Charles Edward Barns

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Born(1862-07-23)July 23, 1862
Burlington, Wisconsin, US
DiedMay 24, 1937(1937-05-24) (aged 74)
Morgan Hill, California, US
Occupationjournalist, short story writer, novelist, science writer
EmployerNew York Tribune
Charles Edward Barns
Charles Edward Barns, early 1870s
Charles Edward Barns, early 1870s
Born(1862-07-23)July 23, 1862
Burlington, Wisconsin, US
DiedMay 24, 1937(1937-05-24) (aged 74)
Morgan Hill, California, US
Occupationjournalist, short story writer, novelist, science writer
EmployerNew York Tribune
Alma materColumbia University
Period1889-1929
Genreshort stories
Subjectscience, travel
Notable worksThe Amaranth and the Beryl; An Elegy, 1001 Celestial Wonders as Observed with Home-Built Instruments
SpouseMabel Balston (1884-1936)
Children3
RelativesCaleb P. Barns (father), Elizabeth Eddy (mother), Cornelia Barns (daughter)
Website
www.burlingtonhistory.org

Charles Edward Barns (July 23, 1862 – May 24, 1937) was an American writer, journalist, astronomer, theater impresario, and publisher.

Three orphaned children

Charles Barns was born on July 23, 1862, in Burlington, Wisconsin. He is found in the 1870 and 1880 Censuses of Burlington, Wisconsin, enumerated in a household of five children and youths, a housekeeper and a domestic servant.[1][2] Some background reveals how this came about.

The parents of Charles Barns, Caleb Paul Barns/Barnes and Elizabeth Ann (Eddy) Barns, emigrated from New York State to Wisconsin Territory with the early Euro-American settlers, and Caleb Barns began practicing law.[3] He soon gained a reputation as a skilled and conscientious lawyer. Though claiming little motivation for public life, Caleb Barns served in the Wisconsin State Assembly (1850 and 1855).[4] By his mid forties his health was declining, forcing him to abandon the practice of law, and he turned to banking, where he was likewise highly successful.[3]

Charles Barns' mother, Elizabeth Eddy (later Barns), along with her sister, Cornelia, was educated at the renowned Emma Willard School for Girls in Troy, New York.[5] As new brides, both sisters settled in Burlington, Wisconsin. Cornelia (as Mrs. David L. Wells) gave birth to two sons; Elizabeth and Caleb Barns had a daughter and two sons. In 1848 David Wells lost his job as Burlington postmaster, rumored to be a result of his liberal, anti-slavery politics.[6] In the early 1850s, the Wells family headed for California, where, within six years, Cornelia died of consumption (tuberculosis).[5] A short time later, David Wells was thrown from a horse and mortally wounded.[5] Sons Asa Eddy Wells and Frederick Elisha Wells boarded a ship in San Francisco and soon joined the Barns household in Wisconsin. After their arrival, two Barns boys, Frederick and Charles were born. When young Charles was two years old, his mother Elizabeth died from tuberculosis.[5] Just three years later, his father, Caleb, finally succumbed to his chronic illness.[7] In a note to the Teutonia Glee Club, which had recently performed at their house, Charles' dying father, Caleb, had written,

But I commend the childhood of my two little boys to your kindness and care so far, that you shall be ever ready to discourage in them every deviation from the path of rectitude and virtue––and whenever in after years, you shall meet them and think of me––tell them that I have charged you to repeat the words: Industry––Integrity and Truth.[8]

Caleb Barns left a sufficient estate to provide for his children's education and well-being.[9] Three carefully chosen guardians (family friends Antony Meinhardt and C. E. Dyer and older cousin Asa Eddy Wells),[9][10] oversaw the housekeeper and servant who managed the home. In their teens, the Barns brothers, who had been educated in Burlington’s schools, enrolled at the newly opened Racine Academy.[11] Frederick Barns entered Williams College, where he was an outstanding student, but dropped out in favor of a business career.[9] By 1880, at 17 and 19, Charles and Frederick Barns were enumerated in the U.S. Census as clerks in a loan office.[2] They were involved at the time as partners in a new bank. In 1883 Frederick and Asa Eddy Wells had gone to Nebraska as banking partners. On a visit home to Burlington Frederick died suddenly of typhoid fever. Only Charles and his sister, who had lived with a grand aunt much of the past 20 years and studied in Europe, remained. She married a Canadian-born lawyer, Hector Baxter, in 1885.

Career

California years

References

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