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Wilder accepted an invitation to dinner at the home of Jim Keegan, the town's surgeon, and his wife, Gwen. While she prepared spaghetti in the kitchen, Wilder peppered the doctor about his profession. "He brought a bottle of wine," Gwen recalled recently. "I loved his laugh. He was a very curious guy—easy to talk to, full of knowledge and life. He was very vibrant."
The relentlessly curious Wilder listened to his Douglas acquaintances talk about how to make soap and which drinks go with kippered herring. He asked a lot of questions, and many of the answers found their way into The Eighth Day. "He wanted to know how one would set up a boardinghouse," Nan Ames recalls. "He was not as down-to-earth as most people in the world. He was learning to be casual. Ask questions—that's what he did best."
For all the goodwill and friendly respect Douglas offered, Wilder began to detect an undercurrent "bubbling with hatred." At a bar one night, a rancher pounded the table with his fist and declared: "Mrs. Roosevelt did more harm to the world than ten Hitlers." A woman who worked at the telephone office asked another townsperson, "Who is that Mr. Wilder, is he a Communist?" Just after the assassination of President Kennedy, a fellow at the Gadsden bar said, "Well, he had it coming to him, didn't he?"
After a year and a half, Wilder left Douglas, Arizona, on November 27, 1963, never to return. He traveled to Washington, D.C. to receive the Medal of Freedom from President Lyndon Johnson, then to Cambridge, Massachusetts, for his brother Amos' retirement from the Harvard Divinity School faculty. The Eighth Day, after considerable expansion and revision, was published in 1967. By far Wilder's longest and most ambitious book, it became a best seller and won the National Book Award. Tappan Wilder, the author's nephew and literary executor, says "he went to Douglas, Arizona, as a playwright and came home a novelist."
Who among us doesn't seek a hideaway, a place without distractions, a neutral space in which to do whatever it is that nurtures us—solitude without loneliness? Thornton Wilder regained his literary voice in remote Arizona, and for him his temporary hometown's name became synonymous with rejuvenation. More than five years after departing the Arizona desert he wrote a friend: "Ever since I keep hunting for another 'Douglas.' "
Tom Miller has written ten books about the American Southwest and Latin America, including The Panama Hat Trail.
Related topics: American Writers 1960s Arizona Desert Towns and Villages
Additional Sources
The Thornton Wilder letters, ©2009 The Wilder Family LLC. By arrangement with The Wilder Family LLC and The Barbara Hogenson Agency, Inc. All rights reserved. Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and the Garson Kanin Estate hold the Thornton Wilder letters quoted here.


Comments
Great article! The Gadsden Hotel is still there in Douglas, and is a great place to stay. I really doubt that much has changed at that hotel since Wilder lodged there. The bar is original, the elevators still have human operators. It truly is a time capsule.
Posted by Carey Granger on June 22,2009 | 07:45PM
Come to Douglas. Visit the HOTEL..Robin is a great host!!
We also have many famous ranches that have been in the area for over 100 years protecting the land from development and keeping the open spaces open!! The Cowbelles a women's organization that promotes the education of the ranching history and beef education. We will celebrate 70 years this October. We were the first women's group to do be organzied on Oct. 17th 1939.
Posted by Sue on June 25,2009 | 05:48PM
I am surprised at the sloppy research conducted by your publication covering the photo of Douglas, Arizona. You state that the photo is "c.1949" when in fact there are at least two 1954 and a couple of 1953 model autos in the photo. Care to comment?
Posted by Robert Worth on June 28,2009 | 09:17PM
Yep, I concur, Dougles used to be a great little quiet town. (It would be interesting to find out if there is any truth to the rumor that Louis L'amour also used to reside there and write books?)
But, like pretty much everything, time does change things and not always for the better. Douglas has changed from the days when Phelps Dodge used to keep the local economy thriving. Those were 'new' dollars coming into town.
Back then, everybody's lawns were manicured, the roofs were all taken care off, and the fences were for decoration and not for security. Now, two of the biggest employers are Govt agencies. (The Border Patrol and the prisons.) That is not 'new' money coming into town, it is recycled money, i.e. tax $.
And the nature of having those two industries there leads one to beleive that, like most border towns, it is somewhat of a war zone.
Still.....Douglas is a town to visit! There are several Historical Monuments there, and the Dove-of-the-Desert, the Gadsden Hotel, alone is well worth the trip.
