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Name: Edwin Way Teale
Birth: June 02 1899
Death: October 18 1980
Nationality:
US
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Edwin Way Teale (June 2, 1899 – October 18, 1980) was an American naturalist, photographer, and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer. Teale's works serve as primary source material documenting environmental conditions across North America from 1930 - 1980. He is perhaps best known for his series The American Seasons, four books documenting over 75,000 miles (121,000 km) of automobile travel across North America following the changing seasons.

Contents

Early Years and Education

Born Edwin Alfred Teale in Joliet, Illinois to Oliver Cromwell and Clara Louise (Way) Teale, his interest in the natural world was fostered by childhood summers spent at his grandparents' "Lone Oak" farm in Indiana's dune country—experiences recalled in his book Dune Boy (1943). At the age of nine he declared himself a naturalist and at twelve changed his name to Edwin Way Teale.

He received a B.A. from Earlham College in English literature in 1922, then took a job at Friends University in Wichita, Kansas. Teale taught at Friends from 1922-1924 and served as men's and women's debate coach, yearbook adviser, and chairman of the campus Peace Contest. In 1923 he married Nellie Imogene Donovan, also on the Friends faculty, whom he had met while at Earlham College. In Wichita, Teale lived first at 421 South Vine Avenue in 1923, then moved to 621 South Vine Avenue with his wife Nellie in 1924.

On February 28, 1924, in Wichita, Professor Teale was robbed of six dollars by the “Midnight Bandit” as he later recounted in his book Journey Into Summer.

In 1924, Edwin and Nellie Teale moved to New York so Edwin could pursue his education at Columbia University. Teale chose Columbia in part

...because it was in New York and it wouldn't take two months to get a manuscript back from a magazine.

In 1926 he received his Master of Arts degree from Columbia University.

Literary career

In New York, Teale spent 13 years in his first full-time writing job with Popular Science as a staff writer working a wide variety of assignments.

In 1937, Teale's first photographic nature study, Grassroots Jungle was published from among 200 of Teale's insect photographs, many of which were taken on a 4-acre (16,000 m2) plot of land near his home on Park Avenue in Baldwin, Long Island. This was followed in 1941 by The Golden Throng, a combination of text and photographs on bees.

At the age of 42, Teale quit his full-time job at Popular Science to become a freelance photographer and nature writer.

In 1942 he wrote Byways to Adventure: A Guide to Nature Hobbies as well as Near Horizons,which received the 1943 John Burroughs Medal for distinguished natural history writing.

In March 1945 Edwin's son David was killed in action in Germany. The Teales began a series of trips across the country, in part to deal with their grief. That same year, Lost Woods was published and received positive reviews.

On February 14, 1947, Teale and his wife Nellie set off in their black Buick for a 17,000-mile (27,000 km) roadtrip. They headed first to the Florida Everglades, then zigzagged northward following the advance of spring. Teale wrote about the adventure in North with the Spring. The book was followed by three others on the North American seasons: Journey Into Summer, Autumn Across America, and Wandering Through Winter, which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction in 1966.

Teale served as president of the New York Entomological Society 1944-1949 and the Brooklyn Entomological Society from 1949-1953.

Teale worked as a co-writer for a segment titled Vernal Equinox on the March 20, 1955 episode of Omnibus, a TV-Radio Workshop of the Ford Foundation produced by Robert Saudek and hosted by Alistair Cooke on the CBS Television Network.

He became president of the Thoreau Society in 1958, the same year that Autumn Across America was presented to the White House Library. He received an Indiana Author's Day award in 1960 and the Doctor of Humane Letters (LHD) honorary degree from Indiana University in 1970. Earlham College honored Teale with an Honorary Doctor of Letters degree.

In 1959, the couple purchased a farm in Hampton, Connecticut, which Teale chronicled in A Naturalist Buys an Old Farm (1974). The property, which they named "Trail Wood," is now managed as a nature preserve by the Connecticut Audubon Society.

In 1975, Teale received the Ecology Award from the Massachusetts Horticultural Society and the Conservation Medal from the New England Wildflower Society.

Death

In 1980 while working with author Ann Zwinger on the book A Conscious Stillness: Two Naturalists on Thoreau's Rivers, Teale died. Teale's portion of the book was nearly complete at the time of his death, and he was included as co-author when the book was published in 1982.

Teale is buried at North Cemetery, Hampton, Connecticut.

In July, 1993, Nellie Teal died at the age of 92.

References

Wikipedia

 
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