Hendrik
Willem van Loon (January 14, 1882-March 11, 1944), a
Dutch-American author and illustrator, was the first winner
of the Newbery Medal for The
Story of Mankind. He was beloved by the public during
his lifetime as an engaging, energetic interpreter of the
arts and humanities. Now that lively, well-illustrated
non-fiction books for all ages are widely available, his
reputation has faded.
Born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, the son
of Elisabeth Johanna Hanken and Hendrik Willem van Loon,
Hendrik Willem was baptized a Lutheran. He claimed to have
been raised in a "strict form of Calvinism," and was
nevertheless "completely indifferent to the claims of any
church." He attended schools in Gouda and Voorschoten,
including the prestigious Noorthey Institute. In 1902 he
emigrated to the United States to study at Cornell
University. He transferred to Harvard in 1903 but returned
to Cornell the following year, receiving his bachelor's
degree in 1905. After graduation, he found work as a
journalist, filing reports for the Associated Press from
Russia and elsewhere.
In 1906, van Loon married Eliza Ingersoll
Bowditch, daughter of a prominent Harvard physiology
professor and great-granddaughter of Unitarian Nathaniel
Bowditch, the New England scientist and mathematician. They
had two sons, Henry Bowditch and Gerard Willem. When the
newlyweds moved to Munich, they attended the American
(Episcopal) Church of the Ascension for social and
intellectual reasons. Although van Loon served briefly on
the vestry, he regarded the worship services as dispensable
"hors d'oeuvres." He later claimed that he had "never
associated . . . with a definitely organized religious
group" until he joined New York City's All Souls (Unitarian)
Church at the age of sixty.
Van Loon earned his Ph.D. from the University
of Munich in 1911. His thesis became his first book, The
Fall of the Dutch Republic, 1913, and was followed by The
Rise of the Dutch Kingdom, 1915. Although few copies of
either book were sold, van Loon was praised by at least one
reviewer for daring to "write history as if he enjoyed it."
His Cornell professor, George Lincoln Burr, however,
deplored his occasional careless lapses in historical
accuracy, as did Dutch reviewers. Having returned to the
United States after receiving his doctorate, van Loon
resumed work in Europe for the Associated Press during the
First World War. He became an American citizen in 1919.
He returned to Cornell as a lecturer in
history, 1915-17. His flamboyant presentations were popular
with students but failed to prepare them to pass
departmental exams. Accordingly, his peers judged him an
inept instructor and ill-suited to a scholarly career.
Although he later served as head of the Department of Social
Sciences at Antioch College, Ohio, 1921-22, he henceforth
regarded his academic colleagues as petty adversaries
determined to persecute him for his popularity.
After van Loon's unfaithfulness ended his
marriage to Eliza Bowditch, he wed Eliza Helen "Jimmie"
Criswell in 1920 and then playwright Frances Goodrich Ames
in 1927. After his divorce from Ames he returned to
Criswell, albeit pursuing other women from time to time.
There are conflicting accounts on whether they remarried.
When he died, obituaries listed Criswell as his widow and
she inherited his estate.
As he labored over The
Short History of Discovery, 1917, Ancient
Man, 1920, and The
Story of Mankind, 1921, van Loon became acquainted with
Leonore St. John Power, a children's librarian at the New
York Public Library. She encouraged his efforts to render
history in a style accessible and entertaining to all ages.
The first edition of The
Story of Mankind included
a reading list she had compiled at his request. The head of
Power's department, Anne Carroll Moore, came to share her
admiration of van Loon. An influential critic of juvenile
literature, Moore hailed The
Story of Mankind as
"the most invigorating and, I venture to predict, the most
influential children's book for many years to come."
Lavishly
praised in the press as a future classic, The
Story of Mankind was
selected as the first book to receive the annual Newbery
Medal, which had been created by Unitarian bookseller and
editor Frederic Melcher to honor outstanding American
children's books. The award, bestowed in 1922, cemented The
Story of Mankind's status as a landmark in the field.
