From Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, 25 April 1947.
Dr. Willa Cather, 70 [sic], author and former
Pittsburgher, died
yesterday of a cerebral hemorrhage in the the Madison Ave. (New York)
home where she lived for many years.
One of her best books was "Death Comes for the Archbishop," in 1927.
She was an artist in telling a story simply.
Dr. Cather was born in Winchester, Va., reared on a Nebraska ranch, but
spent 11 years in Pittsburgh.
Here in 1895.
She came to Pittsburgh in 1895, upon graduation from the University of
Nebraska, because she was fond of music and believed she could satisfy
her desire for concerts and intellectual companionship in the "city of
steel."
In Nebraska she was a newspaper correspondent.
Here, she was telegraph editor and drama critic for the old "Pittsburgh
Leader."
She also taught a year at Old Central High School, where John O'Connor
Jr., now assistant director of fine arts at Carnegie Institute, was one
of her pupils. He still cherishes a yellowed composition paper of his on
which she marked "Good."
Well-Liked.
She was well-liked by the pupils, he said, who found inspiration in the
breezy, western way she had with people. She dressed plainly in tailored
clothes, he said, and always wore her hair parted Madonna-like in the
middle.
Following the year at Central, she transferred to Allegheny High School
in 1901, where she became head of the English department.
Another Pittsburgher at whose home she spent a great deal of time is
George Seibel, critic and present head of the Carnegie Free Library of
Allegheny.
Delightful.
She was delightful and intelligent company Seibel recalls. Twice a week
she came to the Seibel home to read French authors with George and his
wife. Seibel says:
"She did her work, did it well, and let it go at that. She avoided
getting into the limelight."
Her first important writing, as he recalls it, was a short story
published in "Cosmopolitan" magazine and a poem in the then popular
"Youth's Companion." She also did a great deal of work for a local
publication called "The Library."
Close Friend.
While living in Pittsburgh, her residence most of the time was the home
of Judge S. A. McClung, whose daughter,
Isabel, was her close friend. Isabel married a musician, Jan Hambourg,
and later moved to Paris.
Much of Miss Cather's musical knowledge and interest came about through
this association.
One of her short stories, written in Pittsburgh, was called "Paul's
Case," and was based on the actual suicide of a
local high school youth. His parents objected, and when the story later
came out in a book of short stories by Miss
Cather it was entitled "Youth and the Bright Medusa."
Her first book was in verse, "April Twilights," 1903. In 1905 a book of
short stores "clicked" and she became
associate editor of "McClure's Magazine" in 1906.
'Birthplace.'
She often referred to Pittsburgh as the "birthplace" of her writing
career. Many of her poems and stories were based
on activities that centered here at the turn of the century in Carnegie
Music Hall, Schenley
Park, Schenley
Hotel and the fashionable residences of Fifth Ave. and
Old Allegheny. "Death Comes for the Archbishop" and "A Lost Lady," 1923,
were considered her best books. The former was a
simple, vivid story of two saints of the Southwest; the latter a
feminine study with a prairie background.
"One of Ours," the story of a western boy in World War I, won the
Pulitzer prize in 1922. In 1933 she was
awarded Prix Femina Americaine "for distinguished
literary accomplishments."
Other Books.
Her other books were The Troll Garden, 1905; Alexander's Bridge, 1912; O
Pioneers, 1913; The Song of the Lark, 1915; My Antonia, 1918, a story of
the currents of emotion in every Main St. in America; Youth and the
Bright
Medusa, 1920; The Professor's House, 1925; My Mortal Enemy, 1926; Shadows
on the Rock, 1931; Obscure Destinies, 1932; Lucy Gayheart, 1935; Not
Under Forty, 1936; Sapphira and the Slave Girl, 1940.
She held Doctor of Literature degrees from University of Nebraska,
University of Michigan, University of California, Columbia, Princeton and
Yale. She was unmarried.