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(N.22203)

Photos of Lummis 
courtesy of the 
Southwest Museum
,
Los Angeles, Calif.





American Character
The Curious Life of 
Charles Fletcher Lummis and 
the Rediscovery of the Southwest

     In 1884, he walked from Ohio to California in a pair of knickerbockers and street shoes  to take a job as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times.  He gained a national following with weekly letters about his escapades along the way.  A New England Yankee by birth, he gained a deep appreciation for both the natural beauty and cultural diversity of the Southwest, where he remained for the rest of his life. 

       Charles Fletcher Lummis, almost always attired in his trademark well-worn, dark green, Spanish-style corduroy suit, soiled sombrero and red Navajo sash, went on to become one of the most famous and colorful personalities of his day as a book author, magazine editor, archaeologist, preserver of Spanish missions, advisor to President Theodore Roosevelt and a crusader for civil rights for American Indians, Hispanics and other minority groups.  

      A biography of Lummis, American Character, was published in the spring of 2001.   Publisher's Weekly called it  "a compulsively engaging and spirited biography of a man as colorful as he was influential."  Read other book reviews or order the book.   You can also explore the following links to learn more about a most unusual American character.

Overview of Lummis's Life

     >A Precocious Poet
     >His Tramp Across the Continent

     >Reporting for the L.A. Times
     >On the Trail of Geronimo
     >Pioneering Photojournalist
     >A Penitente Crucifixion
     >Lummis in the Pueblo of Isleta
     >Indian Rights Activist
     >Aficionado of Southwestern Cuisine

Travels With Charlie: Visits to Places
     Lummis Wrote About 

Research Resources

About This Web Site

Email author Mark Thompson

 


 

 

 

 

 


(N.21821)


      "I was prepared for a poseur but found too much reality behind the pose to care whether it were there or not.   I found a man of real taste and power." Lummis was "strangely interesting and attractive" and he had "the real temperament of the artist and superabundant energy and natural ability, expressing itself in all sorts of strange ways." 

-David G. Hogarth, a distinguished British archaeologist and Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society, 1907

 

     

Apostle of the Southwest 

       "Charles Lummis was one of the first ‘discoverers’ of the southwest. Many a person had traveled through Arizona and New Mexico before he did. A few had written of it glowingly. But Mr. Lummis combined the skill and instinct of a journalist with a deep love of the country."

-Obituary, New York Times, Nov. 1928

© 2000 Mark Thompson