Van Loon did not shy away from controversial
statements. In The
Story of Mankind he
began with an extended treatment of evolution. He chose not
to mention the biblical account of creation. The activities
of "Joshua of Nazareth," told using the device of an
exchange of letters between a Roman physician and his
nephew, are depicted as a political rather than a spiritual
matter, with no mention of miraculous works. Such heresies
reportedly deterred a number of libraries from acquiring the
book.
An avowed skeptic, van Loon left the
Immaculate Conception and the Resurrection out of his
subsequent The
Story of the Bible, 1923. Reviews were mixed. Gerard van
Loon thought that his father, had done "his best with
material that basically bored him." The book consequently
lacked the panache that had propelled its predecessor to the
bestseller lists.
Van Loon's tendency to insert himself into
his narratives was a source of entertainment to some readers
and of vexation to others. In The
New York Times, John Chamberlain noted "When Hendrik
Willem van Loon writes history, you can be certain of
getting both plenty of history and plenty of van Loon." One
of his quirkiest efforts, Van
Loon's Lives, 1942, was devoted to imaginary dinner
parties, featuring guests ranging from Plato and Confucius
to Thomas Jefferson and Emily Dickinson, and containing
digressions on such topics as the author's aversion to lamb.
A more serious charge against van Loon was
the sloppiness of his scholarship. He manufactured details
to aid his narrative, perpetrated anachronisms, and
committed other mistakes. Insisting that his own belief in
his text was sufficient, he regarded editors and
proofreaders as interfering nuisances. His partisans argued
that, as he made history come to life, his factual errors
were inconsequential.
Because of the success of his early books,
van Loon was able to devote the second half of his life to
writing. He illustrated most of his own books and
occasionally those of others—for example, Stephen H.
Fritchman's Men
of Liberty: Ten Unitarian Pioneers, 1944. In addition to
contributing columns and cartoons to The
Nation, The
Rotarian, Forum and
other magazines, he served as an associate editor of The
Baltimore Sun, 1923-24.
Van Loon had joined the Unitarian Laymen's
League in 1924. He was listed on their rosters until 1933.
The League raised money for the American Unitarian
Association (AUA), financed mission projects, coordinated
special events, and recruited potential ministers. He
presented a lecture on "Tolerance" at All Souls Unitarian
Church, New York in 1925.
In his book, Tolerance,
1925, van Loon asserted, "The human race is possessed of
almost incredible vitality. It has survived theology. In due
time it will survive industrialism." Although he admitted to
an occasional chat with God, whom he pictured as "a sort of
beneficent grandfather," van Loon generally had little
patience for myths. "There is no Providence. There is no
Guidance. No Divine Purpose," he wrote a friend. He
insisted, rather, that "we ourselves are responsible for
everything we do—no stars, no spooks, no psychic phenomena."
This belief fueled his determination to publicize and
celebrate the inventions and accomplishments of human beings
with evangelical zeal.
In addition to many public lectures,
beginning in 1935 van Loon delivered talks on radio—notably
for NBC—and appeared on Information
Please and
other celebrity quiz shows. As "Oom Henk" ("Uncle Hank") he
broadcast anti-Nazi speeches to Holland during the Second
World War. He also assisted European refugees. In 1942 he
was knighted by Queen Wilhelmina for his contribution to the
Dutch resistance.
Van Loon participated in Franklin Delano
Roosevelt's 1940 presidential campaign. Roosevelt considered
him "a true and trusted friend," and admired van Loon's Our
Battle—Being One Man's Answer to "My Battle" by Adolf Hitler,
1938, in which he exhorted Americans to fight
totalitarianism. Van Loon defied his doctor's caution
against overwork in order to chair a division of the
National War Fund.
Wishing to connect with potential allies in
his battle against wishful thinking, in 1942 van Loon signed
the membership book at All Souls. The minister, Lawrence I.
