Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Ray Stannard Baker

 
Biography: Ray Stannard Baker

The American author Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946) was a noted muckraking journalist before he became the official biographer of Woodrow Wilson.

Ray Stannard Baker was born in Lansing, Mich., on April 17, 1870. An 1889 graduate of Michigan Agricultural College (now Michigan State University), he later studied law and literature at the University of Michigan.

In 1892 Baker went to work for the Chicago Record, remaining for 6 years as reporter and editor. This introduced him to the misery of Chicago's poor, soup kitchens, charity wards, and thousands of homeless, starving men in the streets. "My attitude was that of the frontier where I had grown up. Bums, tramps! Why didn't they get out and hustle? Why didn't they quit Chicago?" he said. But his attitude began to change after he tried fruitlessly to help a youth find a job. He was haunted for the rest of his life by this "Potato-Car Boy," whom he wanted to make the central figure in a novel.

Baker's experiences as a reporter in Chicago reversed, or at least challenged, his early attitudes. In 1894 he was assigned to go with Coxey's Army on their march on Washington to demand relief from unemployment. When Coxey's "petition in boots" left Massilon, Ohio, Baker thought it was a "dishonest way for freemen to redress wrongs." But 12 days later he wrote sympathetically that the army was a "manifestation of unrest in the laboring classes" and should be looked upon as "more than a huge joke." He returned to Illinois in time to cover the Pullman strike that began in May 1894 and broke into violence in July. Baker gave a full, sympathetic account of the strikers' complaints and of the violence on the company's part. He was critical of George Pullman's "model city," with its high rents, and he handled the Chicago Record relief fund for the strikers.

In 1896 Baker married Jessie Beal, and they had two children. Baker went east in 1898 to work for McClure's Magazine. Other staff members were muckrakers (exposé journalists) Ida Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, and Frank Norris. Baker wrote about conditions in industry and moved politically toward independent "progressivism." But in Native American (1941) he said he had never belonged to a political party and had "never been a Socialist, nor a Communist, nor a Single Taxer"; and he looked back on his actions in the McClure's days as "sheer bumptiousness."

By 1906 he and the other muckrakers had become disenchanted. They broke away from McClure's and gained control of American Magazine. Although American Magazine was also a muckraking publication, Baker was about to enter a new phase of life. He had long wanted to write the "great American novel," but instead he shifted to two new areas - writing essays under the pen name of David Grayson and producing the official biography of President Wilson. Baker wrote Adventures in Contentmentand eight other books on the same theme under the Grayson name for 35 years. Baker spent 14 years on the Wilson project, going through 5 tons of the President's personal papers and becoming his intimate. The last two books of Baker's eight-volume Woodrow Wilson: Life and Letters won the Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1940. Baker died of a heart attack in Amherst, Mass., on July 12, 1946.

Further Reading

Baker's own writings include Native American: The Book of My Youth (1941) and American Chronicle: The Autobiography of Ray Stannard Baker (David Grayson) (1945). The best study of Baker is Robert C. Bannister, Jr., Ray Stannard Baker: The Mind and Thought of a Progressive (1966).

For background, works sympathetic to Baker are C. C. Regier, Era of the Muckrakers (1932), and Louis Filler, Crusaders for American Liberalism (1939; new ed. 1961). Studies critical of him are John Chamberlain, Farewell to Reform: The Rise, Life and Decay of the Progressive Mind in America (1932; 2d ed. 1933), and Granville Hicks, The Great Tradition: An Interpretation of American Literature since the Civil War (1933; rev. ed. 1935). See also Arthur S. Link, Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era, 1910-1917 (1954), and David Noble, The Paradox of Progressive Thought (1958).

