Worth Tuttle Hedden (born Ella Worth Tuttle; January 10, 1896 – September 14, 1985) was an American writer who released four books between the 1940s and 1950s. Of her works, Wives of High Pasture became available in 1944 while The Other Room came out in 1947. The following year,The Other Room received the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for fiction. After publishing Love is a Wound in 1952, Two and Three Make One was made public in 1956 under her pen name Winifred Woodley. Apart from books, Tuttle wrote for the Encyclopædia Britannica between 1927 and 1928 while also writing for magazines such as The World Tomorrow. She advocated for civil rights.[1] She won a Southern Authors Award.
Outside of writing, Tuttle held secretarial and assistant positions between the 1910s and 1920s. Some people that Tuttle worked for in these positions include Walter B. Pitkin and Mary Hunter Austin. During the late 1910s, Tuttle helped veterans while working at a New York branch of the American Red Cross. She wrote to W. E. B. Du Bois in 1928 about story she hoped to publish in The Crisis.[3] As an English teacher, Tuttle taught at Straight College in the early 1920s and The Windward School during the mid-1930s.
In between her post-secondary studies, Tuttle began working at the Virginia Bureau of Vocations for Women in 1916 as a secretary.[11] With assistant positions, Tuttle worked for Norman Thomas and Walter B. Pitkin between 1917 and 1918 in New York City.[12] While in New York, Tuttle helped veterans at a branch of the American Red Cross and penned African American short stories.[10] After spending a year at the Red Cross, Hedden left New York for New Orleans in 1920 and became an English teacher at Straight College.[5]
After the release of Wives of High Pasture in 1944, The Other Room was published in 1947.[11] Hedden converted a play she had completed in the 1920s to make The Other Room during the mid-1940s.[17] The following year, The Other Room won the Southern Author's Award and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for fiction in 1948.[18][19] In 1949, the book was re-released by Bantam Books and set a ten-day average record with over 16,000 sales.[20]
With the sales record, The Other Room was called "the fastest selling book in America" by Bantam.[21] By July 1949, The Other Room had 310,000 sales.[22] In 1952, Hedden released Love is a Wound.[23] Hedden used the name Winifred Woodley to publish her 1956 book titled Two and Three Make One.[24]
Writing process and themes
To create her books, Hedden revised her drafts on her typewriter multiple times. With her drafts, Hedden includes notes that she handwrote.[21] For Wives of High Pasture, Hedden wrote about romance in a fictionalized group of people and used "the historical accounts of the Oneida Community" to write the book.[25]The Other Room is about an interracial relationship at a post-secondary institute in New Orleans. Hedden used her time at Dillard to create the basis of her book.[17] She set Wives of High Pasture in the 1850s while The Other Room took place in the 1920s.[9]
Love Is a Wound is based in North Carolina and involves a love triangle.[26] She set her book over the course of fifty years between 1884 and 1934.[27] Hedden incorporated the love triangle between her aunt and parents to write Love Is a Wound.[28] The book was originally started as Prism before Hedden renamed it to Love Is a Wound after a work by Edith Rickert.[29] To make Two and Three Makes One, Hedden used notes of what occurred during her life between the mid-1930s and early 1940s.[24]
Personal life and death
During the 1910s, Ella Worth Tuttle renamed herself to Worth Tuttle after she decided to remove her first name.[10] In 1919, Tuttle married and became Worth Tuttle Hedden.[30] During her marriage, Hedden had three children. On September 14, 1985, Hedden died in Augusta, Maine.[1]
^LeForge, P.V.; Warner, Sara (2006). "Wives of High Pasture: Worth Tuttle Hedden and Her Novel of the Oneida Community". Utopian Studies. 17 (2): 347. doi:10.2307/20718829. JSTOR20718829.
^ abWarfel, Harry R. (1951). "Worth Tuttle Hedden". American Novelists of Today. New York and San Francisco: American Book Company. p. 200. Retrieved July 11, 2022.