
Mural in Shelby, Ohio (Dawn Powell on right, Charles Follis, left)

Orpha May Sherman Steinbrueck's house, Shelby, Ohio

9 E. 10th St. (1931-1942)

35 E 9th (1942-1958)
A favorite author of mine is Dawn Powell (1896-1965). She wrote more than a dozen novels, some set in Ohio, others in New York. Her books are mostly smart, observant satires that, unusually, treat the objects of satire with respect. None of the novels sold well during her lifetime and her books were out of print until a revival of sorts took place in the 1990s. Her cousing Jack Sherman, who was instrumental in her literary revival, died just this past spring.
Powell was born in Mt. Gilead, Ohio. Her mother died when Dawn was a small child. Her traveling salesman father remarried soon after to a woman who became the proverbial evil stepmother. Powell ran away in her early teens to live with her aunt Orpha in Shelby. She fictionalized much of her childhood in My Home is Far Away, which is about as unrelentlingly sad a novel as you'll ever want to read. As long as I was in the neighborhood I stopped in Shelby to take a look.
You would never know it by visiting today but Shelby was a growing industrial powerhouse a century ago. In 1890 it was the birthplace of the seamless tube industry and the Shelby Bicycles (warning: really horrible web page layout) made from those seamless tubes were quite popular.
Shelby was pretty quiet on a Saturday afternoon but Orpha's much modified house was still standing. The mural in which Powell is depicted also include Charles Follis. Follis is recognized as the first African-American professional football player, getting paid to play for the Shelby Athletic Club in 1902.
When Powell first moved to New York she lived on the Upper West Side. All those buildings are long gone. Most of the her time, though, was spent amongst the mid-century bohemian crowd in Greenwich Village. The building on East 10th Street has a plaque dedicated to her. That building was designed by the firm of Renwick, Aspinwall, and Russell. Renwich was James Renwick of Grace Church, St. Patrick's Cathedral, and Smithsonian fame.
Although those two New York buildings are nice places, Powell and her husband never had much money. Their only child was severly autistic and needed lots of care. Toward the end of their lives Powell and husband were nearly itinerant and dependent on the kindness of benefactors. Powell died in 1965 and was buried in the pauper's cemetery on Hart Island.
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