fbpx
Wikipedia

George Ade

George Ade (February 9, 1866 – May 16, 1944) was an American writer, syndicated newspaper columnist, and playwright who gained national notoriety at the turn of the 20th century with his "Stories of the Streets and of the Town", a column that used street language and slang to describe daily life in Chicago, and a column of his fables in slang, which were humorous stories that featured vernacular speech and the liberal use of capitalization in his characters' dialog.

George Ade
Ade in 1904
Born(1866-02-09)February 9, 1866
Died(1944-05-16)May 16, 1944 (aged 78)
Resting placeFairlawn Cemetery, Kentland, Indiana
Occupation(s)Writer, newspaper columnist, and playwright
Parents
  • John Ade (father)
  • Adaline Bush (mother)

Ade's fables in slang gained him wealth and fame as an American humorist, as well as earning him the nickname of the "Aesop of Indiana". His notable early books include Artie (1896); Pink Marsh (1897); Fables in Slang (1900), the first in a series of books; and In Babel (1903), a collection of his short stories. His first play produced for the Broadway stage was The Sultan of Sulu, written in 1901. The Sho-Gun and his best-known plays, The County Chairman and The College Widow, were simultaneously appearing on Broadway in 1904. Ade also wrote scripts and had some of his fables and plays adapted into motion pictures.

During the first quarter of the 20th century, Ade, along with Booth Tarkington, Meredith Nicholson, and James Whitcomb Riley helped to create a Golden Age of literature in Indiana.

The Purdue University graduate from rural Newton County, Indiana, began his career in journalism as a newspaper reporter in Lafayette, Indiana, before moving to Chicago, Illinois, to work for the Chicago Daily News. In addition to writing, Ade enjoyed traveling, golf, and entertaining at Hazelden, his estate home near Brook, Indiana. Ade was also a member of Purdue University's board of trustees from 1909 to 1916, a longtime member of the Purdue Alumni Association, a supporter of Sigma Chi (his college fraternity), and a former president of the Mark Twain Association of America. In addition, he donated funds for construction of Purdue's Memorial Gymnasium, its Memorial Union Building, and with David Edward Ross, contributed land and funding for construction of Purdue's Ross–Ade Stadium, named in their honor in 1924.

Early life and education

George Ade was born in Kentland, Indiana, on February 9, 1866, to farmer and bank cashier John and Adaline Wardell (Bush) Ade.[1] George was the second youngest of the family's seven children (four boys and three girls). George's father served as the Newton County, Indiana, recorder, and was also a banker in Kentland; his mother was a homemaker. George enjoyed reading from an early age, but he disliked manual labor and was not interested in becoming a farmer. Although he graduated from Kentland High School in 1881, his mother did not think he was ready for college. As a result, Ade remained in high school for another year before enrolling at Purdue University in 1883 on scholarship.[2][3][4]

Ade studied science at Purdue, but his grades began to falter after his first year when he became more active in the college's social life. Ade also developed an interest in the theater and became a regular at the Grand Opera House in Lafayette, Indiana. In addition, he joined the Sigma Chi fraternity. Ade also met and began a lifelong friendship with cartoonist and Sigma Chi fraternity brother John T. McCutcheon. Ade graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from Purdue in 1887. He briefly thought about becoming a lawyer, but abandoned the idea to pursue a career in journalism.[2][5][6][7]

Career

 
Ade (left), with John T. McCutcheon, circa 1894–1895

Newspaper reporter

Ade did not begin his writing career in college. In 1887, after graduating from Purdue University, he worked in Lafayette, Indiana, as a reporter and telegraph editor for the Lafayette Morning News and then the Lafayette Call.[1] After the newspaper discontinued publication, Ade earned a meager paycheck writing testimonials for a patent-medicine company. By 1890 he had moved to Chicago, Illinois, and resumed his career as a newspaper reporter, joining John T. McCutcheon, his college friend and Sigma Chi fraternity brother, at the Chicago Daily News (which later became the Chicago Morning News and the Chicago Record), where McCutcheon worked as an illustrator.[2][7]

Ade's first assignment was writing a daily weather story for the Morning News. He also covered some major news events, including the explosion of the steamer Tioga on the Chicago River; the heavyweight championship boxing match between John L. Sullivan and James J. Corbett in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1892; and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago World's Fair) in 1893.[6]

Syndicated columnist

While working for the Chicago Record, Ade developed his talent for turning local human-interest stories into humorous satire, which became his trademark.[8] Beginning in 1893, Ade was put in charge of the daily column, "Stories of the Streets and of the Town," which frequently included McCutcheon's illustrations. Through Ade's use of street language and slang, the column described daily life in Chicago and introduced some of his early literary characters, which included Artie, an office boy; Doc Horne, a "gentlemanly liar"; and Pink Marsh, an African American shoeshine boy who worked in a barbershop.[6][9] Collections of Ade's columns were subsequently published as books, such as Artie (1896), Pink Marsh (1897), and Doc' Horne (1899), which also helped to increase the popularity of his column. Ade's newspaper columns also included dialog and short plays containing his humorous observations of everyday life.[8]

Ade first introduced his fables in slang in the Chicago Record in 1897. "The Fable of Sister Mae, Who Did As Well As Could Be Expected" appeared on September 17, 1897; the second one, "A Fable in Slang," appeared a year later; others followed in a weekly column. These humorous stories, complete with morals, featured vernacular speech and Ade's idiosyncratic capitalization of the characters' dialog. Ade left the Chicago Record in 1899 to work on nationallysyndicated newspaper column of his fables in slang. Fables in Slang (1900), the first in a series of book of Ade's fables, was popular with the public and for nearly twenty years more collections of his fables were compiled into additional books, ending with Hand-Made Fables (1920). Ade's fables also appeared in periodicals, the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company produced them as motion-picture shorts, and Art Helfant also turned them into comic strips.[6][8][10]

Playwright and author

 
Frederick Truesdell and Dorothy Tennant in a scene from The College Widow

After Ade's newspaper columns went into syndication in 1900, he began writing plays. His first play produced for the Broadway stage was The Sultan of Sulu, a comic opera about the American military's efforts to assimilate natives of the Philippines into American culture. Written in 1901 with composer Nathaniel D. Mann and lyricist Alfred George Whathall, it was produced on Broadway in 1902. His other works for Broadway include Peggy from Paris (1903), a musical comedy; The County Chairman (1903), a piece about small-town politics; The Sho-Gun (1904), a musical set in Korea; and The College Widow (1904), a comedy about college life and American collegiate football.[4][11][12]

