This presentation is about Ferner Nuhn, husband of Iowa author Ruth Suckow, and a writer, literary critic, and artist. He founded the Ruth Suckow Memorial Association and he and Ruth lived in Cedar Falls Iowa for several years in the 1940s.They were involved with the Quakers, were opposed to WW2, traveled to Writers Workshops, and were friends with people like Robert and Frances Frost.
1. Cherie Dargan Webmaster, Ruth Suckow Memorial Association
website Ferner Nuhn: Writer, Literary Critic, Artist, and
Activist
2. Ferner Nuhn (July 25, 1903-April 15, 1989)
3. Overview of Ferners life Ferner Nuhn was born and educated
in Cedar Falls Iowa He went to North Central College in Naperville,
Illinois, graduating with a B. A. in 1924 He was interested in
writing, literature, and art He worked as a teacher and wrote about
the teaching of literature in American schools He was a literary
critic, and met his future wife after reading and reviewing her
work. He married Iowa writer Ruth Suckow in 1929
4. Overview of Ferners life, cont. They enjoyed their life
together, doing extensive traveling for the first few years, going
to various Writers Retreats, and going to Washington, D. C. for two
years, when Ferner was hired by the Department of Agriculture.
Eventually they returned to Cedar Falls, Ferners hometown, to help
his ailing father run his business. While there, they became part
of the community and helped to establish several important
organizations. Eventually they retired to California, where Ruth
died.
5. Ferners early career Ferner enrolled in Graduate School at
Columbia; however, he dropped out when H. L. Mencken accepted one
of his stories for the American Mercury. Historian Dorothy Grant
says that Ferner said, I decided I already knew too much, and
stopped taking classes to have more time to write. This led to the
publication of a number of stories, reviews, and articles in The
New Yorker, The Nation, The New Republic, The American Mercury, The
Christian Century, and other magazines, especially Quaker
publications. [7]
6. Ferners wife, Ruth Suckow Ruth Suckow published a dozen
books and wrote numerous articles, reviews and short stories.
Ferner read her work and wanted to meet her.
7. They met in Earlville Ruth kept bees in Earlville for 6
years or more, spending her winters in New York city, writing. She
had learned the apiary business from a woman in Denver, while
attending college. Ferner wrote to her and asked if he could drive
to Earlville and meet her. So he got in his Model T and drove there
in 1926.
8. Marriage Ferner and Ruth married in San Diego, California on
March 11, 1929. Ruth wrote to her aunt, We start out with several
things in our disfavor, but a very great deal of love in our favor.
An observer said, Ferner found an artist who could translate the
Midwest, and in Ferner, Ruth found a critic who could understand
the translation.
9. Their life together They traveled extensively for the first
seven years of their marriage, going from one Writers workshop to
another. Here is an article about their lives together in Cedar
Falls.
10. Their life together, cont.
11. Ferner's writing Ferner wrote a number of essays, reviews,
and articles. He is the author of one book, The Wind Blew from the
East, which was originally planned as a two book project.
12. The Ice Wagon He wrote this booklet for the Cedar Falls
Historical Society: it is a collection of essays that recalls his
childhood.
13. The Farmer Learns Direct Action Ferner wrote an article for
The Nation in 1933 that is available online. It describes
witnessing a forced farm sale in Iowa and described this practice
in the March 1933 issue. The article begins with the comment that
Some may think of farmers as conservative, but that view ignores a
long tradition of rural radicalism in the United States. In the
early years of the Great Depression, that radicalism found powerful
expression in the subverting of farm foreclosures and tax
sales.
14. Editor's note Nation magazine reporter Ferner Nuhn
witnessed such an auction sale in Iowa and described this practice
in March 1933. These efforts saved the livelihood of many South
Dakota and Iowa farmers who were devastated by the depression, but
they were not enough. Between 1930 and 1935, about 750,000 farms
were lost through foreclosure and bankruptcy sales.
15. Ferner Nuhn's article, cont. The technique was simplewhen a
farm was foreclosed for overdue taxes or failure to meet mortgage
payments, neighbors would show up at the auction and intimidate any
potential buyers. Then the farm and equipment would be purchased at
a token price and returned to the original owner.
16. His descriptive opening A raw, chilly day. The yard of the
farm, churned black in a previous thaw, is frozen now in ruts and
notes. Where the boots of the farmers press, a little slime of
water exudes, black and shiny. Through a fence the weather-
bleached stalls of corn, combed and broken by the busking stand
ghostly in the pale air. The farm buildings machine-shed,
chicken-houses, pig- houses, corncribssprawl and gather again in
the big, hip- roofed red barn, and strike a final accent in the
thrust of the tiled silo. The farm is kempt and has a going air;
there is nothing run down about it. The fields spread away, picking
up other farm dusters sections off remote, separate, dim under the
big gray sky. One feels the courage of the isolated units, each
swinging its big segment of earth. Perhaps they call for too much;
perhaps the independence is doomed; but something of worth will be
gone if it goes.
