Stephen Crane was born in
Newark, New Jersey on November 1, 1871 the youngest of fourteen children of the
Rev. Dr. Jonathan Townley Crane and Mary Helen Peck Crane. Stephen's father
was a dedicated Methodist minister who wrote sermons and tracts condemning the
evils of tobacco, alcohol and prostitution - vices that Stephen would embrace
later in life. His mother was an equally passionate proselytizer of virtue and
was a leading figure in the Women's Christian Temperance Union.
When Dr. Crane
died in 1880, Stephen's mother took her youngest son to Asbury Park, NJ and at
seventeen years of age he began to help his brother with his press service. He
attended Syracuse University where he distinguished himself only as a baseball
player. After attending a few classes he left school and moved to New York
City where he tried but failed to make his way as a newspaper reporter. During
this time his mother died and Stephen managed to publish some pieces entitled
"Sullivan County Sketches." Stephen continued to live hand-to-mouth in the
city and managed to complete Maggie: A Girl of the Streets during this
time. Although publishers balked at the barren and experimental story that
held none of the didacticism popular in slum stories of the day, Crane
published the work himself under the pseudonym Johnston Smith in 1893. He gave
away many more copies than he sold but the story attracted the attention of two
literary giants - Hamlin Garland and William Dean Howells - who recognized the
young author's talent and supported him.
A year later Crane's novel The Red
Badge of Courage appeared as a syndicated story in 750 papers. The success
of the serial ensured that Crane would have work whenever he wanted it. In the
following years he was sent as a correspondent to the West where he wrote "the
Bride Comes to Yellow Sky" and "The Blue Hotel". In 1895 The Red Badge of
Courage was published as a novel and enjoyed immediate popularity for its
realistic portrayal of warfare. The next year a sanitized version of Maggie
was reprinted and many other notable works followed including The Little
Regiment and George's Mother.
Crane went to Cuba as a correspondent
and later formed a romantic attachment to Cora Taylor, a well-known madam and
brothel keeper of the Hotel de Dream. While in the Caribbean, Crane had the
experience of having a ship sunk from underneath him, an event he memorialized
in his story "The Open Boat". The year 1897 found him on the front of the
Greco-Turkish war from which he sent dispatches to newspapers. Afterward,
Stephen and Cora moved to England for awhile where Crane associated with many
of the well-known writers of the day but in 1898 he returned to the Caribbean
to cover the Spanish-American war for the New York World. He and Cora returned
to England in 1899 where Crane, deeply in debt and suffering from tuberculosis,
completed several works and struggled to earn money. He died of the disease at
a sanatorium in Germany on June 5, 1900.