Not all of Ade's theatrical productions were successes, such as The Bad Samaritan (1905), but three of his plays (The College Widow, The Sho-Gun, and The County Chairman) were simultaneously appearing on Broadway in 1904. The best known and among the most successful of Ade's Broadway plays are The County Chairman and The College Widow, which were also adapted into motion pictures. Ade's final Broadway play before he retired from playwriting was The Old Town, produced in 1910.[4][11][12]

After Ade retired from writing Broadway plays in 1910, he continued to write one-act plays that small theater companies presented in theatres across the United States.[13] Marse Covington is considered to be among the best of his one-act plays. Ade also wrote scripts for moving pictures, such as Our Leading Citizen (1922 silent film), Back Home and Broke (1922 silent film), and Woman-Proof (1923 silent film) for actor Thomas Meighan. Ade also wrote two films for Will Rogers, U.S. Minister Bedlow and The County Chairman, a 1935-screen version of the play, but Ade did not get along with Hollywood filmmakers.[4][14]

By the mid-1920s, Ade's plays were no longer in fashion, but he continued to write essays, short stories, and articles for newspapers and magazines in addition to film scripts.[15] Ade also wrote about his extensive travels, but he is best known for his humorous columns, essays, books, and plays. His fables in slang stories and series of books, in addition to making him wealthy, gained him notoriety as an American writer.[5][8] His final book, The Old-Time Saloon, was published in 1931.[4]

Writing style

 
George Ade, 1903

Ade's literary reputation rests upon his achievements as a humorist of American character. When the United States began a population shift as the first large wave of migration from rural communities to urban cities and the county transitioned from an agrarian to an industrial economy, Ade used his wit and keen observational skills to record in his writings the efforts of ordinary people to get along and to cope with these changes. Because Ade grew up in a Midwestern farming community and also knew about urban living in cities like Chicago, he could develop stories and dialog that realistically captured daily life in either of these settings. His fictional men and women typically represented the common, undistinguished, average Americans, who were often "suspicious of poets, saints, reformers, eccentricity, snobbishness, and affectation," as well as newcomers.[16]

While his humor depicts Midwestern speech and manners, it also reflects mannerisms found in late 19th-century America as well. Like Ade himself, his characters also found humor in everyday experiences, mocked pretentious social situations, and tried not take life too seriously.[16] Using a writing style similar to Mark Twain's, Ade was adept in the use of the American language. Ade's fables in slang," for example, were written in the American colloquial vernacular. He also offered genial satire and provided "a social record of how ridiculous some people make themselves."[16]

Striking features of Ade's essays and fables in slang are his creative figures of speech and liberal use of capitalization.[16][17] An example of Ade's non-standard punctuation and writing style appears in this description of a modern single woman and what Ade believes to be her high standards for an ideal husband:

Once upon a Time there was a slim Girl with a Forehead which was Shiny and Protuberant, like a Bartlett Pear.... In all the Country around there was not a Man who came up to her Plans and Specifications for a Husband. Neither was there any Man who had any time for Her. So she led a lonely Life, dreaming of the One—the Ideal. He was a big and pensive Literary Man, wearing a Prince Albert coat, a neat Derby Hat and godlike Whiskers. When He came he would enfold Her in his Arms and whisper Emerson's Essays to her. [non-standard capitalization in original][18]

In 1915, Sir Walter Raleigh, Oxford professor and man of letters, while on a lecture tour in America, called George Ade "the greatest living American writer."[19] H. L. Mencken considered selections that appeared in Ade's book, In Babel, as "some of the best short stories in America."[20]

Personal life

 
Ade's house near Brook, Indiana

Hazelden farm

By the early 1900s, after twelve years in Chicago, Ade's writing had brought him financial success and he retired to a leisurely life in the country. Ade invested his earnings in Newton County, Indiana, farmland, eventually owning about 2,400 acres (970 hectares).[12][21] In 1902, George's brother, William Ade, purchased on his behalf a 417-acre (169-hectare) site of wooded land along the Iroquois River near the town of Brook in Newton County, Indiana. George initially intended to build a summer cottage. Instead, Chicago architect Billie Mann, a Sigma Chi fraternity brother, designed for Ade a two-story, fourteen-room country manor, which was constructed at an estimated cost of US$25,000. Ade named the property Hazelden, after his English grandparents' home, and moved from Chicago into the newly built residence in 1904. In addition to the Tudor Revival-style home, the property eventually included landscaped grounds, a swimming pool, greenhouse, barn, and caretaker's cottage, among other outbuildings. Ade also added an adjacent golf course and country club in 1910.[12][21][22]

Ade frequently entertained at his Indiana estate. In addition to serving as a summer home (and his permanent residence beginning in 1905), Hazelden was used for political gatherings and community events. Hazelden was the site where Republican William Howard Taft announced his candidacy for president of the United States and launched his campaign in 1908. It was also used as the site for a political rally for Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party in 1912 and a venue for an address from vice presidential candidate Charles W. Dawes in 1924. (Ade, a political conservative, supported Republican Party candidates.) Ade also hosted a homecoming party for soldiers and sailors on July 4, 1919, as well as parties and gatherings for the community, local children, Purdue University alumni, Sigma Chi fraternity brothers, members of the Indiana Society of Chicago, and golf tournaments.[8][21][23]

Other interests

Ade spent the summer months at his Hazelden estate in Newton County, Indiana, and vacationed during the winter months at a rented home in Miami, Florida. He was also an avid traveler who made trips around the world, as well as multiple trips to Europe, the West Indies, China, and Japan. In addition to his frequent travels, Ade enjoyed horse racing and golf.[13][8]

Ade, who never married, corresponded regularly with a wide circle of friends and was active in literary, civic, and political organizations. In 1905 he was a cofounder with Edward M. Holloway and John T. McCutcheon of the Indiana Society of Chicago, a literary organization. Ade also served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in Chicago in 1908.[13][8]

Ade was a longtime supporter of Purdue University and Sigma Chi,his college fraternity. He served as national president of Sigma Chi in his later years[7][8] and as a member of Purdue's board of trustees from 1909 to 1916. Ade was also a member of the Purdue Alumni Association.[4] Ade donated funds for construction of Purdue's Memorial Gymnasium and its Memorial Union Building. In 1922, Ade and David Edward Ross, another Purdue alumni, bought 65 acres (26 hectares) of land for use as the site of a new football stadium at Purdue's campus in West Lafayette, Indiana. In addition, Ade and Ross provided financial support construction of the facility, which was formally dedicated on November 22, 1924, and named Ross–Ade Stadium in their honor.[13][23] Ade also led a fund-raising campaign to endow the Sigma Chi mother house at Miami University, where the fraternity was originally established. Ade also authored the Sigma Chi Creed in 1929, which is one of the central documents of the fraternity's philosophies.[citation needed]