17. Newspaper clipping from action in Nebraska
18. Setting the scene There are 300 farmers here. It is a
Quaker community, long established, conservative. The farmers are
mostly middle-aged, very workaday in overalls, sagging sweaters,
mud-stained boots. They talk quietly in their slow, concrete
manner, move about little. They are neighbors of a farmer who can
no longer pay interest on a $2,000 mortgage. These farmers have
known him for years; they know he would pay if he could. They know
the debt and the interest are three times as hard to pay off now as
when the mortgage was given. Some of them know that soon their own
property may be endangered by defaults. They know that this
particular mortgage was given on stock, and that the farmer has
offered the stock in settlement. And they know that the mortgagee
refused the offer, demanded a sale insteada sale of personal
property, as provided by law.
19. Farm house of the 1930s
20. The auction begins . The auctioneer goes through his
regular cry. The mare is sixteen years old, sound except for a wire
cut and a blue eye. What is he offered, what is he offered, does he
hear a bid? He tries to make it sound like an ordinary sale. But
the crowd stands silent, grim. At last someone speaks out. Two
dollars. Two dollars! Unheard of, unbelievable, why shes worth
twenty times that! The silence of the farmers is like a thick wall.
The rigmarole of the auctioneer beats against it, and falls back in
his face. The farmer holding the mare stands with his head hanging.
At last, without raising his eyes, he says, Fifteen dollars. This
is a new and distressing business to him, and he is ashamed to make
a bid of less than that. . . .
21. Depression era farm sales
22. The crowd refuses to bid against the farmer Do I hear a
twenty, a twenty, a twenty? Why, shes worth twice that much. The
auctioneer is still going through the make-believe. He keeps it up
for five more minutes. A pause, and a voice speaks out. Sell her.
It is not loud, but there is insistence in it, like the slice of a
plow, with the tractor-pull of the crowd reinforcing it. The
auctioneer hesitates, gives in. The silent, waiting crowd is too
much. Sold. After that there is less make-believe. Three more
horses are offered. They are knocked down to the farmer, with no
other bids, for ten dollars, eight dollars, a dollar and a half.
The farmer is learning. The machinery comes next. A hay rack, a
wagon, two plows, a binder, rake, mower, disc- harrow, cultivator,
pulverizer. A dollar, fifty cents, fifty cents, a quarter, a half a
dollar. Sold to the farmer. His means of livelihood are saved to
him.
23. Farm animals and equipment
24. The farmers gather . That night there is a meeting in the
country chapel. It is a strange affair; nothing like this has
happened in this community before. . Ten-cent corn to pay
seventy-five-cent debts; a quarter, perhaps almost a third, of all
Iowa farms lost to their original owners in the last seven years
for inability to meet obligations. But a dream does not die easily.
Heat generates from it even in this conservative audience. Old
phrases are spoken, spoken with a new meaning. Justice above the
law. "The Boston Tea Party. "The right to save our homes. Someone
describes the affair of the afternoon. The farmers cannot help
being pleased at its success. It is a taste of direct action. They
organize to use it more effectively.
25. Conclusion At any rate, the farmer is not taking the threat
of loss of ownership of his land lying down. He has tasted direct
action. He may use it more drastically. Source: Ferner Nuhn, The
Farmer Learns Direct Action, Nation 136 (March 8, 1933): 254256.
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5060/ History matters website. You
can read the entire article at the Nation website.
26. History Matters website The essay can be found online on
the following website. Ferner Nuhn, The Farmer Learns Direct
Action, Nation 136 (March 8, 1933): 254256.
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5060/ History matters website.
27. Figures of the 30s At the MacDowell Colony, in
Peterborough, New Hampshire, Ferner began a series of oil character
sketches he later called Figures of the Thirties. Dorothy Grant
notes that the collection provides valuable insights into the
political scene as well as the Arts during the 1930s. He made
copies of the sketches, wrote up a booklet with comments, and then
made copies of the booklet for the people he had sketched. Later,
copies were given to the Hearst Center for the Arts, while the
original is in the Special Collections Department at the University
of Iowa library in Iowa City.
