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Joaquin Miller -
California Writer
Poem : Joaquin Murietta
A Concise Biography of Joaquin Miller
Joaquin
Miller was
born Cincinnatus Hiner Miller on September 8, 1837. In the introduction
to Volume One of JOAQUIN MILLER'S POEMS, published by Harr Wagner Publishing
Co. in 1917 however, Miller wrote,
"I see that my birthday is set down in some books for 1841, and in others
for 1842. This comes from the loss of the Bible...Papa gave the former year,
according to his recollection of the trivial event, while mother insisted
on the latter, both giving the same day of the month....I was born in a
covered wagon, I am told at or about the time it crossed the line dividing
Indiana from Ohio."
In a 1967 Biography by O.W. Frost, Twayne Publishers Inc, however, Miller's
biographer establishes 1837 as the year of Millers birth. Frost also identifies
Miller's covered wagon birth as a fabrication.
The name Joaquin was adapted from the legendary California bandit, Joaquin
Murietta. Joaquin Miller described his decision to adopt the name at the
conclusion of the Poem "Joaquin Murietta," in Volume II of his collected
works.
"The third poem in my first London Book was called 'California,' but it
was called 'Joaquin' in the Oregon book. And it was from this that I was
in derision called "Joaquin." I kept the name and the poem too, till both
were at least respected. But my elder brother, who had better judgement
and finer taste than I, thought it too wild and bloody; and so by degrees
it has been allowed to disappear, except this fragment, although a small
book of itself to begin with." (see the poem "Joaquin Murietta" below.)
Joaquin Miller's parents were Quakers. Miller's father was a magistrate
in Indiana. In 1852, his parents relocated their family to Oregon, traveling
with two heavily laden wagons, eight oxen yoked to each, a carriage and
two horses. Miller's family at the time consisted of his parents, three
young boys and a baby girl. The three thousand mile trip took seven months
and five days. The family settled in the Williamette Valley where they established
a home and farm.
Miller, while still a boy headed to California with another boy during the
early gold rush. He worked in a number of mining camps. He reported that
he was severely wounded in a battle between the settlers near Mt. Shasta
and the Modoc Indian Tribe when an arrow pierced his face and exited the
back of his neck. The arrow passed close to the base of his brain. Although
he eventually recovered from the wound, he suffered both physical and mental
effects of the injury for at least a year. He later had little recollection
of that period of time. He later survived other battles with northern California
Indian groups, and had several altercations with the law over matters relating
to the ownership of livestock and gun play.
Miller left Northern California and traveled to San Francisco. From there
he claimed that he travelled to Nicaragua by ship, and then returned to
Oregon. O.W. Frost reports however that the trip to Nicaragua was also a
fabrication. In Oregon Miller attended college briefly, taught school, studied
law, and was admitted to the bar. The lure of gold in Idaho was more than
he could resist. He again headed for the gold fields.
Miller returned to Oregon again at the beginning of the Civil War with enough
gold to build a new home and purchase a newspaper. Although his autobiography
claims that this money was made as a gold miner, O.W. Frost comments that
Miller enjoyed only moderate success as a miner in Idaho, earning enough
to acquire a number of horses. With these horses, Miller entered the pony
express business with Isaac Mossman. After Wells Fargo bought the business
in 1862, Miller returned to the Williamette Valley. In his newspaper, The
Eugene City Democratic Register Miller plead for an end to the Civil War,
adopting the Quaker creed of his father. Miller's older brother went to
war, and never returned to Oregon. Miller's anti war editorials were suppressed,
and he again turned to mining. He was eventually elected to the position
of Judge in a Southern Oregon community.
Miller left Oregon in 1870 and travelled to London, where his first book,
Song of The Sierras was published in 1871. Miller also published his second
book, Life Among The Modocs, in Europe. It was a success in Paris.
Joaquin Miller returned from Europe, and settled in Oakland California.
After the death of his father in a farm accident, his mother came to live
with him in Oakland, where she spent the last twenty years of her life.
An enchanting interview of Margaret Miller by Isabel Darling appeared in
Sunset magazine shortly before her death. In his last years Joaquin Miller
lived on seventy-five acres in the Oakland Hills with a full view of the
Golden Gate. He named his estate "The Hermitage, Oakland Heights." It was
later renamed "The Hights." O.W. Frost remarks that the spelling was intended
by the poet.
Joaquin Miller visited the Klondike during the Alaskan Gold Rush. He returned
to The Hights after six months, exhausted from his Alaskan adventures, with
thousands of dollars of gold dust, and $6,000 from W. R. Hurst for his Alaskan
letters.
In his later years Joaquin Miller became known as "The Poet of The Sierras."
He was a colorful figure who was well known in California literary and social
circles. Six volumes of his collected poems and other writing were published
in 1909. Joaquin Miller died on February 13, 1913. Selected Writings of
Joaquin Miller, and Unwritten History, or My Life Among The Modocs were
published by Urion Press in the 1970's.
References:
· Joaquin Miller's Poems [in six volumes] The Whitaker & Ray Company, 1915
· The Poetical Works of Joaquin Miller Edited and with an introduction by
Stuart P. Sherman, Ph.D., University of Illonois,G.P. Putnam's Sons, New
York and London, The Knickerbocker Press 1923
· Joaquin Miller by O.W. Frost, Alaska Methodist University, Twayne Publishers,
Inc. New York, 1967
from http://www.solopublications.com/jurn6101.htm#biography
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