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Spare Change for O. Henry

by Mike Cox
Mike Cox
One hundred five years after his death, William Sydney Porter – far better known to the world simply as O. Henry – is still making money off his writing.

To explain how a dead man continues to profit from his literary efforts, it will be necessary to cover some back story before reaching the sort of “twist at the end” denouement that Porter perfected in many of his 600 or so short stories.

Born in Greensboro, NC in 1862, Porter -- via Texas, Ohio (federal prison), Pittsburg (where he started writing full time) and New York (where he became a noted writer), returned to North Carolina in 1907 at the peak of his career. But the country boy no longer felt comfortable in the country.

Porter came to Texas in 1882 at the suggestion of a family friend, one of whose sons, former Texas Ranger Capt. Lee Hall, managed a ranch in La Salle County. The young Southerner lived on the ranch for two years before moving to Austin to work as a draftsman in the General Land Office and later as a teller at the Austin National Bank. During that time, he published a humor sheet called “The Rolling Stone,” which he liked to joke gathered neither moss nor money.

While working at the bank, depending on what story you choose to buy, Porter either took the rap for someone else’s embezzlement or – beset by money troubles and alcoholism – he really did dip into the till. A federal jury believed the latter, and he did three years as a federal contract prisoner in the Ohio State Prison in Columbus.

Apparently hoping to avoid all that inconvenience in the first place, he had skipped to Central America following his indictment. But he was enough of a straight-up guy to come back to Texas to face the music when he received word that his beloved wife Athol was dying of tuberculosis.

O. Henry did not remarry until 1907. His met his future bride through the early 20th century style of online dating, running an ad in several New York newspapers seeking “an attractive but unconventional lady.” With Miss Sara Lindsay Coleman of Weaverville, NC, he got both.

She responded to his ad and they began an epistolary romance. Up against a writer like O. Henry, she didn’t stand a chance. His way with words ended in their marriage.

The happy couple moved to Weaverville, a community just north of Asheville, a resort town on the eastern edge of the Great Smoky Mountains. Alas, O. Henry did not stay happy, at least not with his native state. Too accustomed to big city life (read a vast universe of places to drink) and ready access to his editors and cronies, O. Henry returned to the Big Apple. Mrs. Porter stayed behind.

Famously telling his nurse to open the shades because he did not want to “go home in the dark,” O. Henry died on June 5, 1910 of cirrhosis of the liver, complications from diabetes and an enlarged heart. His widow had him shipped back to Asheville for burial on the slope of a hill in Riverside Cemetery.

The house in Weaverville they had lived in when he was in town burned in 1933, but she built a second place and stayed there the rest of her long life. She died in 1959 at 91. Later, her family donated some of the furniture she and O. Henry had shared to the Weaverville Public Library. One of those items is a round wooden table where O. Henry would write while in town.

That piece, which has two small plaques attached to it, may be viewed at the library on Saturdays or by appointment, but O. Henry’s final resting place can be visited at any time during daylight hours.

He lies beneath a simple, gray granite marker, his own colorful story reduced on stone to a terseness he never would have settled for on the printed page. No matter his status as one of the world’s great short story writers, all there is to be read on his tombstone is “William Sydney Porter 1862-1910.”

Recently visiting O. Henry’s grave for the first time, I found that somewhat weathered marker covered with a scattering of coins and one dollar bill weighted down by other coins. Turns out, at some point no one in Asheville seems to remember, a clever O. Henry fan left $1.87 on the writer’s grave and now it is a tradition.

Why $1.87?

It’s from one of his most timeless tales, “The Gift of the Magi.” Likely inspired by the money woes he experienced while in Austin, in O. Henry’s well-known Christmas story a loving husband sells his cherished gold watch for $1.87 to buy a fine comb for his wife’s beautiful long hair. Unknown to him, his loving lady cuts much of her hair and sells it to buy her husband a chain for his watch.

Standing at his grave on a humid late afternoon not long after a thunderstorm had rumbled through, I dug into my pockets and added six quarters, two dimes, three nickels and two cents to O. Henry’s non-interest bearing savings “account.” A writer deserves recompense for his work.


© Mike Cox
"Texas Tales" - July 30, 2015 Column

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