In his later years Ade was a member of National Institute of Arts and Letters (American Academy of Arts and Letters) and an executive committee member of the Authors Guild. Purdue University awarded Ade an honorary degree in the humanities in 1926 and Indiana University awarded him an honorary law degree in 1927. During the early 1940s, he also served as president of the Mark Twain Association of America. Ade's activities slowed after he suffered a stroke in June 1943 that left him partially paralyzed and a series of heart attacks in 1944.[4][24]

Death and legacy

Ade fell into a coma after suffering a heart attack and died on May 16, 1944, in Brook, Indiana, at the age of seventy-eight. His remains are interred at Fairlawn Cemetery in Kentland, in Iroquois Township, Newton County, Indiana.[24]

Ade is considered a humorist, satirist, and a moralist with keen observational skills, as well as and "one of the greatest writers of his time."[16] Ade's writings reached the height of their popularity in the 1910s and 1920s. Along with the works of other Hoosier writers, such as James Whitcomb Riley, Booth Tarkington, and Meredith Nicholson, among others, Ade's writing was part of the Golden Age of Indiana Literature of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His fables in slang gained him wealth and fame as an American humorist, in addition to earning him the nickname of the "Aesop of Indiana."[12] In more recent decades, his works have been largely forgotten.[6]

The best known of his plays that were produced on Broadway are The County Chairman and The College Widow, which were also adapted into motion pictures.[4] While the presentations of his plays and musical comedies increased his wealth and international renown, Ade's legacy includes numerous newspaper columns, magazine articles, essays, and books that describe his perspective on American life in the late nineteenth and early decades of the twentieth century.[5]

Ade bequeathed his library, manuscripts, and papers, as well as most of his art objects to Purdue University.[25] Following Ade's death, ownership of Hazelden, his former home in Newton County, Indiana, was transferred to Purdue University, who relinquished the property to the State of Indiana when it could no longer afford its upkeep. The State of Indiana, unable to maintain the home, turned it over to Newton County, Indiana, officials. Ade's remaining land was distributed among his relatives. In 1962 the George Ade Memorial Association raised funds to acquire, renovate, and restore the home.[21][25] Hazelden (the George Ade House) was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.[26] The Association disbanded in 2018, and, as of 2019, Newton county officials are assessing the home's condition and plans for restoring it for use as a public historic site and events venue.[12]

Honors and awards

Selected published works

 
Poster for The Sultan of Sulu (1902)
 
Macklyn Arbuckle as The County Chairman (1903)
 
William H. Crane in Father and the Boys (1908)
  • "Stories of the Streets and of the Town" (a series of newspaper columns published from 1894 to 1900)[5]
  • What a Man Sees Who Goes Away from Home (1896)[27]
  • Circus Day [1896][28]
  • Artie (1896)[2]
  • Pink Marsh (1897)[2]
  • Doc' Horne (1899)[29]
  • Fables in Slang (New York, 1900))[30]
  • More Fables (1900)[31]
  • American Vacations in Europe (1901)[32]
  • Forty Modern Fables (1901)[33]
  • The Girl Proposition (1902)[2]
  • The Sultan of Sulu (1902–03), a comic opera and a one-act play[34]
  • Peggy from Paris (1903), a musical comedy[35]
  • The County Chairman (1903 and 1924), a play[36]
  • In Babel (1903)[37]
  • People You Know (1903))[2]
  • Handsome Cyril (1903,Strenuous Lad's Library, no. 1)[38]
  • Clarence Allen (1903, Strenuous Lad's Library, no. 2)[39]
  • Rollo Johnson (1904, Strenuous Lad's Library, no. 3[40]
  • Breaking into Society (1904)[2]
  • The Sho-gun (1904), a comic opera[2]
  • The College Widow (1904 and 1924), adapted as Leave It to Jane, a musical by Jerome Kern, Guy Bolton, and P. G. Wodehouse in 1917.[7]
  • True Bills (1904)[2]
  • The Bad Samaritan (1905), a play[41]
  • Just Out of College (1905 and 1924), a play[42][5]
  • In Pastures New (1906)[2]
  • Round about Cairo, with and without the Assistance of the Dragoman or Simon Legree of the Orient (1906), from In Pastures New[43]
  • The Slim Princess (1907)[2]
  • The Fair Co-ed (1908), a musical[41]
  • Father and the Boys (1908), a comedy-drama[44][45]
  • The Old Town (1910), a musical[43][41]
  • I Knew Him When: A Hoosier Fable Dealing with the Happy Days of Away Back Yonder (1910[46]
  • Hoosier Hand Book and True Guide for the Returning Exile (1911)[47]
  • Verses and Jingles (1911)[48]
  • On the Indiana Trail (1911)[49]
  • The Revised Legend for One Who Came Back (1912)[5]
  • Knocking the Neighbors (1912)[48]
  • Ade's Fables (1914)[50]
  • The Fable of the Busy Business Boy and the Droppers-In (1914)
  • The Fable of the Roistering Blades (1915)
  • Invitation to You and Your Folks from Jim and Some More of the Home Folks (1916)[51]
  • Marse Covington (1918), a one-act play[52]
  • Hand-made Fables (1920)[53]
  • Single Blessedness and Other Observations (1922)[54]
  • Mayor and the Manicure (1923), a one-act play[55]
  • Nettie (1923), a one-act play[56]
  • Speaking to Father (1923), a one-act play[5]
  • Thirty Fables in Slang (1926; reprinted in 1933)[57]
  • Bang! Bang! (1928)[58]
  • Old-time Saloon: Not Wet—Not Dry, Just History (1931)[59]
  • One Afternoon with Mark Twain (1939)[60]
  • Notes & Reminiscences (with John T. McCutcheon) (1940)[61]

Collected works

  • The America of George Ade, 1866–1944; Fables, Short Stories, Essays (1960, edited and introduced by Jean Shepherd)
  • Stories of the Streets and of the Towns (1941, edited by Franklin J. Meine)

Film adaptations

Other

  • "Authors!—Burn Up Your Alibis!," Photoplay, September 1923, p. 46.
  • The Sigma Chi Creed (1929)

