Edgar Rice Burroughs
September 1st, 2012
On this date in 1875, Edgar Rice Burroughs
was born in Chicago, Ill. He graduated from the Michigan Military
Academy in 1895 and enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1896, but was
discharged after only a year due to a heart condition. He became a
full-time writer of pulp fiction in 1912, the year he published his
story Tarzan of the Apes in The All-Story Magazine. Tarzan of the Apes
was an overwhelming success, and Burroughs went on to publish 26 Tarzan
novels, which became famous worldwide. The novels detail the life of
Tarzan, an Englishman who was raised by apes in the African jungle. The
books have been made into over 50 different movies, beginning with the
silent film “Tarzan of the Apes” in 1918, which was one of the first
films to make over a million dollars. Tarzan novels have also been
adapted into a 1932 radio drama, the Broadway play “Tarzan of the Apes”
(1921) and Broadway musical “Tarzan” (2006), the Disney animated movie
“Tarzan” (1999) and five television series.
Burroughs wrote 50 other books, many which were science fiction, including A Princess of Mars (1912), At the Earth’s Core (1914) and The Cave Girl
(1925). He married Emma Hulbert in 1900 and had three children: Joan,
John and Hulbert. They lived in Tarzana, Calif., which Burroughs founded
in 1928.
On
July 6, 1925, Burroughs published an article supporting evolution in
the New York America. He wrote, “If we are not religious, then we must
accept evolution as an obvious fact. If we are religious, then we must
either accept the theory of evolution or admit that there is a power
greater than that of God” (via www.hillmanweb.com). Burroughs’ novel The Gods of Mars
(1918) contained freethought themes, describing a deeply religious
society where the religion was a myth perpetuated as a way to cover up
murder. D. 1950
“Men who had not progressed as far as we have tried to interpret [evolution] some two thousand years ago. It is not strange that they made mistakes. They were ignorant and superstitious.”
— Edgar Rice Burroughs, New York America, July 6, 1925 (quoted in Tarzan Forever by John Taliaferro, 1999).
Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor (FFRF)
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