Emma Bell Miles
Emma Bell Miles (1879–1919) was a writer, poet, and artist whose works capture the essence of the natural world and the culture of Southern Appalachia.
Early life and education
Miles was born in Evansville, Indiana in 1879 and moved to the area that is now Red Bank, Tennessee when she was a young child. Later, she and her family moved to Walden's Ridge (now Signal Mountain), Tennessee. A talented young woman, she left home to study art in St. Louis, Missouri. However, she really missed the mountains and soon returned to Tennessee. After moving back to Walden's Ridge, she fell in love with a young man named Frank Miles and married him. (Shannon Brooks 161)
Career as writer
Emma and Frank struggled to make ends meet, and often their major source of income was from the short stories and poems Emma sold to magazines such as Harper's Weekly. She also made money selling her art. Emma's major success was The Spirit of the Mountains published in 1905. This genre-defying book has elements of local color, short story, travel narrative, personal memoir, and cultural analysis. Her other works include Our Southern Birds and Our Southern Flowers. She also wrote several articles for local newspapers, the most popular of which were entitled The Fountain Square Conversations, a fanciful series in which birds gather at a fireman's memorial fountain in downtown Chattanooga and have philosophical conversations on life. A fourth book, presumably focused on nature, The Good Gray Mother, was never published and the manuscript has been lost.
Emma and Frank had a difficult marriage. They and their children often suffered from poverty and hunger, and Emma was very bitter about Frank's inability to find paying work to support the family. The separated a number of times, and during these times Emma lived in the Francis Willard Home for Women in Chattanooga, in order to make money in town. Emma proved to be a darling of society, and she often gave lectures which were highly regarded and well received. Emma also held the post of writer-in-residence at Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee for one term. Yet no matter how much Emma enjoyed the intellectual life of the city, she always returned to her simple life on the mountain with her husband.
This life of continual poverty eroded Emma Bell Miles's health and after spending several years in the Pine Breeze Sanitarium in Chattanooga, she died in a small house Frank had rented in what is now North Chattanooga, in 1919. By this time their children were mostly living with others better suited to care for them. She was buried in a simple grave in Red Bank, Tennessee.
Bibliography
- Edwards, Grace Toney (1981), Emma Bell Miles: Appalachian Author, Artist, and Interpreter of Folk Culture, University of Virginia
- Gaston, Kay Baker (1986), Emma Bell Miles, Walden's Ridge Historical Society
- Cox, Steve (2014), Once I Too Had Wings: The Journals of Emma Bell Miles, Ohio University Press, ISBN 978-0-8214-2086-7
- Special Collections and University Archives (2014), Emma Bell Miles Southern Appalachia Art and Correspondence, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
External links
- Some Real American Music -- Reexamined Article about Miles' pioneering writing on American folk music, "Some Real American Music."