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Early Years
Childhood
Yes, there really was a Dr. Seuss. He was not an official
doctor, but his prescription for fun has delighted readers
for more than 60 years. Theodor (“Ted”) Seuss
Geisel was born on March 2, 1904, in Springfield, Massachusetts.
His father, Theodor Robert, and grandfather were brewmasters
and enjoyed great financial success for many years. Coupling
the continual threats of Prohibition and World War I,
the German-immigrant Geisels were targets for many slurs,
particularly with regard to their heritage and livelihoods.
In response, they were active participants in the pro-America
campaign of World War I. Thus, Ted and his sister Marnie
overcame such ridicule and became popular teenagers involved
in many different activities.
Despite some financial hardship the Geisels encountered
due to Prohibition, Ted enjoyed a fairly happy childhood.
His parents were strict, but very loving. His mother,
Henrietta Seuss Geisel, had worked in her father’s
bakery before marrying Ted’s father, often memorizing
the names of the pies that were on special each day and
‘chanting’ them to her customers. If Ted had
difficulty getting to sleep, she would often recall her
‘pie-selling chants’. As an adult, Ted credited
his mother “for the rhythms in which I write and
the urgency with which I do it.” (Morgan, p. 7)
Dartmouth
If you’ve never seen a photograph of Dr. Seuss,
you probably picture him as a young child or a grandfatherly
gentleman. You may not have considered his robust years
as a college student.
Ted attended Dartmouth College and by all accounts was
a typical, mischievous college student. According to
Judith and Neil Morgan, co-authors of Dr. Seuss
& Mr. Geisel and personal friends of his, “Ted
grew to respect the academic discipline he discovered
at Dartmouth—not enough to pursue it, but to appreciate
those who did.” (Morgan, p. 28) He worked hard
to become the editor in chief of Jack-O-Lantern,
Dartmouth’s humor magazine.
His reign as editor came to an abrupt end when Ted and
his friends were caught throwing a party that did not
coincide with school policy. Geisel continued to contribute
to Jack o, merely signing his work as “Seuss.”
This is the first record of his using the pseudonym
Seuss, which was both his middle name and his mother's
maiden name. It was a perfectly innocent pseudonym;
it squeaked Ted's work past unsuspecting college officials,
yet clearly identified him as the creator.
Oxford
Graduation from Dartmouth was approaching, and Ted’s
father asked the question all college students dread:
what was Ted going to do after college?
Ted claimed to have been awarded a fellowship to Oxford
University and the elder Geisel reported the news to
the Springfield paper, where it was published the following
day. Ted confessed the truth—Oxford had denied
his fellowship application—and Mr. Geisel, who
had a great deal of family pride, managed to scrape
together funds to send him anyway. Ted left for Oxford
intending to become a professor. (He couldn’t
think of anything else to do with an Oxford education).
It would be the first of many turning points in his
career.
Sitting in his Anglo-Saxon for Beginners class, his
doodling caught the eye of a fellow American student
named Helen Palmer. Helen suggested that he should become
an artist instead of a professor. He took her advice
and, eventually, he took her hand in marriage as well.
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