Additional Sources

Bannister, Robert C., Ray Stannard Baker: the mind and thought of a progressive, New York: Garland Pub., 1979, 1966.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Ray Stannard Baker
Top
Baker, Ray Stannard, pseud. David Grayson, 1870-1946, American author, b. Lansing, Mich., grad. Michigan State College (now Michigan State Univ.), 1889. At first a Chicago newspaper reporter, he joined the staff of McClure's Magazine in 1897, for which he wrote some famous muckraking articles. With other McClure's contributors he purchased the American Magazine in 1906 and helped edit it. The first book of quiet country sketches by "David Grayson," Adventures in Contentment, appeared in 1907; the series continued with Great Possessions (1917), The Countryman's Year (1936), and others. An intimate of Woodrow Wilson, Baker was sent to Europe in 1918 as one of the president's special agents to study the war situation. At the peace conference at Versailles, Baker was director of the press bureau of the American peace commission. Afterward he wrote Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement (3 vol., 1922), a history of the peace conference based largely on the Wilson papers. With W. E. Dodd he edited Wilson's Public Papers (6 vol., 1925-26). His authoritative biography of Wilson (8 vol., 1927-39), for which he used the president's personal papers, won the Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1940 for the last two volumes.

Bibliography

See his autobiographical works, Native American: The Book of My Youth (1941) and American Chronicle (1945).

Works: Works by Ray S. Baker
Top
(1870-1946)

1927Woodrow Wilson: Life and Letters. Wilson's former press secretary publishes the first two volumes of his massive eight-volume documentary biography (completed in 1939). The final two volumes would win the Pulitzer Prize.

Quotes By: David Grayson
Top

Quotes:

"We fail far more often by timidity than by over-daring."

"Friendship is neither a formality nor a mode: it is rather a life."

"Goodness is uneventful. It does not flash, it glows."

"Happiness... she loves, to see men at work. She loves sweat, weariness, self sacrifice. She will be found not in places but lurking in cornfields and factories; and hovering over littered desks; she crowns the unconscious head of the busy child."

"Adventure is not outside man; it is within."

Wikipedia: Ray Stannard Baker
Top
Ray Stannard Baker

Ray Stannard Baker (April 17, 1870July 12, 1946), also known by his pen name David Grayson, was an American journalist and author born in Lansing, Michigan. After graduating from Michigan Agricultural College (now Michigan State University), he attended law school at the University of Michigan in 1891 before launching his career as a journalist in 1892 with the Chicago News-Record, where he covered the Pullman Strike and Coxey's Army in 1894.

In 1898,[1] Baker joined the staff of McClure's, a pioneer muckraking magazine, and quickly rose to prominence along with Lincoln Steffens and Ida Tarbell. He also dabbled in fiction, writing children's stories for the magazine Youth's Companion and a nine-volume series of stories about rural living in America, the first of which was titled "Adventures in Contentment" under the pseudonym David Grayson.

In 1906, Baker, Steffens and Tarbell left McClure's and created The American Magazine. In 1908, he wrote the book Following the Color Line, becoming the first prominent journalist to examine America's racial divide. It was extremely successful. He would continue that work with numerous articles in the following decade.

In 1912, Baker supported the presidential candidacy of Woodrow Wilson, which led to a close relationship between the two men, and in 1918 Wilson sent Baker to Europe to study the war situation. During peace negotiations, Baker served as Wilson's press secretary at Versailles. He eventually published 15 volumes about Wilson and internationalism, including an 8-volume biography, the last two volumes of which won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in 1940.

Baker wrote two autobiographies, Native American (1941) and American Chronicle (1945).

Baker died of a heart attack in Amherst, Massachusetts, and is buried there in Wildwood Cemetery. A dormitory at the University of Massachusetts Amherst bears Grayson's name. Oddly enough a nearby dormitory "Baker" is named after somebody else.

Notes

  1. ^ Baker, Ray Stannard. American Chronicle. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 84. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Amherst (town, United States)
William Edward Dodd (American historian & statesman)
muckrakers (organization, United States – in journalism, fiction, history)

Why is pieter better than ben starr keegan hodder Josh stannard and corban anderson? Read answer...
Who is hanief baker? Read answer...
Who is Robert Baker? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Is Ray Baker of Sacto Ca on senior tour?
What was David E Stannards main theses in The Nation?
What is bakers?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ray Stannard Baker" Read more