Richard Halliburton was an adventurer and travel writer who became
one of the world's most famous celebrities during the first decades of the 20th
century. R. Scott Williams explores Halliburton's dramatic rise to fame in his
first book about the explorer, "The Forgotten Adventures of Richard
Halliburton, from Tennessee to Timbuktu." Meet the author and learn more
about the story during a book launch and signing Thursday, November 13, 5:45
p.m., at the Delta Heritage Center in Brownsville, Tenn.
Williams looks at Halliburton's life and the cultural changes
taking place in the United States that contributed to his phenomenal success
and tragic failures. Halliburton was born in Brownsville in 1900 and raised in
Memphis. At the age of 19, he left home to lead an extraordinary life of
adventure.
Interest in Halliburton began to develop
while Williams was doing research on his own family. “For several years, I’ve been
researching and writing about my ancestors who, since the early 1830s, mostly
lived in and around Haywood County, Tennessee," he explains. "My
parents, grandparents and great-grandparents were all born and lived there.
Richard Halliburton’s ancestors were from the same area so I ran across the Halliburton
name many times and my curiosity took me down the path of learning more about
Richard."
Against
the backdrop of the Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression, Halliburton's
exploits around the globe made him an internationally-known celebrity and the
most famous travel writer and lecturer of his day. From climbing Mount Olympus
in Greece, to swimming the Panama Canal, to literally flying all the way to
Timbuktu, Halliburton experienced and wrote about adventures that others never
even believed possible. He disappeared in 1939 during a typhoon in the Pacific
Ocean.
"Halliburton's parents, Wesley and Nelle, actually met and
married in Brownsville, Tennessee where Wesley was farming family land and
Nelle was teaching at the Brownsville Women’s College," says Williams.
"Early in Richard Halliburton’s life, the family moved to Memphis, which
is where I also grew up.”
During
his life, Halliburton maintained close ties to his family in Memphis and
returned home frequently. Shortly before his death, Halliburton's father,
Wesley, donated the family's artifacts to Rhodes College. Williams worked
closely with the library archivist and was able to use scrapbooks created by
Wesley as a basis for his work on Halliburton.
The
book features never-before-published photos, rare letters, memorabilia and documents
and photos of artifacts that provide a glimpse into the life of Halliburton.
Several photos will be on display during the Book Launch and Signing November
13.
For
more information about the book, visit www.HalliburtonBook.com. The book is
available at HistoryPress.net and Amazon.com on November 5. To reserve a copy
of the book ($19.99) for the signing or for more information about the event,
call the Delta Heritage Center at 731-779-9000.
About R.
Scott Williams
Originally from Memphis, R. Scott Williams is an advertising, marketing, and public relations executive with a passion for researching and recording unpublished stories of the early American south. After receiving his degree in journalism from the University of Memphis, he worked a variety of jobs until landing at Graceland where he helped take care of business for the king for more than twelve years. Currently, he leads the marketing and communication initiatives at the Newseum, a museum of news and history in Washington, D.C.
Originally from Memphis, R. Scott Williams is an advertising, marketing, and public relations executive with a passion for researching and recording unpublished stories of the early American south. After receiving his degree in journalism from the University of Memphis, he worked a variety of jobs until landing at Graceland where he helped take care of business for the king for more than twelve years. Currently, he leads the marketing and communication initiatives at the Newseum, a museum of news and history in Washington, D.C.