Please do go there - look for the culture - investigate the history - and enjoy the town!
Go Bulldogs!
Posted by Keith Stanford on July 4,2009 | 01:33PM
To Robert Worth: I believe the photograph in question is *not* the one of Douglas, it is the one below of Thornton Wilder himself, taken about 1949. No claim is made for the date of the photo of Douglas. Note that the caption reads "Wilder (below;c. 1949) discovered Douglas . . ."
Posted by Ken M Williams on July 9,2009 | 10:16PM
My wife and I have recently spent time in Douglas, meeting the people, eating at the restaurants, dealing with both Douglas and Cochise County public officials, etc. We like it very much and plan to build there. You can have Sierra Vista with its strip malls and six lanes of traffic. You can have the "new money" and the pretentious plastic people who judge you on how well you have manicured your lawn. During our stays at Douglas we have met more good hearted down-to-earth people who are living their lives at a pace which preserves the humanity blown away by the rat race. Also, there is a steady stream of creative artists, musicians, educators, etc. recognizing what is there and settling in.
Much of what Wilder appreciated is still there.
Posted by Robert Constant on July 12,2009 | 08:42PM
I just wish the author of the article would spent more time describing, at least briefly, Wilder's best pearls, which brought him a Pulitzer prize. Those creations are awesome, unbelievably intriguing and interesting to read. I suggest everybody should read it.
Posted by Oleg on July 14,2009 | 10:24AM
While I was a student at Douglas High School my English teacher, Mr. Landon, mentioned that Wilder was living in town. Actually I guess he lived about five blocks from my house on the same street.
The song "Ghost Riders in the Sky" was written by a person who lived out past "D" hill. He was living on a ranch to regain his health.
Tom
Posted by Tom Bates on July 20,2009 | 09:25AM
i don't care what cira the photo of my home town is,
it was good to see it. It brought back many great memories of my hometown, Douglas,Az
Posted by DAN on July 24,2009 | 10:22AM
My mom is Gwen, who was quoted in the article. She has very fond memories of Mr. Wilder, and their long, drawn out conversations at the kitchen table. I wish I was able to remember those times, but I was just too young.
This article brought my mom, who is 81 now and still producing killer spaghetti, tremendous joy and comfort.
Posted by Dianne (Lucas) Geddis on July 24,2009 | 11:41AM
Great article Tom, at long last! I believe you must have spent about four years on this piece, at least.
It was certainly well worth it, and I wish there were more authors who love their craft enough to take the time to produce a gem like this. It takes the reader into the down, lets him meet the people, and get inside of an amazing writer and see what made him tick.
The descriptions of his daily writing routine reminded me of Hemingway. As a writer, I am always interested on how others actually get the job done.
Thanks also, for recommending that I read all the comments. I visited Douglas many times before I retired from the Arizona Historical Society, and you certainly captured the town pride and how much people love the place.
You certainly did many people a favor by introducing Douglas to the world, and bringing back fond memories for those far from their home town.
I purchased a copy of The Eighth Day when you first told me about it, now I guess it's time to read it!
Look forward to your next piece, hope it is not so long in coming next time . . .
Jim Turner, www.jimturnerhistorian.org
Posted by Jim Turner Historian on July 24,2009 | 04:25PM
Great article on Thorton Wilder, although I think the photo of G Ave. was not dated correctly.
I was a young police officer ( 22 to 26 years of age) in Douglas from 1962 to 1966 and at times was charged with taking Mr. Wilder home from the Gadsen Hotel bar, or from one across the street. I once took him out to the San Bernadino Ranch, once the home of Texas John Slaughter and later the home of Stan Jones of "Ghost Rider" fame and other music and tv. I was once a reporter on the Douglas Dispatch and knew I was in the company of a "Great" writer.
Douglas was the home to a number of characters (like police Chief Percy Bowden and more), but it was a great and productive community and a good place to live.
I knew most of the people mentioned in the story.
Andrew Murphy
Posted by Andrew (Andy) Murphy on August 10,2009 | 02:47PM
My dad spent time in the late thirties near douglas. He frequently mentioned ending the evening at a place called the Top Hat.
Where, and what exactly was the Top Hat? thanx
Posted by J W Freeman on October 23,2009 | 08:36AM