In fiction

References

  1. ^ a b Johnson 1906, p. 58
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Leonard, John William; Marquis, Albert Nelson, eds. (1908). Who's who in America. Vol. 5. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, Incorporated. p. 13.
  3. ^ Boomhower, Ray E. (2000). Destination Indiana: Travels Through Hoosier History. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 60. ISBN 0871951479.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Biographical Sketch" in Mendes, Joanne, compiler (2007). A Guild to the George Ade Papers (PDF). West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections. pp. 7–10.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Banta, R. E., compiler (1949). Indiana Authors and Their Books, 1816–1916, biographical sketches of authors who published during the first century of Indiana statehood with lists of their books. Crawfordsville, Indiana: Wabash College. pp. 3–4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ a b c d e Gugin, Linda C.; James E. St. Clair, eds. (2015). Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-87195-387-2.
  7. ^ a b c d Matson, Lowell (1962). Ade: Who Needed None. p. 9. OCLC 10291088.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "Inventory of the George Ade Papers, 1865–1971: Biography of George Ade". The Newberry. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  9. ^ Matson, p. 12.
  10. ^ Matson, p. 14.
  11. ^ a b Matson, pp. 18 and 22.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Author's Northern Indiana Home Prepares for Next Chapter: A Rural Retreat". Indiana Landmarks. January 23, 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e Gugin and St. Clair, eds., pp. 4–5.
  14. ^ Matson, pp. 23–24 and 26.
  15. ^ Matson, p. 27.
  16. ^ a b c d e Shumaker, Arthur, "George Ade," in Greasley, Philip A. (2001). Dictionary of Midwestern Literature. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 0-253-33609-0.
  17. ^ Sante, Luc (February 9, 2011). "George Ade". HILOBROW. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  18. ^ Excerpt from "The Fable Of The Slim Girl Who Tried To Keep A Date That Was Never Made" in Ade, George (1899). Fables in Slang. Chicago: Herbert S. Stone and Company. (via Project Gutenberg)
  19. ^ Coyle, Lee (1964). George Ade. New York: Twayne Publisher, Inc. p. 7.
  20. ^ "Introduction" in Kelly, Fred (1947). The Permanent Ade: The Living Writings of George Ade. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill Company. OCLC 1075682.
  21. ^ a b c d Boomhower, pp. 63–64.
  22. ^ "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved June 10, 2019. Note: This includes George R. Funk (November 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: George Ade House" (PDF). Retrieved June 10, 2019. and Accompanying photographs.
  23. ^ a b "Biographical Sketch" in Emily Castle (2006). George Ade Letter, 6 may 1923 Collection Guide (PDF). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society.
  24. ^ a b Kelly, Fred (1947). George Ade, Warmhearted Satirist. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill Company. pp. 264–65. OCLC 606708.
  25. ^ a b Kelly, George Ade, Warmhearted Satirist, p. 266.
  26. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  27. ^ Russo, Dorothy Ritter (1947). A Biography of George Ade, 1866–1944. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 14. OCLC 1059626.
  28. ^ Russo, p. 16.
  29. ^ Russo, p. 28.
  30. ^ Russo, p. 30.
  31. ^ Russo, p. 36.
  32. ^ Russo, p. 129.
  33. ^ Russo, p. 38.
  34. ^ Russo, pp. 45–48 and 53.
  35. ^ Matson, p. 20.
  36. ^ Russo, pp. 97–98
  37. ^ Russo, p. 59.
  38. ^ Russo, p. 55.
  39. ^ Russo, p. 57
  40. ^ Russo, p. 58.
  41. ^ a b c Matson, pp. 22–23.
  42. ^ Russo, pp. 98–99.
  43. ^ a b Russo, p. 71.
  44. ^ Russo, pp. 95–96.
  45. ^ "George Ade". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  46. ^ Russo, p. 76.
  47. ^ Russo, p. 77.
  48. ^ a b Russo, p. 78.
  49. ^ Russo, p. 133.
  50. ^ Russo, p. 83.
  51. ^ Russo, p. 84.
  52. ^ Russo, p. 85.
  53. ^ Russo, p. 86.
  54. ^ Russo, p. 88.
  55. ^ Russo, pp. 90–91.
  56. ^ Matson, pp. 23–24.
  57. ^ Russo, p. 53.
  58. ^ Russo, pp. 100–1.
  59. ^ Russo, p. 102.
  60. ^ Russo, p. 104.
  61. ^ Russo, p. 105.
  62. ^ Matson, p. 8.
  63. ^ Wodehouse wrote: "The whole thing began like Mr. George Ade's fable of the author. An author — myself — was sitting at his desk trying to turn out something that could be converted into breakfast food, when a friend came in and sat down on the table and told him to go right on and not mind him." (Chapter XII, Love Among the Chickens) Wodehouse also wrote: "I felt, like the man in the fable, as if some one had played a mean trick on me, and substituted for my brain a side order of cauliflower." (Chapter XVILove Among the Chickens) Wodehouse makes a reference to the "mean trick" again in Mike (1909): "But that Adair should inform him, two minutes after Mr. Downing's announcement of Psmith's confession, that Psmith, too, was guiltless, and that the real criminal was Dunster — it was this that made him feel that somebody, in the words of an American author, had played a mean trick on him, and substituted for his brain a side-order of cauliflower." (Chapter LVIII, Mike)

Sources

  • "Author's Northern Indiana Home Prepares for Next Chapter: A Rural Retreat". Indiana Landmarks. January 23, 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  • "Biographical Sketch" in Castle, Emily (2006). George Ade Letter, 6 May 1923 Collection Guide (PDF). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society.
  • "Biographical Sketch" in Mendes, Joanne (compiler) (2007). A Guild to the George Ade Papers (PDF). West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections. pp. 7–10.
  • Boomhower, Ray E. (2000). Destination Indiana: Travels Through Hoosier History. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. pp. 58–65. ISBN 0871951479.
  • Gugin, Linda C., and James E. St. Clair, eds. (2015). Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-0-87195-387-2. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  • "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved June 10, 2019. Note: This includes Funk, George R. (November 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: George Ade House" (PDF). Retrieved June 10, 2019.
  •   Johnson, Rossiter, ed. (1906). "Ade, George". The Biographical Dictionary of America. Vol. 1. Boston: American Biographical Society. p. 58.
  • Kelly, Fred (1947). George Ade, Warmhearted Satirist. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill Company. OCLC 606708.
  • Kelly, Fred (1947). The Permanent Ade: The Living Writings of George Ade. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill Company. OCLC 1075682.
  • Leonard, John William; Marquis, Albert Nelson, eds. (1908). Who's who in America. Vol. 5. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, Incorporated. p. 13.
  • Matson, Lowell (1962). Ade: Who Needed None. OCLC 10291088.
  • Russo, Dorothy Ritter (1947). A Biography of George Ade, 1866–1944. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. OCLC 1059626.

