Eliot Wigginton

Last updated

Eliot Wigginton (born Brooks Eliot Wigginton on November 9, 1942) is an American oral historian, folklorist, writer and former educator. He is most widely known for developing with his high school students the Foxfire Project, a writing project consisting of interviews and stories about Appalachia. The project was developed into a magazine and series of best-selling Foxfire books. The series comprised essays and articles by high school students from Rabun County, Georgia focusing on Appalachian culture. In 1987, Wigginton was named "Georgia Teacher of the Year," [1] and in 1989, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship. [2]

Contents

In 1992, Wigginton confessed to and was convicted of child molestation. [3]

Early life

Brooks Eliot Wigginton was born in West Virginia on November 9, 1942.[ citation needed ] His mother, Lucy Freelove Smith Wigginton, died eleven days later of "pneunomia due to acute pulmonary edema," according to her death certificate.[ citation needed ] His maternal grandmother, Margaret Pollard Smith, was an associate professor of English at Vassar College and his father was a famous landscape architect, named Brooks Edward Wigginton.[ citation needed ] His family called him Eliot.[ citation needed ] He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in English from Cornell University [4] and a second Master's from Johns Hopkins University.[ citation needed ] In 1966, he began teaching English in the Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School, located in the Appalachian Mountains of northeastern Georgia.[ citation needed ]

Foxfire

In 1966, Wigginton began a writing project with his students at Rabun Gap‐Nacooche High School, who began to compile written oral histories from local residents based on recorded interviews. [4] In 1967, they started publishing the interviews, along with original articles and other student writing, in a quarterly magazine called Foxfire, [5] named after local phosphorescent lichen. [4] Topics included folklife practices, recipes, customs associated with farming, and the rural life of southern Appalachia, as well as the folklore and oral histories of local residents. [6]

In 1972, an anthology of collected Foxfire articles was published as The Foxfire Book (Anchor Press, 1972). The Foxfire Book achieved New York Times best-seller status, selling 298,756 copies by February 1973. [7] By 1975, Foxfire magazine had about 10,000 subscribers, and had earned $250,000 in royalties from sales of Foxfire and Foxfire 2. [6] In 1976, Foxfire 3 appeared on the New York Times Best Sellers list in the Trade Paperbacks section for 5 weeks. In total, the school published twelve volumes.[ citation needed ] Special collections were also published, including The Foxfire Book of Appalachian Cookery, Foxfire: 25 Years, A Foxfire Christmas, and The Foxfire Book of Appalachian Toys and Games. Several collections of recorded music from the local area were also released. The project transferred to the local public school in 1977.[ citation needed ]

Other work

Wigginton had an interest in activists working for social change in association with the Highlander Folk School. After a decade of collecting oral histories of people struggling for social justice in the South, Wigginton edited and published, Refuse to Stand Silently By: An Oral History of Grass Roots Social Activism in America, 1921-1964 (Doubleday, 1991). [13]

In 2014, Wigginton contributed an oral history interview for a documentary on Mary Crovatt Hambidge, [14] founder of the Hambidge Center for the Arts & Sciences, describing his childhood memories of Hambidge and her weaving operations at the Rabun County property where he also briefly lived in the late 1960s.

Child Molestation

On September 15, 1992, Wigginton was indicted for child molestation. [3] The state charged that Wigginton had sexually fondled a 10-year-old boy during an overnight stay at the Foxfire grounds. Wigginton at first claimed to be innocent; however, local prosecutors announced their intent to release testimony from over 20 people claiming that Wigginton had molested them as children between 1969 and 1982. [3] On November 13, 1992, Wigginton pleaded guilty to one count of non-aggravated child molestation. [3] He received a one-year jail sentence, which he served at the Rabun County Jail, and 19 years of probation. [3] Bill Parrish, then-executive director of Foxfire Fund, announced that the guilty plea would require Wigginton's "total separation" from the organization. [3] After being permanently removed from the Foxfire Project, Wigginton moved to Florida, where he is registered as a sex offender. [15]

Foxfire after Wigginton

After Wigginton's departure, the Foxfire project continued under the auspices of the Foxfire Fund and its educational model of the "Foxfire approach" to experiential education. The students and Fund developed a museum in Mountain City, Georgia, consisting of several cabins. In 1998, the University of Georgia anthropology department started to work with the Foxfire project to archive 30 years worth of materials. The collection is held at the museum and includes "2,000 hours of interviews on audio tape, 30,000 black and white pictures and hundreds of hours of videotape." By improving how the material is archived and establishing a database, the university believes the materials can be made more easily available for scholars. [16] The Foxfire educational philosophy is based on the values of "a learner-centered, community-based expression." By 1998, educational theories from Foxfire were being used by teachers in 37 school systems in the US. [16]

