Biographical Research

William Stafford was born in Hutchinson, Kansas, in 1914. He received a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Kansas at Lawrence and, in 1954, a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa. During the Second World War, Stafford was a conscientious objector and worked in the civilian public service camps-an experience he recorded in the prose memoir Down My Heart (1947). He married Dorothy Hope Frantz in 1944; they had four children.

In 1948 Stafford moved to Oregon to teach at Lewis and Clark College. Though he traveled and read his work widely, he taught at Lewis and Clark until his retirement in 1980. His first major collection of poems, Traveling Through the Dark, was published when Stafford was forty-eight. It won the National Book Award in 1963. He went on to publish more than sixty-five volumes of poetry and prose. Among his many honors and awards were a Shelley Memorial Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Western States Lifetime Achievement Award in Poetry. In 1970, he was the Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (a position currently known as the Poet Laureate).

Stafford's poems are often deceptively simple. Like Robert Frost's, however, they reveal a distinctive and complex vision upon closer examination. James Dickey, writing in his book Babel to Byzantium, notes that Stafford's "natural mode of speech is a gentle, mystical, half-mocking and highly personal daydreaming about the western United States." Among his best-known books are The Rescued Year (1966), Stories That Could Be True: New and Collected Poems (1977), Writing the Australian Crawl: Views on the Writer's Vocation (1978), and An Oregon Message (1987). William Stafford died at his home in Lake Oswego, Oregon, on August 28, 1993.

- from POETS.org

William Stafford, one of America's most widely read poets, was born in Hutchinson, Kansas, in 1914 to Ruby and Earl Ingersoll Stafford, the first of three children. He was followed by brother Bob and sister Peg. He worked (sometimes beside his father) at hardscrabble manual jobs during the Depression, including work in beet fields, at an oil refinery, and most memorably yoked to a plow.

Stafford received his bachelor's degree in 1937 from the University of Kansas, and he was in the graduate program there when called up for active military service in 1942. He registered with his draft board as a conscientious objector and was interned in Civilian Public Service (CPS) camps in Magnolia, Arkansas, and in the California camps at Los Prietos near Santa Barbara and Belden on the Feather River. He had applied for assignment to a Friends (Quaker) camp, but was placed in camps run by another peace church, the Church of the Brethren. In 1946, he ended his service as secretary to the church in Elgin, Illinois.

Stafford's career as a poet and educator was shaped by the hard physical labor and the discipline and cooperative ethos of camp life, where he began his lifelong habit of writing each day in the early hours of the morning. His 1946 master's thesis at the University of Kansas, Down in My Heart, is a prose account of his CPS experiences.

After the war, Stafford took a position as a teacher at Chaffey High School in greater Los Angeles. In 1947, he was recruited by Lewis & Clark College president Morgan Odell, himself a conscientious objector in World War I. Stafford remained at the college until his retirement in 1979, with brief absences to teach at San Jose State University, Manchester College (a Brethren college), and the University of Iowa and to make frequent reading and workshop tours. He was in demand for the remainder of his life for poetry readings and writing workshops, activities in which he had been a pioneer.

Stafford's doctoral dissertation, a volume of poems awarded from the University of Iowa's writing program, formed a basis for his first two collections, West of Your City (1960) and Traveling through the Dark (1962), which won the National Book Award in 1963. In 1964, he was awarded the Poetry Society of America's prestigious Shelley Memorial Award, and in 1970 he was named to a one-year position as Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, the office later known as poet laureate. Four years later, Governor Tom McCall appointed him Oregon's fourth poet laureate, a position he held until August 1989.

Stafford's famously democratic approach to teaching, exemplified in his advice "No praise, no blame," is on view in his four volumes in the University of Michigan Press Poets on Poetry series—Writing the Australian Crawl, You Must Revise Your Life, Crossing Unmarked Snow, and The Answers Are Inside the Mountains—and in his 1967 report for the National Council of Teachers of English, Friends to This Ground. A later publication for the NCTE was the bestselling collaboration with Stephen Dunning, the writing manual Getting the Knack (1992). He was also an infrequent but felicitous translator of poems from French, Spanish, Bulgarian, and, most notably, the Urdu ghazals of Ghalib. Stafford's poetry has been translated into many languages, including Persian, Polish, Japanese (through his collaborator Yorifumi Yaguchi), and Swedish—in the 2003 book-length selection by Lars Nordström Rapport fran en avlägsen plats (Report from a Far Place).

The poetry of William Stafford is contained in some fifty collections, selected in Stories That Could Be True (1977) and The Way It Is (1998). His poems are accessible, sometimes deceptively so, with a conversational manner that is close to everyday speech. Among predecessors whom he most admired are William Wordsworth, Thomas Hardy, Walt Whitman, and Emily Dickinson.

Stafford wrote an authoritative introduction to a selection of poems by his conscientious objector colleague, Brother Antoninus (William Everson), and exchanged poems with Marvin Bell, which were published in two volumes, Segues (1983) and Annie-Over (1998). Stafford's association with Bell, his long friendship with poet Robert Bly, and his pacifism are explored in four video documentaries: William Stafford: What the River Says (1989); William Stafford: The Life of the Poem (1992), by Vincent Wixon and Michael Markee; Robert Bly and William Stafford: A Literary Friendship (1994); and Every War Has Two Losers (2009) by Haydn Reiss.

A frequent photographer of his fellow poets, Stafford accumulated 12,000 negatives, which are housed among his papers at Lewis & Clark College. Also in the collection are over forty years of daily drafts and typescripts from the early 1950s to 1993, a voluminous correspondence preserved from 1964, and some 200 recorded readings and interviews.

Stafford's work is celebrated every January in a series of about forty readings organized by Paulann Petersen, Oregon's poet laureate, and the Friends of William Stafford in Oregon. The readings take place in seven states, including Oregon, and in Sweden, Scotland, and Japan, a tribute to his broad appeal. More than a dozen publications have appeared since his death in 1993, most notably The Methow River Poems (1995), Even in Quiet Places (1996), The Way It Is: New and Selected Poems (1998), Kim Stafford's memoir Early Morning (1998), Crossing Unmarked Snow (1998), The Answers Are Inside the Mountains (2003), Every War Has Two Losers (2003), and Fred Marchant's selection of early poems Another World Instead (2008).

Stafford was married in 1945 to Dorothy Frantz, daughter of a Brethren minister who brought her on one of his visits to Los Prietos camp. With Dorothy he had four children—Bret, Kim, Kit, and Barbara. He was active both physically and creatively to the last day of his life, on August 28, 1993, when he wrote an elegiac poem containing the line "I'm [still] here writing it down." Those brackets convey the modest irony that was characteristic of his career.

Written by Paul Merchant (from the Oregon Encyclopedia)