Further reading

  • Coyle, Lee (1964). George Ade. Twayne's United States Authors Series. New Haven College and University Press. OCLC 1087895012.
  • DeMuth, James (1980). Small Town Chicago: The Comic Perspectives of Finley Peter Dunne, George, Ade, and Ring Lardner. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press. ISBN 9780804692526.

External links

george, february, 1866, 1944, american, writer, syndicated, newspaper, columnist, playwright, gained, national, notoriety, turn, 20th, century, with, stories, streets, town, column, that, used, street, language, slang, describe, daily, life, chicago, column, f. George Ade February 9 1866 May 16 1944 was an American writer syndicated newspaper columnist and playwright who gained national notoriety at the turn of the 20th century with his Stories of the Streets and of the Town a column that used street language and slang to describe daily life in Chicago and a column of his fables in slang which were humorous stories that featured vernacular speech and the liberal use of capitalization in his characters dialog George AdeAde in 1904Born 1866 02 09 February 9 1866Kentland IndianaDied 1944 05 16 May 16 1944 aged 78 Brook IndianaResting placeFairlawn Cemetery Kentland IndianaOccupation s Writer newspaper columnist and playwrightParentsJohn Ade father Adaline Bush mother Ade s fables in slang gained him wealth and fame as an American humorist as well as earning him the nickname of the Aesop of Indiana His notable early books include Artie 1896 Pink Marsh 1897 Fables in Slang 1900 the first in a series of books and In Babel 1903 a collection of his short stories His first play produced for the Broadway stage was The Sultan of Sulu written in 1901 The Sho Gun and his best known plays The County Chairman and The College Widow were simultaneously appearing on Broadway in 1904 Ade also wrote scripts and had some of his fables and plays adapted into motion pictures During the first quarter of the 20th century Ade along with Booth Tarkington Meredith Nicholson and James Whitcomb Riley helped to create a Golden Age of literature in Indiana The Purdue University graduate from rural Newton County Indiana began his career in journalism as a newspaper reporter in Lafayette Indiana before moving to Chicago Illinois to work for the Chicago Daily News In addition to writing Ade enjoyed traveling golf and entertaining at Hazelden his estate home near Brook Indiana Ade was also a member of Purdue University s board of trustees from 1909 to 1916 a longtime member of the Purdue Alumni Association a supporter of Sigma Chi his college fraternity and a former president of the Mark Twain Association of America In addition he donated funds for construction of Purdue s Memorial Gymnasium its Memorial Union Building and with David Edward Ross contributed land and funding for construction of Purdue s Ross Ade Stadium named in their honor in 1924 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Newspaper reporter 2 2 Syndicated columnist 2 3 Playwright and author 3 Writing style 4 Personal life 4 1 Hazelden farm 4 2 Other interests 5 Death and legacy 6 Honors and awards 7 Selected published works 7 1 Collected works 7 2 Film adaptations 7 3 Other 8 In fiction 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education EditGeorge Ade was born in Kentland Indiana on February 9 1866 to farmer and bank cashier John and Adaline Wardell Bush Ade 1 George was the second youngest of the family s seven children four boys and three girls George s father served as the Newton County Indiana recorder and was also a banker in Kentland his mother was a homemaker George enjoyed reading from an early age but he disliked manual labor and was not interested in becoming a farmer Although he graduated from Kentland High School in 1881 his mother did not think he was ready for college As a result Ade remained in high school for another year before enrolling at Purdue University in 1883 on scholarship 2 3 4 Ade studied science at Purdue but his grades began to falter after his first year when he became more active in the college s social life Ade also developed an interest in the theater and became a regular at the Grand Opera House in Lafayette Indiana In addition he joined the Sigma Chi fraternity Ade also met and began a lifelong friendship with cartoonist and Sigma Chi fraternity brother John T McCutcheon Ade graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from Purdue in 1887 He briefly thought about becoming a lawyer but abandoned the idea to pursue a career in journalism 2 5 6 7 Career Edit Ade left with John T McCutcheon circa 1894 1895 Newspaper reporter Edit Ade did not begin his writing career in college In 1887 after graduating from Purdue University he worked in Lafayette Indiana as a reporter and telegraph editor for the Lafayette Morning News and then the Lafayette Call 1 After the newspaper discontinued publication Ade earned a meager paycheck writing testimonials for a patent medicine company By 1890 he had moved to Chicago Illinois and resumed his career as a newspaper reporter joining John T McCutcheon his college friend and Sigma Chi fraternity brother at the Chicago Daily News which later became the Chicago Morning News and the Chicago Record where McCutcheon worked as an illustrator 2 7 Ade s first assignment was writing a daily weather story for the Morning News He also covered some major news events including the explosion of the steamer Tioga on the Chicago River the heavyweight championship boxing match between John L Sullivan and James J Corbett in New Orleans Louisiana in 1892 and the World s Columbian Exposition Chicago World s Fair in 1893 6 Syndicated columnist Edit While working for the Chicago Record Ade developed his talent for turning local human interest stories into humorous satire which became his trademark 8 Beginning in 1893 Ade was put in charge of the daily column Stories of the Streets and of the Town which frequently included McCutcheon s illustrations Through Ade s use of street language and slang the column described daily life in Chicago and introduced some of his early literary characters which included Artie an office boy Doc Horne a gentlemanly liar and Pink Marsh an African American shoeshine boy who worked in a barbershop 6 9 Collections of Ade s columns were subsequently published as books such as Artie 1896 Pink Marsh 1897 and Doc Horne 1899 which also helped to increase the popularity of his column Ade s newspaper columns also included dialog and short plays containing his humorous observations of everyday life 8 Ade first introduced his fables in slang in the Chicago Record in 1897 The Fable of Sister Mae Who Did As Well As Could Be Expected appeared on September 17 1897 the second one A Fable in Slang appeared a year later others followed in a weekly column These humorous stories complete with morals featured vernacular speech and Ade s idiosyncratic capitalization of the characters dialog Ade left the Chicago Record in 1899 to work on nationallysyndicated newspaper column of his fables in slang Fables in Slang 1900 the first in a series of book of Ade s fables was popular with the public and for nearly twenty years more collections of his fables were compiled into additional books ending with Hand Made Fables 1920 Ade s fables also appeared in periodicals the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company produced them as motion picture