28. People included in the sketches Others on the list of
people he sketched include: William Rose Benet--poet and playwright
Charles Wakefield Cadman--composer Carl Carmer--novelist, editor,
and conservationist Leo Fisher--sculptor Felix Fox--composer
Frances Frost--poet, fiction writer Robert Frost--poet Horace
Gregory--poet, critic, and editor
29. People included in the sketches, cont. Albert
Halpernovelist Roy Harriscomposer Charles HearstIowa farmer Jeffrey
Levypainter John Cowper Powysnovelist, poet, essayist Evelyn
Scottpoet, novelist Ruth Suckownovelist John Brooks
Wheelwrightpoet, critic Henry A. Wallace agriculturist, author,
statesman [15]
30. Ferner's picture of Ruth This is one of my favorite
portraits done by Ferner--it shows Ruth holding a cat
31. Poet Robert Frost and his wife
32. Charles Hearst Charles was a farmer in Cedar Falls, Iowa
and a long time friend of Ferner and Ruth. His brother James was a
poet.
33. Figures of the 30s
34. Figures of the 30s, cont.
35. Figures of the 30s, cont.
36. Figures of the 30s
37. Figures of the 30s
38. Figures of the 30s
39. Figures of the 30s, cont.
40. Ferners other paintings Two other paintings remain of
Ferners, now housed at the Ruth Suckow Library in Earlville. One is
of Ruths cottage, while the other one shows one of their cats
(always white). Ferner also designed a bookplate for Ruth,
including a cat.
41. Ferners paintingsnow at the birthplace
42. Life in Cedar Falls Ferner and Ruth were both active in the
community and enjoyed being part of the literary and social life of
Cedar Falls. Dorothy and Martin Grant became acquainted with Ruth
and Ferner at this time. The two couples were part of a circle of
friends who enjoyed many dinners and fun and game evenings.
43. Founding the Cedar Falls Art League He founded the Cedar
Falls Art League in the early 1940s and his mother, Anna, let him
have a large upstairs room over the Miller Shoe store at 319 1/2
Main Street for the exhibits. This was an active organization,
offering art classes for children and adults, displaying artwork in
exhibits, and sponsoring receptions. The Hearst Center for the Arts
grew out of that earlier organization.
44. Founding the Cedar Falls Supper Club A group of men--Bill
Reninger,Jim Hearst, Paul Diamond, Martin Grant, and Ferner Nuhn
talked about organizing a discussion type club. By the fall of
1940, basic plans had been put together. There would be twelve
members, half town, half Gown, with a wide range of interests.
Meetings would be once a month in a place where a meal would be
served in a private room. There would be a minimum of business,
with no officers except a Secretary who notified the members of the
coming meeting, requested, and made reservations for the dinner.
Each member would be assigned a certain month to give his paper and
be responsible to inform the Secretary of the title.
45. Supper Club, cont. The group met for the first time in 1941
Local historian Dorothy Grant wrote a self published booklet on the
history of the supper club. She describes Ferners first talk, by
recounting an interview done with Iver Christofferson, then 94. He
remembered Ferners talk as one of the most controversial Iver
experienced in his years in Supper Club. Ferner talked about
Conscientious Objectors.
46. Ferners skills with Carpentry Dorothy Grant also notes that
Ferner enjoyed carpentry work and built a solid walnut desk for
Ruth while they lived in Cedar Falls; she used the desk until they
moved to Arizona. Later, the Grants purchased the desk in 1949 and
donated it to the Ruth Suckow Memorial Library in Earlville in
1991.
47. Health Problems Ruth developed arthritis and Ferner had
allergies, so in the late 1940s they moved west, hoping a milder
climate would help both of them. They first settled in Arizona and
later moved to California.
48. Ferner and Ruth in the later years
49. Retirement to California They ended up in Claremont,
California. Ruth continued to write. Ferner taught at the local
college. They both became active in the Friends (Quakers) and
Ferner began writing pamphlets for the national organization
50. Her later writing She published her memoir & a
collection of short stories in 1952, Some Others and Myself. In
1959 Viking Press brought out The John Wood Case, her last novel,
which concerned an embezzlement case in a church. She died in 1960
at her home in Claremont. Source: Wikipedia article on Ruth
Suckow
51. Ruths Death Ruth died in 1960. She was at work on a new
novel at the point of her death. She is buried in Greenwood
Cemetery in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Ruth is buried next to her father,
William Suckow.
52. Suckow graves in Greenwood Cemetery
53. Ferner remarried After Ruth's death in 1960, Ferner
remarried a wonderful woman named Georgeanna, (or Georgia) who was
also Ruth's cousin. Her husband had died a few years earlier.