Bibliography

Awards and honors

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rabun County, Georgia</span> County in Georgia, United States

Rabun County is the north-easternmost county in the U.S. state of Georgia. As of the 2020 census, the population was 16,883, up from 16,276 in 2010. The county seat is Clayton. With an average annual rainfall of over 70 inches (1,800 mm), Rabun County has the title of the rainiest county in Georgia and is one of the rainiest counties east of the Cascades. The year 2018 was the wettest on record in the county's history. The National Weather Service cooperative observation station in northwest Rabun's Germany Valley measured 116.48 inches of rain during the year. During 2020, the Germany Valley NWS station reported a yearly precipitation total of 100.19 inches.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hume Cronyn</span> Canadian actor and writer (1911–2003)

Hume Blake Cronyn Jr. was a Canadian-American actor and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Rhodes</span> American author and historian

Richard Lee Rhodes is an American historian, journalist, and author of both fiction and non-fiction, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Making of the Atomic Bomb (1986), and most recently, Energy: A Human History (2018).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Raymond E. Brown</span> American priest and biblical scholar (1928-1998)

Raymond Edward Brown was an American Sulpician priest and prominent biblical scholar. He was a specialist on the hypothetical Johannine community, which he speculated contributed to the authorship of the Gospel of John, and he also wrote studies on the birth and death of Jesus.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Theodor Gaster</span> British-born American Biblical scholar

Theodor Herzl Gaster was a British-born American Biblical scholar known for work on comparative religion, mythology and the history of religion. He is noted for his books, Thespis: Ritual, Myth, and Drama in the Ancient Near East (1950), The Dead Sea Scriptures, about the Dead Sea Scrolls, as well as his one-volume abridgement of Sir James Frazer's massive 13-volume work The Golden Bough, to which Gaster contributed updates, corrections and extensive annotations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School</span> Private, co-educational school in Rabun Gap, Georgia, United States

Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School is a small, private college preparatory school located in Rabun County, Georgia, United States, in the Appalachian Mountains. It is both a boarding and a day school. Rabun Gap is notable for initiating the Foxfire magazine project in 1966, experiential education based on interviewing local people, and writing and publishing articles about their stories and oral traditions. This inspired numerous schools across the country to develop similar programs.

Lee Judah Ames was an American artist noted for his Draw 50... learn-to-draw books.

Jonathan Worth Daniels was an American writer, editor, and White House Press Secretary. He was a founding member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors, serving from 1940 until 1950. For most of his life, he worked at The News & Observer, and later founded The Island Packet.

Hubert Skidmore (1909–1946) was an American writer. His twin brother was novelist Hobert Skidmore, and he was married to the novelist Maritta Wolff, writer of Whistle Stop and a fellow student at the University of Michigan, in 1942. He died in a house fire in 1946. He is best known for his social protest novel Hawk's Nest, an account of the disaster at Gauley Bridge, West Virginia during the Great Depression.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Williams (writer)</span> American writer

Thomas Williams was an American novelist. He won one U.S. National Book Award for Fiction—The Hair of Harold Roux split the 1975 award with Robert Stone's Dog Soldiers—and his last published novel, The Moon Pinnace (1986), was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Nancy Roberts was an American writer and storyteller who was often described as the "First Lady of American Folklore." A best selling author, she presented storytelling programs and lectures on creative writing at clubs, public libraries, schools, and universities. The author of over two dozen books, Roberts began writing ghost stories for the Charlotte Observer. Carl Sandburg encouraged her to publish her stories as a book. In 1958 she followed his advice and her books have sold over one million copies earning her national recognition including a nomination for the Great Western Writers iSpur Award and a certificate of commendation from the American Association for State and Local History.

Foxfire magazine began in 1966, written and published as a quarterly American magazine by students at Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School, a private secondary education school located in the U.S. state of Georgia. At the time Foxfire began, Rabun Gap Nacoochee School was also operating as a public secondary education school for students who were residents of northern Rabun County, Georgia. An example of experiential education, the magazine had articles based on the students' interviews with local people about aspects and practices in Appalachian culture. They captured oral history, craft traditions, and other material about the culture. When the articles were collected and published in book form in 1972, it became a bestseller nationally and gained attention for the Foxfire project.