shorts and Art Helfant also turned them into comic strips 6 8 10 Playwright and author Edit Frederick Truesdell and Dorothy Tennant in a scene from The College Widow After Ade s newspaper columns went into syndication in 1900 he began writing plays His first play produced for the Broadway stage was The Sultan of Sulu a comic opera about the American military s efforts to assimilate natives of the Philippines into American culture Written in 1901 with composer Nathaniel D Mann and lyricist Alfred George Whathall it was produced on Broadway in 1902 His other works for Broadway include Peggy from Paris 1903 a musical comedy The County Chairman 1903 a piece about small town politics The Sho Gun 1904 a musical set in Korea and The College Widow 1904 a comedy about college life and American collegiate football 4 11 12 Not all of Ade s theatrical productions were successes such as The Bad Samaritan 1905 but three of his plays The College Widow The Sho Gun and The County Chairman were simultaneously appearing on Broadway in 1904 The best known and among the most successful of Ade s Broadway plays are The County Chairman and The College Widow which were also adapted into motion pictures Ade s final Broadway play before he retired from playwriting was The Old Town produced in 1910 4 11 12 After Ade retired from writing Broadway plays in 1910 he continued to write one act plays that small theater companies presented in theatres across the United States 13 Marse Covington is considered to be among the best of his one act plays Ade also wrote scripts for moving pictures such as Our Leading Citizen 1922 silent film Back Home and Broke 1922 silent film and Woman Proof 1923 silent film for actor Thomas Meighan Ade also wrote two films for Will Rogers U S Minister Bedlow and The County Chairman a 1935 screen version of the play but Ade did not get along with Hollywood filmmakers 4 14 By the mid 1920s Ade s plays were no longer in fashion but he continued to write essays short stories and articles for newspapers and magazines in addition to film scripts 15 Ade also wrote about his extensive travels but he is best known for his humorous columns essays books and plays His fables in slang stories and series of books in addition to making him wealthy gained him notoriety as an American writer 5 8 His final book The Old Time Saloon was published in 1931 4 Writing style Edit George Ade 1903 Ade s literary reputation rests upon his achievements as a humorist of American character When the United States began a population shift as the first large wave of migration from rural communities to urban cities and the county transitioned from an agrarian to an industrial economy Ade used his wit and keen observational skills to record in his writings the efforts of ordinary people to get along and to cope with these changes Because Ade grew up in a Midwestern farming community and also knew about urban living in cities like Chicago he could develop stories and dialog that realistically captured daily life in either of these settings His fictional men and women typically represented the common undistinguished average Americans who were often suspicious of poets saints reformers eccentricity snobbishness and affectation as well as newcomers 16 While his humor depicts Midwestern speech and manners it also reflects mannerisms found in late 19th century America as well Like Ade himself his characters also found humor in everyday experiences mocked pretentious social situations and tried not take life too seriously 16 Using a writing style similar to Mark Twain s Ade was adept in the use of the American language Ade s fables in slang for example were written in the American colloquial vernacular He also offered genial satire and provided a social record of how ridiculous some people make themselves 16 Striking features of Ade s essays and fables in slang are his creative figures of speech and liberal use of capitalization 16 17 An example of Ade s non standard punctuation and writing style appears in this description of a modern single woman and what Ade believes to be her high standards for an ideal husband Once upon a Time there was a slim Girl with a Forehead which was Shiny and Protuberant like a Bartlett Pear In all the Country around there was not a Man who came up to her Plans and Specifications for a Husband Neither was there any Man who had any time for Her So she led a lonely Life dreaming of the One the Ideal He was a big and pensive Literary Man wearing a Prince Albert coat a neat Derby Hat and godlike Whiskers When He came he would enfold Her in his Arms and whisper Emerson s Essays to her non standard capitalization in original 18 In 1915 Sir Walter Raleigh Oxford professor and man of letters while on a lecture tour in America called George Ade the greatest living American writer 19 H L Mencken considered selections that appeared in Ade s book In Babel as some of the best short stories in America 20 Personal life Edit Ade s house near Brook Indiana Hazelden farm Edit Main article George Ade House By the early 1900s after twelve years in Chicago Ade s writing had brought him financial success and he retired to a leisurely life in the country Ade invested his earnings in Newton County Indiana farmland eventually owning about 2 400 acres 970 hectares 12 21 In 1902 George s brother William Ade purchased on his behalf a 417 acre 169 hectare site of wooded land along the Iroquois River near the town of Brook in Newton County Indiana George initially intended to build a summer cottage Instead Chicago architect Billie Mann a Sigma Chi fraternity brother designed for Ade a two story fourteen room country manor which was constructed at an estimated cost of US 25 000 Ade named the property Hazelden after his English grandparents home and moved from Chicago into the newly built residence in 1904 In addition to the Tudor Revival style home the property eventually included landscaped grounds a swimming pool greenhouse barn and caretaker s cottage among other outbuildings Ade also added an adjacent golf course and country club in 1910 12 21 22 Ade frequently entertained at his Indiana estate In addition to serving as a summer home and his permanent residence beginning in 1905 Hazelden was used for political gatherings and community events Hazelden was the site where Republican William Howard Taft announced his candidacy for president of the United States and launched his campaign in 1908 It was also used as the site for a political rally for Theodore Roosevelt s Bull Moose Party in 1912 and a venue for an address from vice presidential candidate Charles W Dawes in 1924 Ade a political conservative supported Republican Party candidates Ade also hosted a homecoming party for soldiers and sailors on July 4 1919 as well as parties and gatherings for the community local children Purdue University alumni Sigma Chi fraternity brothers members of the Indiana Society of Chicago and golf tournaments 8 21 23 Other interests Edit Ade spent the summer months at his Hazelden estate in Newton County Indiana and vacationed during the winter months at a rented home in Miami Florida He was also an avid traveler who made trips around the world as well as multiple trips to Europe the West Indies China and Japan In addition to his frequent travels Ade enjoyed horse racing and golf 13 8 Ade who never married corresponded regularly with a wide circle of friends and was active in