons, Thurston and Peter.

A consummate professional writer as well as a rigid technician, Steele met the demand of his market by submitting short stories to both women's slick magazines and the literary journals, then turned to novels and plays when the time seemed propitious. Though he always returned to his base on the Massachusetts coast, a wanderlust took him to Ireland, England, France, Switzerland, Tunisia, the Caribbean, and South America, providing the tall, bespectacled writer with a wide variety of settings for stories. His first novel was published in 1914 and his first collection of short stories in 1918. Between 1916 and 1933 he won numerous O. Henry awards and citations in the annual Best Short Stories, edited by Edward J. O'Brien.

After two winters in Charleston, South Carolina, Steele returned in late 1929 to North Carolina and rented the Greenlaw House (729 Franklin Street) in Chapel Hill, where he enjoyed the friendship of Paul Green and the university community. He wrote in the morning, played golf after lunch, and attended the movies (he had never seen a bad one, he said) or "partied" in the evening. For "The Man without a God," a two-part story whose central character was based partially on Paul Green, the Ladies' Home Journal paid him the unprecedented sum of $10,000. It was only after the death of his wife, in 1931, that Steele decided he could no longer remain in the village. Twice during his four years in the Carolinas he returned for short visits to Greensboro. In 1932 he married in London a family friend, the writer Norma Mitchell, then lived at her home in Hamburg, Connecticut. In 1956 he moved to nearby Old Lyme, where he died fourteen years later.

Like O. Henry, also born in Greensboro, Steele often provided for his stories an unexpected but logical ending. In addition to "Light" and "A Way with Women," two of his most highly acclaimed stories also have North Carolina settings: "How Beautiful with Shoes" and "Man and Boy," whose earlier titles were "Town Drunk" and "The Man without a God." By 1955 he had published seven volumes of short stories, ten novels, and three books of plays. Martin Bucco's authoritative critical biography (1972) indicates that a number of unpublished stories and plays are among the Steele Papers at the Stanford University Library.

A portrait of him used in promotion was painted by W. Langdon Kihn.

Works

Novels

  • Storm (1914)
  • Isles of the Blest (1924)
  • Taboo (1925)
  • Meat (1928) Republished as The Third Generation (1929)
  • Undertow (1930)
  • Sound of Rowlocks (1938)
  • That Girl from Memphis (1945)
  • Diamond Wedding (1950)
  • Their Town (1952)
  • The Way to the Gold (1955)
  • Short story collections
  • Land's End and Other Stories (1918)
  • The Shame Dance and Other Stories (1923)
  • Urkey Island (1926)
  • The Man Who Saw Through Heaven and Other Stories (1927)
  • Tower of Sand and Other Stories (1929)
  • The Best Stories of Wilbur Daniel Steele (1945)
  • Full Cargo: More Stories (1951)

Plays

  • Contemporaries, produced 1915.
  • Not Smart, produced 1916.
  • The Giants' Stair, produced 1924.
  • The Terrible Woman and Other One Act Plays, 1925. Also includes Not Smart, Ropes.
  • (with Norma Mitchell) Any Woman, produced in August 1934 for one-week run.
  • (with Norma Mitchell) Post Road, produced 1934; printed 1935.
  • (with Anthony Brown) How Beautiful with Shoes, produced 1935. From the story by Steele.
  • Luck, in William Kozlenko (ed.) One Hundred Nonroyalty Plays, 1941.
view all

Wilbur Daniel Steele's Timeline

1886
March 17, 1886
Greensboro, Guilford County, North Carolina, United States
1915
January 16, 1915
1918
April 21, 1918
1970
May 26, 1970
Age 84
Stamford, Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States
????
Pleasant View Cemetery, Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, United States