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This Goodly Land

James Saxon Childers, portrait

James Saxon Childers

Dates

April 19, 1899 - July 17, 1965

Alabama Connection

  • Birmingham, Jefferson County: birthplace, childhood residence, adult residence

Selected Works

  • Childers, James Saxon. Laurel and Straw. New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1927.
  • Childers, James Saxon. Hilltop in the Rain. New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1928.
  • Childers, James Saxon. Through Oriental Gates: The Adventures of an Unwise Man in the East. New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1930.
  • Childers, James Saxon. In the Deep South: A Novel about a White Man and a Black Man. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1936. Rpt. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988.
  • Childers, James Saxon. Erskine Ramsey: His Life and Achievements. New York: Cartwright & Ewing, 1942.
  • Childers, James Saxon. War Eagles: The Story of the Eagle Squadron. New York: D. Appleton-Century Co., 1943.
  • Childers, James Saxon. The Nation on the Flying Trapeze: The United States as the People of the East See Us. New York: D. McKay Co., 1960.

Biographical Information

James Saxon Childers was born and raised in Birmingham, Ala. In 1915, he was admitted as a Danforth Fellow to Oberlin College, an integrated institution in Ohio. During World War I, Childers left college to serve as a US Navy pilot. He returned to Oberlin after the war and earned his baccalaureate degree in 1920. After teaching in Birmingham for a year, Childers won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University, where he studied history and literature, earning a BA and an MA. In 1925, Childers returned to Birmingham, where he taught literature and creative writing at Birmingham-Southern College for seventeen years. During this time, Childers also worked part-time for The Birmingham News as a columnist and book reviewer. In 1926, his first novel, Laurel and Straw, was published. The first of his travel books, Through Oriental Gates, was published in 1930. Although his early novels did not receive good reviews, his travel books were liked by the critics.

In 1936, Childers published A Novel about a White Man and a Black Man in the Deep South, which advocated racial integration. From 1929 to 1942, Childers published novels, travel books, and a biography of Erskine Ramsay, a Birmingham civic leader. During World War II, Childers served as an intelligence officer. In 1943, he published War Eagles, a nonfiction work about American fighter pilots in the Royal Air Force of Great Britain. After the war, Childers and his wife moved to Chapel Hill, N.C., where he spent five years writing full-time. In 1951, they moved to Atlanta where Childers became an editor for The Atlanta Journal. His liberal views on integration and civil rights clashed with those of the publisher, however, and Childers was forced to resign in 1956. He then worked for the US State Department, giving lectures on American culture. His book The Nation on the Flying Trapeze grew out of that work. From the late 1950s until his death from cancer in the mid 1960s, Childers worked for the Atlanta publishing firm of Tupper & Love.

Interests and Themes

James Saxon Childers wrote novels, travel books, biography, and history. Several of his books are set in Birmingham.

For More Information

Please check your local library for these materials. If items are not available locally, your librarian can help you borrow them through the InterLibrary Loan program. Your librarian can also help you find other information about this author.

There may be more information available through the databases in the Alabama Virtual Library. If you are an Alabama citizen, AVL can be used at your public library or school library media center. You can also get a username and password from your librarian to use AVL at home.

Reference Book Prefaces

  • McWilliams, Tennant S. Introduction: James Saxon Childers and Southern Liberalism in the 1930s. A Novel about a White Man and a Black Man In the Deep South. By James Saxon Childers. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988. ix-xxiii.

Reference Web Sites

Location of Papers

  • Birmingham Public Library
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Photo courtesy of the Birmingham Public Library Archives, James Saxon Childers Papers, File No. 1120.1.61.

Last updated on 2009-07-23.