literary civic and political organizations In 1905 he was a cofounder with Edward M Holloway and John T McCutcheon of the Indiana Society of Chicago a literary organization Ade also served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in Chicago in 1908 13 8 Ade was a longtime supporter of Purdue University and Sigma Chi his college fraternity He served as national president of Sigma Chi in his later years 7 8 and as a member of Purdue s board of trustees from 1909 to 1916 Ade was also a member of the Purdue Alumni Association 4 Ade donated funds for construction of Purdue s Memorial Gymnasium and its Memorial Union Building In 1922 Ade and David Edward Ross another Purdue alumni bought 65 acres 26 hectares of land for use as the site of a new football stadium at Purdue s campus in West Lafayette Indiana In addition Ade and Ross provided financial support construction of the facility which was formally dedicated on November 22 1924 and named Ross Ade Stadium in their honor 13 23 Ade also led a fund raising campaign to endow the Sigma Chi mother house at Miami University where the fraternity was originally established Ade also authored the Sigma Chi Creed in 1929 which is one of the central documents of the fraternity s philosophies citation needed In his later years Ade was a member of National Institute of Arts and Letters American Academy of Arts and Letters and an executive committee member of the Authors Guild Purdue University awarded Ade an honorary degree in the humanities in 1926 and Indiana University awarded him an honorary law degree in 1927 During the early 1940s he also served as president of the Mark Twain Association of America Ade s activities slowed after he suffered a stroke in June 1943 that left him partially paralyzed and a series of heart attacks in 1944 4 24 Death and legacy EditAde fell into a coma after suffering a heart attack and died on May 16 1944 in Brook Indiana at the age of seventy eight His remains are interred at Fairlawn Cemetery in Kentland in Iroquois Township Newton County Indiana 24 Ade is considered a humorist satirist and a moralist with keen observational skills as well as and one of the greatest writers of his time 16 Ade s writings reached the height of their popularity in the 1910s and 1920s Along with the works of other Hoosier writers such as James Whitcomb Riley Booth Tarkington and Meredith Nicholson among others Ade s writing was part of the Golden Age of Indiana Literature of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries His fables in slang gained him wealth and fame as an American humorist in addition to earning him the nickname of the Aesop of Indiana 12 In more recent decades his works have been largely forgotten 6 The best known of his plays that were produced on Broadway are The County Chairman and The College Widow which were also adapted into motion pictures 4 While the presentations of his plays and musical comedies increased his wealth and international renown Ade s legacy includes numerous newspaper columns magazine articles essays and books that describe his perspective on American life in the late nineteenth and early decades of the twentieth century 5 Ade bequeathed his library manuscripts and papers as well as most of his art objects to Purdue University 25 Following Ade s death ownership of Hazelden his former home in Newton County Indiana was transferred to Purdue University who relinquished the property to the State of Indiana when it could no longer afford its upkeep The State of Indiana unable to maintain the home turned it over to Newton County Indiana officials Ade s remaining land was distributed among his relatives In 1962 the George Ade Memorial Association raised funds to acquire renovate and restore the home 21 25 Hazelden the George Ade House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 26 The Association disbanded in 2018 and as of 2019 Newton county officials are assessing the home s condition and plans for restoring it for use as a public historic site and events venue 12 Honors and awards EditHonorary degree in the humanities from Purdue University 1926 4 Honorary law degree from Indiana University 1927 4 Ross Ade Stadium at Purdue University was named in honor of Ade and David E Ross both of whom were Purdue alumni and major donors 13 The World War II Liberty Ship SS George Ade was named in his honor Selected published works Edit Poster for The Sultan of Sulu 1902 Macklyn Arbuckle as The County Chairman 1903 William H Crane in Father and the Boys 1908 Stories of the Streets and of the Town a series of newspaper columns published from 1894 to 1900 5 What a Man Sees Who Goes Away from Home 1896 27 Circus Day 1896 28 Artie 1896 2 Pink Marsh 1897 2 Doc Horne 1899 29 Fables in Slang New York 1900 30 More Fables 1900 31 American Vacations in Europe 1901 32 Forty Modern Fables 1901 33 The Girl Proposition 1902 2 The Sultan of Sulu 1902 03 a comic opera and a one act play 34 Peggy from Paris 1903 a musical comedy 35 The County Chairman 1903 and 1924 a play 36 In Babel 1903 37 People You Know 1903 2 Handsome Cyril 1903 Strenuous Lad s Library no 1 38 Clarence Allen 1903 Strenuous Lad s Library no 2 39 Rollo Johnson 1904 Strenuous Lad s Library no 3 40 Breaking into Society 1904 2 The Sho gun 1904 a comic opera 2 The College Widow 1904 and 1924 adapted as Leave It to Jane a musical by Jerome Kern Guy Bolton and P G Wodehouse in 1917 7 True Bills 1904 2 The Bad Samaritan 1905 a play 41 Just Out of College 1905 and 1924 a play 42 5 In Pastures New 1906 2 Round about Cairo with and without the Assistance of the Dragoman or Simon Legree of the Orient 1906 from In Pastures New 43 The Slim Princess 1907 2 The Fair Co ed 1908 a musical 41 Father and the Boys 1908 a comedy drama 44 45 The Old Town 1910 a musical 43 41 I Knew Him When A Hoosier Fable Dealing with the Happy Days of Away Back Yonder 1910 46 Hoosier Hand Book and True Guide for the Returning Exile 1911 47 Verses and Jingles 1911 48 On the Indiana Trail 1911 49 The Revised Legend for One Who Came Back 1912 5 Knocking the Neighbors 1912 48 Ade s Fables 1914 50 The Fable of the Busy Business Boy and the Droppers In 1914 The Fable of the Roistering Blades 1915 Invitation to You and Your Folks from Jim and Some More of the Home Folks 1916 51 Marse Covington 1918 a one act play 52 Hand made Fables 1920 53 Single Blessedness and Other Observations 1922 54 Mayor and the Manicure 1923 a one act play 55 Nettie 1923 a one act play 56 Speaking to Father 1923 a one act play 5 Thirty Fables in Slang 1926 reprinted in 1933 57 Bang Bang 1928 58 Old time Saloon Not Wet Not Dry Just History 1931 59 One Afternoon with Mark Twain 1939 60 Notes amp Reminiscences with John T McCutcheon 1940 61 Collected works Edit The America of George Ade 1866 1944 Fables Short Stories Essays 1960 edited and introduced by Jean Shepherd Stories of the Streets and of the Towns 1941 edited by Franklin J Meine Film adaptations Edit The County Chairman 1914 film The County Chairman 1935 film The Fair Co Ed 1927 film Freshman Love 1936 an adaption of The College Widow 62 Other Edit Authors Burn Up Your Alibis Photoplay September 1923 p 46 The Sigma Chi Creed 1929 In fiction EditAde journeys to Mars with Nikola Tesla and Mark Twain in Sesh Heri s novel Wonder of the Worlds 2005 citation needed P G Wodehouse refers to Ade s The Fable of the Author Who Was Sorry for What He Did to Willie in Love Among the Chickens 1909 