Hal Borland
Harold "Hal" Glen Borland (May 14, 1900 – February 22, 1978) was a well-known American author, journalist and naturalist. In addition to writing many non-fiction and fiction books about the outdoors, he was a staff writer and editorialist for The New York Times.[1]
Early life and education
Borland was born on the plains in Sterling, Nebraska, to Sarah M (née Clinaburg) and William Arthur Borland, both of whom owned and published a weekly newspaper in Flagler, Colorado, where the family moved to homestead when Borland was 10. After attending local schools, he studied at the University of Colorado from 1918-1920, majoring in engineering. While there, he held jobs at the Denver Post and the Flagler News. It was during this time he realized his true calling was as an author, and he soon moved to New York where he studied journalism and graduated from Columbia University in 1923 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature.
Career
Borland started writing as a journalist for publications such as The Denver Post and the Flagler News. While attending Columbia University he wrote for the Brooklyn Times, the United Press, and King Features Service. After graduation Borland worked for a variety of newspapers across the United States, eventually settling in Philadelphia and working for Curtis Newspapers, the Philadelphia Morning Sun, and the Philadelphia Morning Ledger from 1926 until 1937.
In 1937 Borland began writing for The New York Times, first as a staff writer for The New York Times Sunday Magazine (1937-1943) and then in 1942 as an editorial writer for The New York Sunday Times, a position he held until his death in 1978. While at The Times, Borland began writing about his experience as an outdoorsman in a series of editorials that were later compiled into two books. He wrote similar pieces for the Berkshire Eagle (1958-1978), Pittsburgh Press (1966-1978), and Torrington Register (1971-1978).
Borland also wrote short stories, poetry, novels (including westerns under the pseudonym Ward West), biographical novels, non-fiction, articles for a variety of magazines, and one play.
Works
- Heaps of Gold (1922), a collection of verse
- Rocky Mountain Tipi Tails (1924), a young adult novel.
- The Amulet
- High, Wide, and Lonesome (1956, 1990)
- The Seventh Winter (1960)
- The Dog That Came to Stay (1961), a must read for any dog lover
- When the Legends Die (1963), about the struggles of a young Ute Indian to live apart from white society, has become a young adult classic. It was adapted as a film by the same name directed by Stuart Millar and released in 1972.
- The King of Squaw Mountain (1964)
- An American Year: Country Life and Landscapes Through the Seasons (1946)
- Beyond Your Doorstep: A Handbook to the Country (1962)
- This Hill, This Valley (1957, 1990), about a year on his Connecticut farm
- Hill Country Harvest
- Sundial of the Seasons: A Selection of Outdoor Editorials from the New York Times (1964)
- Seasons
- Hal Borland's Book of Days
- Twelve Moons of the Year (1979)
- Countryman: A Summary of Belief (1965)
- Hill Country Harvest (1967)
- Homeland: A Report from the Country (1969)
- Country Editor's Boy (1970)[2]
Awards and Honors
- Meeman Award for Conservation Writing (1966)
- John Burroughs Medal for Distinguished Nature Writing (1968)
- Interpretive Naturalists Award (1973)
Personal Life
Borland was married twice, to Helen Alice née Le Bene until her death in 1944, and to Barbara Ross née Dodge until Borland's death in 1978. Both of his wives were also writers. Borland and Helen had three sons, Harold Glen Jr. (1925-1963), Donal William (1929-), and Neil Frederick (1929-1944).
In 1952, Borland and wife Barbara moved to a 100-acre farm in Connecticut, where they lived and worked until his death in 1978 at the age of 77 from emphysema. [3]
References
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Hal Borland |
- Works by or about Hal Borland in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Hal Borland Room, Flagler, CO
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