Opie Read(1852-1939)
- Writer
- Actor
Opie Percival Read was the youngest of ten children born to Guilford
and Elizabeth Wallace Read. He was raised on his parent's plantation
near Gallatin, Tennessee and later attended Neophagen College in
Nashville. Prior to his enrollment, Read had worked for the Franklin
(KY) Patriot Newspaper where he learned to set type. A skill that would
later help pay his way through college working for the school
newspaper. Read would go on to be the editor of the Little Rock Gazette
and the Cleveland Leader. In 1882 Read and Philo D. Benham founded the
Arkansas Traveler. Five years later Read and Benham moved their popular
humor based paper from Little Rock to Chicago. There Read became a
prolific contributor of stories about Southern life to a number of
national publications. He would also author several bestsellers over
the waning years of the nineteenth century and the birth of the
twentieth century. His most successful book "The Jucklins" (1895)
stayed in print for the better part of twenty years. "Len Gansett"
(1882) and "The Turkey Egg Griffin" (1905), were also well received by
the public. Read also achieved some notoriety on the lecture circuit
talking about life in the South. On 30 June, 1881, Read married his
partner's sister, Ada Benam. The couple would go on to have three sons
and three daughters. Ada would pass away in 1928, a week shy of her
seventy-seventh birthday. Their daughter Enid died some ten years
earlier while still in her early twenties. Opie Read's romantic style
of writing had fallen out of favor with the reading public by the 1920s
and has been largely overlooked since.