Neale, had been a classmate at Harvard and an usher at his
first wedding. In his pamphlet for the AUA, This
I Believe!, van Loon quipped that the Unitarian Church
appealed to him "because the only time the name Jesus Christ
is uttered is when the janitor falls downstairs." He
envisioned young Unitarians populating intellectual "shock
troops" to combat fantasies of an instant postwar utopia.
In failing health, van Loon did not attend
All Souls after he appeared in the pulpit the Sunday he
joined. Neale presided at the funeral. The well-attended
service featured readings of twelve "prophetic voices,"
ranging from the early apostles to Thomas Jefferson and
William Ellery Channing.
To van Loon, human achievement mattered above
all things. "I have tried to show that Man is the center of
the universe." Seldom modest, he regarded himself as too
progressive for his era. His books have not aged well;
almost all of them are now out of print. His style, once
praised as daring and innovative, now seems quaint and
mannered. Because of his racial and social bias and his
disdain for historical precision, his books can no longer be
used as classroom or reference texts. He nevertheless
brought to light a previously unaddressed demand for
well-narrated popular histories. His own work has since been
eclipsed by the expectations he himself helped raise.
The Hendrik Willem van Loon Papers are kept
in the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell
University Library, Ithaca, New York. The letters of Eliza
Bowditch van Loon are at the Arthur and Elizabeth
Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College, Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Their son Gerard van Loon published some of
these as Letters
from a Boston Bride. Information on van Loon's
participation and membership at All Souls Church, New York
City is in their archives. Among van Loon's works not
mentioned above are The
Golden Book of the Dutch Navigators (1917); The
Story of America (1927); The
Life and Times of Pieter Stuyvesant (1928);Man
the Miracle Maker (1928); R.
v. R.: The life and Times of Rembrandt van Rijn (1930);
"If the Dutch Had Kept Nieuw Amsterdam," in If,
Or History Rewritten, edited by Philip Guedala (1931); Van
Loon's Geography (1932);
"Hints for Reformers," Atlantic (December
1934); An
Elephant Up a Tree (1933); Ships
and How They Sailed the Seven Seas (1935);
his radio talks, Air
Storming (1935); The
Arts (1937); How
to Look at Pictures (1938); The
Story of the Pacific (1940); The
Life and Times of Johann Sebastian Bach (1940); Thomas
Jefferson (1943);
the Life and
Times of Simon Bolivar (1943);
and "Every
Man a Historian," Rotarian (May
1944).With Grace Castagnetta he
compiled several songbooks, including The
Songs We Sing (1936), Christmas
Carols (1937), Folk
Songs of Many Lands (1938),
and The Songs
America Sings (1939).
Van Loon also wrote an unfinished, posthumously published
autobiography, Report
to St. Peter (1947).
The biographies of van Loon are Cornelis A. van Minnen, Van
Loon: Popular Historian, Jounalist, and FDR Confidant (2005)
and Gerard Willem van Loon, The
Story of Hendrik Willem van Loon (1972).
Richard O. Boyer wrote a three-part profile of van Loon,
"The Story of Everything," in The
New Yorker (March-April,
1943). There are obituaries in the New
York Times (March
12, 13, and 15, 1944) and other major periodicals. Frederic
Melcher paid tribute to him in "Three Good Men,"Publisher's
Weekly (March
18, 1944). There is an entry by Stephen Anderson Mihm in American
National Biography (1999).
Profiles of van Loon as a writer and his place in literature
include David Karsner, "Hendrik Willem van Loon," in Sixteen
Authors to One: Intimate Sketches of Leading American
Storytellers (1928,
republished 1968); Anne Carroll Moore, "Hendrik Willem van
Loon and 'The Story of Mankind,'" in Bertha Mahony Miller
and Elinor Whitney Field, eds., Newbery
Medal Books, 1922-1955 (1955);
Joan Shelley Rubin, The
Making of Middlebrow Culture (1992);
and Bette J. Pettola, "Hendrik Willem van Loon," in Anita
Silvey, ed., Children's
Books and Their Creators (1995).
Thanks to Amy Strano and Lorraine Allen at
All Souls Church, New York City for their assistance.
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