54. Ruths papers They worked together to preserve Ruth's
legacy, collecting and organizing her papers for the Special
Collections at the University of Iowa library.
55. Georgias display for the library in Earlville Georgia
created an exhibit for the Suckow Library in Earlville, donated a
bookcase from Ruth's Father, and helped gather mementos to display
in a glass case.
56. Other Memorials to Ruth Suckow Ferner and Georgia worked
with the Ruth Suckow Memorial Association to establish several
memorials to Ruth: The Park in Earlville, Iowa (on the grounds
where Ruths cottage & apiary once stood) The Library in
Earlville, Iowa The birthplace in Hawarden, Iowa
57. The Ruth Suckow Memorial Association Ferner and Georgia met
with a group of people in Earlville in the 1960s: they discussed
Suckows characters and stories and formed the Ruth Suckow Memorial
Association (RSMA). The RSMA still gathers each June: members come
from all over the midwest.
58. The Ruth Suckow Memorial Association
59. Hawarden: the Suckow birthplace
60. Earlville: the Ruth Suckow Park
61. Earlville: Ruth Suckow Memorial Library
62. Dedicating the Ruth Suckow Park Ferner and Georgeanna were
there for the dedication of the Suckow park in Earlville in 1982.
Here they are with Barbara, Ferner's niece.
63. Earlville: the Ruth Suckow Park
64. Earlville: Ruth Suckow Memorial Library
65. Early leaders & scholars
66. People pictured on the previous slide Clarence Andrews is
the gentleman in the light blue jacket on the front row; he wrote a
book about the literary history of Iowa that included a chapter on
Ruth Suckow. He titled her chapter, The Poetry of Place Andrews
calls her close to being the best Iowa writer of fiction (A
Literary History of Iowa, University of Iowa Press, Iowa City,
1972)
67. Leedice Kissane, biographer Next to Andrews is Leedice
Kissane, seated in the middle of the front row. She wrote the
definitive biography of Ruth Suckow, one of the Twaynes United
States Authors series (1969, New York, Twayne Publishers) She also
served on the 1992 Centennial observation and gave feedback on the
play Just Suppose, which told the story of Ruth and Ferner. Kissane
describes Suckows writing style as quiet and restrained, it was
characterized by detachment and almost stark simplicity. Suckow is
sometimes called a regional writer and other times as a realistic
writer. All of Suckows stories have Iowa settings for the most
part.
68. Others in the picture Ferner is in the back row, at the far
end. The other two men are Joseph Wall, historian at Grinnell
College, and Dale Bentz, from the University of Iowa Library.
Clarence and Leedice were both involved with the RSMA and their
efforts as scholars helped to establish her literary legacy.
Margaret Kiesel, a teacher at Grinnell College, wrote articles
about Suckow, edited its newsletter and served on the RSMA Board.
She is seated on the end of the front row.
69. Georgias death Georgeanna (Georgia) Dafoe Nuhn, a founding
member of the RSMA, died on May 28, 1984 in Claremont, California.
She was 79 years old. She is buried in Tecumseh Cemetery, Tecumseh,
Johnson County, Nebraska. Ferner wrote a moving tribute to her life
and work in the Fall 1984 issue of the Ruth Suckow newsletter. He
remembered her role in the efforts to establish the park: "The
event was a fitting climax to Georgia's long labor of love in
memory of Ruth Suckow.
70. Hawarden: the Suckow birthplace
71. Ferners death Ferner moved into a retirement home in
Claremont. He died at age 85 in 1989. After a funeral in
California, his body was returned to Iowa where he was buried
beside his beloved Ruth in Greenwood cemetery in Cedar Falls.
However, it wasnt until 2009 that a headstone matching Ruths was
put in place. Finally, Ruth laid between the two men who had
influenced her life so much: her father and her husband.
72. Ferners Stone -- 2009
73. Ferners Literary Legacy While Ferner was not the prolific
writer that Ruth was, he was a critic, scholar and accomplished
writer. He captured the plight of the Midwestern farmers during the
Great Depression in his essay for the Nation about farm sales. In
addition, he is credited with writing about the Society of Friends
(Quakers). Furthermore, without his efforts to establish the Ruth
Suckow Memorial Association and related activities to reprint some
of her books, it is not certain that the current generation of
readers would be able to read some of Ruth Suckows books.
74. Ferners Literary Legacy, cont. Two of Suckow's earlier
books were reprinted, largely due to his advocacy and the
establishment of the Ruth Suckow Memorial Association. The
University of Iowa Press, in Iowa City, Iowa released The Folks
(1992) and New Hope (1998). In addition, A Ruth Suckow Omnibus came
out in 1988; this contained eleven of her short stories. It also
included an introductory essay by Suckow Scholar Clarence A.
