Thomas Wolfe House - Asheville, North Carolina
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member NCDaywalker
N 35° 35.865 W 082° 33.030
17S E 359545 N 3940440
This is a Registered National Historic Landmark that was boyhood home and literary subject of famed author, poet, novelist, and playwright Thomas Wolfe.
Waymark Code: WMTCY7
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 11/03/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 3

"The home is located in downtown Asheville, North Carolina. The sprawling frame of the Queen Anne-influenced house was originally only six or seven rooms with a front and rear porch when it was constructed in 1883 by prosperous Asheville banker, Erwin E. Sluder. By 1889, additions had more than doubled the size of the original structure, but the architecture changed little over the next 27 years. In Look Homeward, Angel Thomas Wolfe accurately remembered the house he moved into in 1906 as a "big cheaply constructed frame house of eighteen or twenty drafty, high-ceilinged rooms." In 1916, Wolfe's mother enlarged and modernized the house, adding electricity, additional indoor plumbing, and 11 rooms.

Today the boardinghouse where Thomas Wolfe spent his childhood and adolescence feature furnishings that evoke the daily routine of life in both fact and fiction. In Wolfe's second novel, Of Time and the River (1935), 14 years before the "Old Kentucky Home" became a memorial, Wolfe already had intuitively assessed the house's true importance. He said his mother's "old dilapidated house had now become a fit museum." It is preserved almost intact with original furnishings arranged by family members very much the way it appeared when the writer lived there. Memories, kept alive through Wolfe's writings, remain in each of the home's 29 rooms.

Thomas Wolfe was perhaps the most overtly autobiographical of this country's major novelists. His boyhood at 48 Spruce Street shaped his work and influenced the rest of his life. So frank and realistic were his reminiscences that Look Homeward, Angel was banned from Asheville's public library for over seven years. Today Wolfe is celebrated as one of Asheville's most famous citizens, and his boyhood home has become a part of our nation's literary history.

Of Time and the River was a continuation of Look Homeward, Angel and Wolfe's last two major novels (published posthumously), The Web and the Rock (1939) and You Can't Go Home Again (1940), followed the events of his life in New York and Brooklyn, his wandering travels through Europe, his success as a novelist, and his final sad revelation of "you can't go home again." Thomas Wolfe died in the prime of his life of tubercular meningitis on September 15, 1938, 18 days short of his 38th birthday.

Wolfe's mother lived in the "Old Kentucky Home" until her death in 1945. Four years later her surviving sons and daughters sold the house to a private organization, the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Association, and it opened to the public as a house museum on July 19, 1949. The association continued to operate the memorial until 1958, when it was taken over by the City of Asheville. On January 16, 1976, the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources acquired the property."
Name of Famous Person: Thomas Wolfe

Physical Address: 52 N Market Street, Asheville, NC

What is this person famous for?:
famed author, poet, novelist, and playwright Thomas Wolfe.


Website verifying legitimacy of site: [Web Link]

Personal Experience:
Along the Thomas Wolfe Trail, one finds momentoes of his life and stories of his life. Plaques that tell of his career as a writer. In front of the house, a bronzed pair of Mr Wolfe's shoes are found as are a concrete casting of his footprints. Step in and see how you measure up!


Other information about area:


Additional Website verifying Site legitimacy: Not listed

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Recent Visits/Logs:
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NCDaywalker visited Thomas Wolfe House - Asheville, North Carolina 11/12/2016 NCDaywalker visited it
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