Gene degruson biography youtube

Biography 
          

Eugene H. DeGruson was born Oct. 10, in Girard, Kansas, The son of a coal miner, he lived with his parents in Camp 50, a community built by the Central Coal & Coke Company Mine.

After graduating from Crawford County High School, he received both bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Pittsburg State University and did post-graduate study at Iowa State University.

He taught for several years at Highland Park High School in Topeka, before accepting a position in as an instructor in the English Department at Pittsburg State University.

He moved to the Porter Library staff in and took responsibility for the library’s special collections.

Gene immersed himself in the literary, cultural and ethnic history of southeast Kansas, an area known as the Little Balkans, because of its diversity.

Gene degruson biography wikipedia Axe Library to honor the memory of Mr. Gene founded the Special Collections department in , and spent the next twenty-nine years building it into a rich treasure trove of knowledge on local history as well as an archive for Pittsburg State University. He also wrote and edited books and journals of poetry, history and biography. Gene, who was frequently referred to as a living encyclopedia on Kansas history and culture, loved to share his knowledge with others in the form of lectures, speeches, readings and performances. The Friends of Axe continue to honor that tradition by sponsoring its annual lecture every year around the time of Gene's birthday on October 10th.

The coal mines in this area attracted immigrants from all over Europe and many of the cultures have survived and thrived.

Gene Degruson died in

    
Bibliography (- housed in Thomas Fox Averill Kansas Studies Collection) 
 

Goat's House is a book of narrative poems, many based on Gene's memories of growing up in mining camps in southeast Kansas.

Some of his poems are from stories of older people he knew, and some poems are descriptions of southeast Kansas places and people.

The Lost First Edition of Upton Sinclair's The Jungle Gene DeGruson wrote the introduction, which includes the story of how the Pittsburg State University Special Collections came to receive a truckload of moldy, disintegrating papers found in a cellar at a farm in Girard, Kansas.

Upton Sinclair's name was on several pieces of correspondence with the once prominent Socialist newspaper Appeal to Reason which was based in Girard, Kansas. Upon further investigation, Gene discovered that The Jungle was published serially in this publication.

Gene degruson biography The annual memorial lecture is an event sponsored by the Friends of the Leonard H. Axe Library to honor the memory of DeGruson, a Southeast Kansas scholar, writer, editor, and pioneering archivist and curator of Special Collections at Axe Library, who died in DeGruson founded Special Collections in and spent 29 years building it into a rich treasure trove of knowledge on local history as well as an archive for Pittsburg State University. He also wrote and edited books and journals of poetry, history and biography. The Benders murdered nearly a dozen travelers over several years who stopped by their inn.

When the novel was published commercially it was shortened and emended, so Gene did the research and editing to reissue this "unexpurgated edition."

Little Balkans Review: A Southeast Kansas Literary and Graphics Quarterly was founded by Gene DeGruson in Primary consideration was given to works by Kansans and former Kansans, as well as work set in the Little Balkans as southeast Kansas is often called.

He served as poetry editor until his death in

A Guide to Special Collections in Kansas was a collaboration with other archivists and librarians written in , which detailed unique collections not usually included in library catalogs. Gene helped compile and edit the section that lists collections in public libraries, museums, historical societies, and other organizations.

The guide also included contact information, hours and use policies which was very helpful in the days before the internet.

Porter Library Bulletin/Library Bulletin, published by Pittsburg State University Library, was edited by Gene DeGruson from

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Writing Samples

 
 

from Goat's House
-for Eva Jessye

So many women did not want to come here,
including my grandmother, who loved France.
It was stark then, the landscape, without trees,
smogged by smelters which promoters called
prosperity.

Gene degruson biography wife Pittsburg State Axe Library hosted the annual Gene Degruson Memorial Lecture discussing research and publishing in the age of internet. Since his passing in , lectures have been held in his honor. In her lecture, Hermansson discussed the changes of publishing and sourcing research in the age of the internet and how it has played into her education and even the education of students today. Hermansson also discussed the preservation of books and papers in rare book libraries and her experience in them while traveling in her graduate studies years. In these libraries, the books were taken care of by professional caretakers at the library.

Although timid, she stubbornly
resisted the language until refusal became habit.

Thus there was always a translator present
when she talked to those of us born in the new country.
You could tell from her eyes that something was lost,
but we impatiently hurried off to play
when her questions or comments didn't make sense,
irrelevant, like going to the goat's house for wool.

On her deathbed she gave me things and crooned
their mysteries in a secret tongue I could not share:
a Tricolored ribbon, a centime piece, a celluloid
doll that drank from a bottle with a long, long
tube which ran to the nipple: strange gifts
for a child who did not know why she gave.

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Critical Essay by Robert Lawson
 

No one could be more the product of Southeast Kansas than Eugene Henry DeGruson it is as a poet of Southeast Kansas that I would like to emphasize his achievement.  In , Gene won the first Robert E.

Gross Memorial manuscript competition sponsored by the Woodley Press, at Washburn University in Topeka, with a book of poems.  That volume, Goat's House, is a special tour of one man's memories, of the stories he heard growing up and the people he grew up among, captured by the imagination of a writer who recreated their idiom, their humor, their sorrow and hard times, their joys, their eccentricities.

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Links
 

PSU Axe Library Gene DeGruson Collection

Newspaper articles and obituaries

Funeral Service and Memorials

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