Andrews, a longtime member of the RSMA. Without Ferner Nuhn's
persistence, these books would not have been published.
75. Ferners Literary Legacy, cont. In the meantime, some of his
work can still be enjoyed online: a collection of his short
stories, book reviews, and articles can be viewed at Unz.org. In
addition, he wrote several booklets published by Historical
Societies and the Quakers.
76. Sources of images for the slides Slide 11 --
http://www.livinghistoryfarm.org/farminginthe30s/ money_10.html
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/jacksnell707/sets/
72157626333189712/ farm equipment
77. Sources on Ruth and Ferner Ferner Nuhn, Wikipedia entry.
Cherie Dargan, editor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferner_Nuhn
Christian, Rebecca. Just suppose, the story of Iowa novelist Ruth
Suckow : a one-woman show in two acts. 1992 Christian, Rebecca.
"She wrote of Iowa and of Life." Grant, Dorothy. Self-published
booklet, "History of The Cedar Falls Supper Club." (June 1993)
Grant, Dorothy. Ferner Nuhn: His Art and Writings. The Ruth Suckow
Newsletters, Summer 1998. Martin Mohr, editor. Published at Luther
College, September 1998. Decorah, Iowa.
78. Sources on Ruth and Ferner, cont. Grant, Dorothy. Ruth and
Ferner: Their Years Together in Cedar Falls. The Ruth Suckow
Newsletters, Summer 1998. Martin Mohr, editor. Published at Luther
College, September 1998. Decorah, Iowa. Nuhn, Ferner. The Farmer
Learns Direct Action, Nation 136 (March 8, 1933): 254256. History
Matters. Like a Thick Wall: Blocking Farm Auctions in Iowa
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5060/ Nuhn, Ferner. Biographical
note on the book jacket of The Wind Blew From the East. Harper
& Brothers, 1940. New York & London. Nuhn, Ferner.
Biographical notes at the conclusion of a brochure written by
Ferner, The Ice Wagon and Other Vanished Wonders, a booklet written
for the Cedar Falls Historical Society, May 8, 1981. (Cedar Falls,
Iowa)
79. Sources on Ruth and Ferner, cont. "Ruth Suckow." Wikipedia
entry. Michael Dargan, editor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Suckow The Ruth Suckow Memorial
Association Website. Cherie Dargan, Webmaster.
http://www.ruthsuckow.org/ Suckow, Ruth. A Ruth Suckow Omnibus (A
Collection of Short Stories). With a New Introduction by Clarence
A. Andrews. University of Iowa Press, Iowa City. 1988. Suckow,
Ruth. Some Others and Myself: Seven Stories and a Memoir. Rinehart
& Company, Inc. New York, 1952b. White, Lee. Biography of Ruth
Suckow Nuhn.
http://www.uni.edu/historyofblackhawkcounty/peopbio
80. Links to Websites Ruth Suckow. Hall of Fame. Iowa
Commission on the Status of Women.
http://www.women.iowa.gov/about_women/HOF/iafame- suckow.html The
Ruth Suckow Memorial Association website. Cherie Dargan, webmaster.
http://www.ruthsuckow.org/ Ferner Nuhn on Unz.org
http://www.unz.org/Author/NuhnFerner A list of 19 articles, book
reviews and short stories Nuhn, Ferner. The Farmer Learns Direct
Action, Nation 136 (March 8, 1933): 254256. History Matters. Like a
Thick Wall: Blocking Farm Auctions in Iowa
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5060/ Ruth Suckow and Ferner Nuhn.
John Cowper Powys website (One of the people Ferner sketched)
http://www.powys-lannion.net/Powys/America/Suckow.htm There is a
brief bio of Ruth Suckow mentioning Ferner and their wedding
picture, as well as a quote from an essay written by Ferner
Nuhn.
81. Links to websites, cont. Ruth Suckow Collection. Penrose
Library, University of Denver.
http://library.du.edu/site/about/specialCollections/colle
ctions/m061.php Ruth Suckow's papers. Special Collections,
University of Iowa Libraries, Iowa City
http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-
coll/msc/tomsc750/msc706/suckowaugust2005.htm Supper Club blog.
Michael Dargan, webmaster. http://cedarfallssupperclub.blogspot.com
White, Lee. "Biography of Ruth Suckow Nuhn."
http://www.uni.edu/historyofblackhawkcounty/peopbio
graphy/Nuhn/Nuhn.htm Category:Articles created via the Article
Wizard