Annie Fellows JohnstonThis web site is devoted to
Annie Fellows Johnston and the Little Colonel Stories

Brought to you by The Samuel Culbertson Mansion (Home of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky" in historic Old Louisville) and the people of Pewee Valley, Kentucky

Please join us in Louisville & Lloydsboro Valley November 17, 2007-February 16, 2008 for a Special Little Colonel ExhibitClick here for more information


John E. Johnston
1881-1910
We lived nearly eight years in Texas, and I wrote a book each year. Much of my writing was done at John's bedside. I thought of him whenever I wrote of Jack Ware, and he was my inspiration for "The Jester's Sword." "And it came to pass wherever he went men felt a strange strength-giving influence radiating from his presence. One could not say exactly what it was, it was so fleeting and intangible, like warmth that circles from a brazier or perfume that is wafted from an unseen rose . . . . So blithely did he bear his lot it seemed a kingly spirit dwelt among us, and earth is poorer for his going."
                                                                 --Annie Fellows Johnston, in Land of the Little Colonel", Chapter 8

     
John, 1902-1903 at Lee's Ranch, near Phoenix, Arizona
about age 21 or 22

If there is a tragic character in the Little Colonel stories, it is Jack Ware.  His sad story of a devastating injury casts a dark shadow over much of the later Little Colonel books. His plight teaches many lessons, but in the end he triumphs.

Sadder still is the story of  the model for his character, Annie Fellows Johnston's step-son John.  John's mother died when he was but two, and shortly after, his father married Annie Fellows.  Then his father died when he was 10, and his sister Rena when he was 18.  Sometime during his early life he contracted pulmonary tuberculosis, the same illness that had taken his mother.  By the time of his early adulthood, his disease had advanced to a point where he required extra care.  Without the antibiotics that could have saved his life today, all there was to do was to go where the air was clean and dry, and thus his loving step-mother took him to Lee's Ranch in Arizona during 1902/3, and later to California and Boerne, Texas.

Despite all the care Annie could give, John died in September,1910 at the age of 29.

His character in the books has a happier outcome.  In 1912, in the last of the Little Colonel books, Mary Ware's Promised Land, Annie Fellows Johnston decided to let Jack be saved.  But in the books before that we can sense the agony that Annie Fellows Johnston must have often felt in her own life at the time because of John's illness.

Many of John's exploits present themselves in the character Jack Ware. You might remember the animal menagerie in Little Colonel in Arizona.  A letter from Boerne, Texas in 1908 describes Johns real menagerie and some of what Annie and John were going through at that time.


John Johnston's Graduation Class from Northwestern Military Academy at Highland Park, Illinois in 1898
From the private collection of Suzanne Schimpeler

 

 

This Site:
Home Page   What's New?   Biography of Annie Fellows Johnston,   
Books on Line
  (Complete Original Little Colonel Book Series)
    The Little Colonel (link to U. Penn))
   
The Giant Scissors
    Two Little Knights of Kentucky
    The Little Colonel's House Party
    The Little Colonel's Holidays
    The Little Colonel's Hero
    The Little Colonel at Boarding-School
    The Little Colonel in Arizona
    The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation 
    The Little Colonel, Maid of Honor 
    The Little Colonel's Knight Comes Riding
 
    Mary Ware, The Little Colonel's Chum 
    Mary Ware in Texas  
    Mary Ware's Promised Land
          Check our home page for more titles by AFJ on other sites
The People & Characters:
The Little Colonel, Papa Jack and Mrs. Sherman,  The Old Colonel, Two Little Knights of Kentucky,  Two Little Knights of Kentucky(2), 
Uncle Sidney & Aunt Elise, parents of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky, Grandmother McIntyre, Aunt Allison, The Waltons, Rob and Anna Moore, Betty, Joyce Ware, Jack WareMom Beck, Walker, Katherine Marks, Gay Melville, The Lees of Arizona, Small Parts
Their Final Resting Places

The Places:
in Pewee (Lloydsboro) Valley: Map, Map 2, Where it all began, The Locust, The Beeches  Edgewood, The Little Colonel's Cottage, The Railroad Station, "Lloydsboro Seminary", Clovercroft, The Post Office, Churches, The Haunted House at Hartwell Hollow,  Confederate Home Rollington, Minor Places In Old Louisville: The Culbertson Mansion, "Home of a Hero" Elsewhere: The Cuckoo's Nest (Indiana), Lee's Ranch, Camelback Mountain & Hole-in-Rock (Arizona), 
San Antonio and The Little Town of Bauer (Boerne), Texas, The Gate of the Giant Scissors (France)
Letters from Annie Fellows Johnston and "Mrs Walton"  
Scrapbook

Links
Cooking with The Little Colonel
Guest Book

Email us about this site  We always appreciate your suggestions and insights, and will do our best to answer your questions..  Much of the material included on this site comes from devoted Little Colonel Fans like you.

Subscribe to our mailing list

Visit historic Old Louisville on the web at the:
Old Louisville Guide
(Old Louisville and Literature)

 

 

 

 


The Samuel Culbertson Mansion
Historic Inn 

in Historic Old Louisville

(your host for this web site)
Home Page   Rooms Page
Annie Fellows Johnston Room  The East Room  The President's Room
The Little Colonel Suite  The Knights of Kentucky Suite  The General Lawton Suite

History
   Samuel Culbertson & the Kentucky Derby  General Henry W. Lawton

The Samuel Culbertson Mansion
"Home of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky"
1432 S. Third Street
Louisville, KY 40208
(502) 634-3100

inn@culbertsonmansion.com

Hit Counter

Google
Search WWW Search littlecolonel.com

 

original material & research © 1998-2007 LittleColonel.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hit Counter