63 References Edit a b Johnson 1906 p 58 a b c d e f g h i j k l Leonard John William Marquis Albert Nelson eds 1908 Who s who in America Vol 5 Chicago Marquis Who s Who Incorporated p 13 Boomhower Ray E 2000 Destination Indiana Travels Through Hoosier History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society p 60 ISBN 0871951479 a b c d e f g h i j Biographical Sketch in Mendes Joanne compiler 2007 A Guild to the George Ade Papers PDF West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Libraries Archives and Special Collections pp 7 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g Banta R E compiler 1949 Indiana Authors and Their Books 1816 1916 biographical sketches of authors who published during the first century of Indiana statehood with lists of their books Crawfordsville Indiana Wabash College pp 3 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e Gugin Linda C James E St Clair eds 2015 Indiana s 200 The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press pp 3 4 ISBN 978 0 87195 387 2 a b c d Matson Lowell 1962 Ade Who Needed None p 9 OCLC 10291088 a b c d e f g h Inventory of the George Ade Papers 1865 1971 Biography of George Ade The Newberry Retrieved June 6 2019 Matson p 12 Matson p 14 a b Matson pp 18 and 22 a b c d e f Author s Northern Indiana Home Prepares for Next Chapter A Rural Retreat Indiana Landmarks January 23 2019 Retrieved June 11 2019 a b c d e Gugin and St Clair eds pp 4 5 Matson pp 23 24 and 26 Matson p 27 a b c d e Shumaker Arthur George Ade in Greasley Philip A 2001 Dictionary of Midwestern Literature Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 28 29 ISBN 0 253 33609 0 Sante Luc February 9 2011 George Ade HILOBROW Retrieved June 11 2019 Excerpt from The Fable Of The Slim Girl Who Tried To Keep A Date That Was Never Made in Ade George 1899 Fables in Slang Chicago Herbert S Stone and Company via Project Gutenberg Coyle Lee 1964 George Ade New York Twayne Publisher Inc p 7 Introduction in Kelly Fred 1947 The Permanent Ade The Living Writings of George Ade Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Company OCLC 1075682 a b c d Boomhower pp 63 64 Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database SHAARD Searchable database Department of Natural Resources Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Retrieved June 10 2019 Note This includes George R Funk November 1975 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form George Ade House PDF Retrieved June 10 2019 and Accompanying photographs a b Biographical Sketch in Emily Castle 2006 George Ade Letter 6 may 1923 Collection Guide PDF Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society a b Kelly Fred 1947 George Ade Warmhearted Satirist Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Company pp 264 65 OCLC 606708 a b Kelly George Ade Warmhearted Satirist p 266 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Russo Dorothy Ritter 1947 A Biography of George Ade 1866 1944 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society p 14 OCLC 1059626 Russo p 16 Russo p 28 Russo p 30 Russo p 36 Russo p 129 Russo p 38 Russo pp 45 48 and 53 Matson p 20 Russo pp 97 98 Russo p 59 Russo p 55 Russo p 57 Russo p 58 a b c Matson pp 22 23 Russo pp 98 99 a b Russo p 71 Russo pp 95 96 George Ade Internet Broadway Database Retrieved December 1 2019 Russo p 76 Russo p 77 a b Russo p 78 Russo p 133 Russo p 83 Russo p 84 Russo p 85 Russo p 86 Russo p 88 Russo pp 90 91 Matson pp 23 24 Russo p 53 Russo pp 100 1 Russo p 102 Russo p 104 Russo p 105 Matson p 8 Wodehouse wrote The whole thing began like Mr George Ade s fable of the author An author myself was sitting at his desk trying to turn out something that could be converted into breakfast food when a friend came in and sat down on the table and told him to go right on and not mind him Chapter XII Love Among the Chickens Wodehouse also wrote I felt like the man in the fable as if some one had played a mean trick on me and substituted for my brain a side order of cauliflower Chapter XVILove Among the Chickens Wodehouse makes a reference to the mean trick again in Mike 1909 But that Adair should inform him two minutes after Mr Downing s announcement of Psmith s confession that Psmith too was guiltless and that the real criminal was Dunster it was this that made him feel that somebody in the words of an American author had played a mean trick on him and substituted for his brain a side order of cauliflower Chapter LVIII Mike Sources Edit Author s Northern Indiana Home Prepares for Next Chapter A Rural Retreat Indiana Landmarks January 23 2019 Retrieved June 11 2019 Biographical Sketch in Castle Emily 2006 George Ade Letter 6 May 1923 Collection Guide PDF Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Biographical Sketch in Mendes Joanne compiler 2007 A Guild to the George Ade Papers PDF West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Libraries Archives and Special Collections pp 7 10 Boomhower Ray E 2000 Destination Indiana Travels Through Hoosier History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society pp 58 65 ISBN 0871951479 Gugin Linda C and James E St Clair eds 2015 Indiana s 200 The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 0 87195 387 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database SHAARD Searchable database Department of Natural Resources Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Retrieved June 10 2019 Note This includes Funk George R November 1975 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form George Ade House PDF Retrieved June 10 2019 Johnson Rossiter ed 1906 Ade George The Biographical Dictionary of America Vol 1 Boston American Biographical Society p 58 Kelly Fred 1947 George Ade Warmhearted Satirist Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Company OCLC 606708 Kelly Fred 1947 The Permanent Ade The Living Writings of George Ade Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Company OCLC 1075682 Leonard John William Marquis Albert Nelson eds 1908 Who s who in America Vol 5 Chicago Marquis Who s Who Incorporated p 13 Matson Lowell 1962 Ade Who Needed None OCLC 10291088 Russo Dorothy Ritter 1947 A Biography of George Ade 1866 1944 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society OCLC 1059626 Further reading Edit Wikisource has original works by or about George Ade Coyle Lee 1964 George Ade Twayne s United States Authors Series New Haven College and University Press OCLC 1087895012 DeMuth James 1980 Small Town Chicago The Comic Perspectives of Finley Peter Dunne George Ade and Ring Lardner Port Washington New York Kennikat Press ISBN 9780804692526 External links EditGeorge Ade at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity George Ade at the Internet Broadway Database Works by George Ade at Project Gutenberg Works by or about George Ade at Internet Archive Works by George Ade at LibriVox public domain audiobooks George Ade at IMDb Over 150 George Ade stories read in Mister Ron s Basement Podcast now indexed to make them easy to find George Ade Digital Exhibit at Purdue University Libraries The Libraries Archives and Special Collections holds many of Ade s original works George Ade at Find a Grave George Ade Papers 1865 1971 at The Newberry Library Portals Biography Chicago Journalism United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Ade amp oldid 1130186899, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.