Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Fred Starr: Ozark Folklorist, Writer, and Teacher

Probably most students who attended Fayetteville, Arkansas public schools in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s remember Fred Starr as “Mr. Starr,” the substitute teacher.  Mr. Starr and Mrs. Shepard were the two most frequent substitutes during my years at Hillcrest Junior High School, and others knew them as substitute teachers at Woodland Junior High and Fayetteville High School.  They were quite a contrast:  Mr. Starr was quiet and dignified, a bit aloof and very sober.  Mrs. Shepherd, as sweet as ice tea in August, overwhelmed you with the deepest Southern accent imaginable.  

When encountering Mr. Starr in the classroom,  I knew that he was a minor local celebrity who wrote a weekly column in the Northwest Arkansas Times (NWAT), but I did not fully realize or appreciate the extent of his accomplishments.  By the late 1950s, he had already had been writing a newspaper column for thirty-or-so years, had authored several books, had served two terms in the state legislature, had been principal of a Farmington school and superintendent of the Elkins school district, and was a well known and respected amateur folklorist.
NW Ark Times, 5-21-38
Saving the details of his life for a longer biographical article, the following is a brief sketch of his life.
John Fred Starr was born on September 11, 1896, in Waco, Georgia and spent his early years in nearby Flint Corner, a small settlement in Carroll County, located in Northeast Georgia near Alabama.  His father was William David Starr (1861-1950) and his mother was Alice Irene Murphy Starr (1863-1937).  His family moved around quite a bit as he observed in a column published in the NWAT on July 30, 1940:
When I was but a child my father contracted itching feet and there has always been much moving in the family. Why, I can remember we used to move so often when the chickens saw us coming to catch them they just walked up and crossed their legs.
The family moved to Oklahoma three times and returned to Georgia twice.  The final move was in 1911, and the Starr family stayed there until 1915, when it moved to Columbia Country, Arkansas, near Magnolia

In 1918, Fred Starr -- he dropped "John" from his name early on -- married Fannie Markham (who was about 16 years old at the time). They lived for awhile in Wyoming. Their daughter, Martha Loyce Starr, was born in February 1920. The couple were divorced in July 1928.  (In 1938, Martha married Fayetteville native, Charles Morrow Wilson, a nationally known author.)

Starr moved to Northwest Arkansas sometime in June, 1935 and made a living as a writer and an educator.  He married Florence Lillian Clark, and they made their home in Greenland until the early 1940s. They had three children, Jon Larry, Joe Fred, and girl who died in infancy (he wrote a moving "Letter to Heaven" soon after her death; it was published in his book Gifts from the Hills (pp. 22-25).

Fred Starr must have spent much of his time roaming the Ozarks collecting stories and wisdom from folks living in the mountains. The focus of his writing was on their life, speech, music, beliefs, customs, superstitions, and ways. The information in his columns was often cited by the famed Ozark folklorist Vance Randolph and others.

I am not sure when he started writing a newspaper column, but a search shows his columns were published in the NWAT in 1937 (I don't have access to earlier issues of the paper). According to Randolph, Starr's early columns appeared in the Fayetteville Democrat, which existed until the late 1920s His column was first called "Plain Tales of the Hills," then "Plain Tales of the Ozarks." In 1940, the name was changed to "Hillside Adventures." His columns were published not only in the NWAT, but also in the Tulsa World and other papers in Arkansas and Missouri. He continued writing a column, on and off, for the NWAT until his death in 1973.

I do not have information on Starr's educational background, but his work as an educator began in the 1940s.  Starr taught at Farmington's new school in the early '40s, and was principal of that school from 1944 to 1947. In the middle 1940s, he taught commercial law, English, business math, and accounting at the Fayetteville Business College. In 1948, he was appointed to be superintendent of the Elkin’s school district, a post he held for several years.

In 1954, Starr was elected to represent Northwest Arkansas in the state House of Representatives. He served two terms in that office.

From the later 1950s until his death in 1973, Starr wrote several books, including a couple of novels. Most were about, or set in, the Ozarks. In addition, he continued to write his column and other articles for periodicals, His published books, including shorter "booklets," were:
From an Ozark Hillside (compilation of columns), 1938
Plain Tales from the Ozarks (compilation of columns), 1940
Pebbles from the Ozarks, (complication of columns), 1942
Of These Hills and Us, 1958, 1960, 1971
Gifts from the Hills, 1960
Climb the Highest Mountain, 1964
To Keep at Promise, 1969
Of What Was, Nothing is Left, 1972
High Hills, Deep Hollows and Tale Tales of the Ozarks, 1968 (24 pp)
 As I mentioned at the beginning, Fred Starr was often a substitute teacher in the Fayetteville school system, and perhaps others, in the late 1950s and in the 1960s.  These years were also his most productive as a writer.

Starr died on November 24, 1973, at the age of 77. His obituary is below.

 A few days after his death, the NWAT published an editorial tribute to him that stated, in part, the following:

Fred Starr was a remarkable gentleman.  We shall miss his weekly column, Hillside Adventures, which graced this page so well, so long....
Fred Starr's roots were deep in the tradition of these Ozarks he loved and wrote about so delightfully.  True to the tradition of the hill country, he had a heap of sayings, and a heap more common sense.  These stood him in good stead as an accomplished teacher, author, and lecturer...
Although proficient at a great many callings, Fred Starr's real vocation was the Ozarks.  He liked nothing better than to spread the word about the richness and beauty of the simple life in these Ozark hills...
...[T]hese hills of ours are grander, more satisfying for those who know them, thanks to Fred Starr's having taken the time to help us understand them.  In that respect, he was a teacher of uncommon perception, a conservationist ahead of his time, and a folk artist of all too rare a quality.

1 comment:

  1. Professor H.O. Davis's "Fayetteville Business College" at 309 West Dickson (which is now a part of Webster Universtiy) causes a bit of ambiguity for readers. It is often confused with the Business College of the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, Arkansas.

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