J. Hyatt Downing

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Born(1888-03-18)March 18, 1888
Died1973(1973-00-00) (aged 84–85)
Occupation(s)Novelist, short story writer
J. Hyatt Downing
Born(1888-03-18)March 18, 1888
Died1973(1973-00-00) (aged 84–85)
EducationUniversity of South Dakota
Occupation(s)Novelist, short story writer
SpouseMary McGinnis
Children1

J. Hyatt Downing (1888–1973) was an American novelist and short story writer. His short stories were published in Scribner's Magazine and Reader's Digest. His novel about Sioux City, Iowa, Sioux City, was a bestseller.

John Hyatt Downing was born on March 18, 1888, in Granville, Iowa.[1][2][3] He grew up in Hawarden, Iowa and Blunt, South Dakota.[1][2] He worked on his father's ranch and as a railroad surveyor for the Northwestern Railroad, hotel's night clerk and shepherd in Wyoming, Nebraska and the Black Hills.[1][3] He then graduated from the University of South Dakota in 1913.[1][3][4]

Career

Downing worked for the Internal Revenue Service in Aberdeen, South Dakota. He managed an alfalfa farm in Carlsbad, New Mexico, in 1921–1925. Downing worked as an insurance agent in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1925–1930. At the same time, he began writing short stories for Scribner's Magazine.[1][3]

His first novel, A Prayer for Tomorrow, was a semi-autobiographical account of the ranching culture in South Dakota.[5] He moved to Sioux City, Iowa, and wrote four more novels, including Sioux City, which became a bestseller and book of the month.[4] Downing sold the rights to a film production company and moved to California, but the movie was never made. Instead, he wrote publicity and radio scripts for Twentieth Century Fox instead.[1][3] His last short story was published in Reader's Digest in 1963.[1] His novel Four on the Trail was a paperback Western only released in England.[6]

Personal life and death

Downing married Mary McGinnis. They had son, John, in 1921. Downing contracted tuberculosis in 1925.[1][3] Downing and his family first resided in Sioux City, Iowa, and later in Pismo Beach, California.[4]

Downing died in 1973 in Pismo Beach, California, at 85.[4]

Works

References

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