Lambros Comitas was Gardner Cowles Professor of Anthropology and Education at Teachers College, Columbia University. A product of Columbia University, he received the A.B. from Columbia College in 1948 after service in the United States Army, and was awarded the Ph.D. in anthropology in 1962 from the Columbia Faculty of Political Science. Influential figures in his early professional years were Conrad Arensberg, Marvin Harris, Charles Wagley and Margaret Mead from the Columbia faculty and M. G. Smith, the eminent British-trained anthropologist whom he first met during field work in Jamaica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Corrina Sephora Mensoff</span> Musical artist

Corrina Sephora Mensoff is a visual artist who specializes in metal work, sculpture, painting, installation, and mixed media in Atlanta, Georgia, in the United States. Corrina works with universal and personal themes of loss and transformation, within the context of contemporary society. In Corrina’s most recent bodies of work she is exploring lunar images, cells, and the universe as “a meditation in the making.” In a concurrent body of work she has delved into the physical transformation of guns, altering their molecular structure into flowers and garden tools through hot forging the materials. Her work has led her to community involvement with the conversation of guns in our society.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arie Carpenter</span>

Aunt Arie Carpenter (1885-1978) was a resident of Macon County, North Carolina, in the Southern Appalachian Mountains. She was interviewed for the Foxfire Book published in 1972, through which she became known to thousands of readers. High school students interviewed her and reproduced her stories and skills of living in the Foxfire oral history-based books.

Below is a bibliography of published works written by Dutch-born Catholic priest Henri Nouwen. The works are listed under each category by year of publication. This includes 42 books, four of which were published posthumously, along with 51 articles and 4 chapters which are lists in process. Also listed below are 31 of the forewords, introductions, and afterwords which he wrote for others' works. Finally, the list of 32 readers and compilations continues to grow as material from his work is incorporated into new publications.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Jennerjahn</span> American artist and dancer (1923–2007)

Elizabeth Schmitt Jennerjahn was an American artist and dancer. She was best known for her work as a dancer and dance instructor at Black Mountain College and later for her textile work and paintings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Crovatt Hambidge</span> American artist

Mary Crovatt Hambidge (1885-1973) was an American weaver. She is known for establishing the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences in rural Georgia. The institution is still in existence as the Hambidge Center

Thomas O’Conor Sloane III was an American editor, professor, etymologist and career military officer.

Appalachian cuisine is a style of cuisine located in the central and southern sections of the Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern United States. It is an amalgam of the diverse foodways, specifically among the British, German and Italian immigrant populations, Native Americans including the Cherokee people, and African-Americans, as well as their descendants in the Appalachia region.

References

  1. 1 2 "Former Georgia Teachers of the Year" (PDF). Georgia Department of Education. 2022. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  2. Teltsch, Kathleen (July 18, 1989). "MacArthur Foundation Honors Achievement". The New York Times. p. A18. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Smothers, Ronald (November 13, 1992). "'Foxfire Book' Teacher Admits Child Molestation". The New York Times . Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 Johnston, Donald (April 9, 1972). "They Learned, And They Loved It". The New York Times. pp. Education Supplement, 13. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  5. Mendonca, Adrienn. "Foxfire". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  6. 1 2 Ayres, Jr, B. Drummond (October 24, 1975). "Publishing a Journal Ignited Student Interest in English". The New York Times. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  7. "Big Money". The New York Times Book Review. February 11, 1973. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  8. Beaufort, John (November 18, 1982). "Heartfelt essay on a disappearing rural America; Foxfire. Starring Jessica Tandy, Hume Cronyn, Keith Carradine. Play by Susan Cooper and Hume Cronyn, with songs by Jonathan Holtzman. Directed by David Trainer". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN   0882-7729 . Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  9. "Winners". www.tonyawards.com. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  10. Appelbaum, Judith (November 28, 1982). "PAPERBACK TALK; Sales Through the Mails". The New York Times. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  11. 1 2 Foxfire (TV Movie 1987) - Awards - IMDb , retrieved 2023-08-15
  12. "Outstanding Lead Actress In A Miniseries Or A Movie Nominees / Winners 1988". Television Academy. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  13. Shireman, Charles (1993). "Review of Refuse to Stand Silently By: An Oral History of Social Activism in America, 1921-1964". Social Service Review. 67 (2): 299–301. doi:10.1086/603986. ISSN   0037-7961. JSTOR   30012205.
  14. Mary Crovatt Hambidge: Whistler, Wanderer, Weaver, Utopian (2017, remastered 2021) , retrieved 2021-12-29
  15. "FDLE - Sexual Offender and Predator System". offender.fdle.state.fl.us. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  16. 1 2 "University of Georgia To Help Archive, Preserve Thirty Years Of Materials From Foxfire Project", University of Georgia Archives, 1998, accessed 12 Nov 2010