logo
A whole new chapter for one of SC's greatest writers, Beaufort's Ann Head

A whole new chapter for one of SC's greatest writers, Beaufort's Ann Head

Yahoo18-05-2025

The story ends with Ann Head's disturbing death.
'Unlike her fiction, her ending was never resolved,' her daughter Nancy Thode writes in a biography of her mother that launched in Beaufort on Saturday.
Ann Head is a little-known native of Beaufort who overcame personal fears to become one of South Carolina's most accomplished writers. At the time of her death in 1968, she was believed to be South Carolina's most widely-read novelist.
They said a stroke or cerebral aneurysm ended Ann Head's life at age 52, only a day and a half after yet another night at home was torn apart by the rage of her husband, well-respected Beaufort doctor Stan Morse.
He would not let Nancy see her mother in the hospital. And there was no autopsy.
When the stabs of fate are more than plot lines on paper, they hurt – for 57 years, and counting -- for Ann Head's two daughters who call their mother's last chapter 'the enduring unknown.'
'Not knowing has haunted Stacey and me to this day,' Thode writes in the last chapter of 'Ahead of Her Time: The Trailblazing Life and Literary Legacy of Ann Head' from Evening Post Books in Charleston.
Now the story can have a different ending.
The world can now better appreciate the woman who was Pat Conroy's first writing mentor when he was a Beaufort High School student.
It can read the correspondence between the two when Conroy was at The Citadel. It can see how Ann Head's four novels – including the young-adult classic 'Mr. and Mrs. Bo Jo Jones' and 'Fair With Rain' – came to be, and read samplings from her more than 50 magazine stories that have been unearthed to date through eBay and other searches.
Ann Head's story involves one of Beaufort's most historic families, a sudden marriage and divorce from the eventual inventor of the Head Ski, and the sad tale of the dream boat from hell that almost sank her second marriage. It traces family tragedy, a nervous breakdown at age 8, and plenty of sex and intrigue -- including a mention of Murdaugh madness of old.
Ann Head was born Anne Wales Christensen to Niels Christensen and Nancy Stratton in October 1915.
The Christensens are a well-educated, cultured family that has contributed to Beaufort's fabric in many ways since Ann Head's grandmother, Abbie Holmes Christensen, arrived in Beaufort with her abolitionist parents during the Civil War. The Strattons were proper Boston elites, and young Ann Head split her life between these two poles.
Beaufort historian Larry Rowland says Thode's biography offers 'a revealing description of mid-twentieth century Beaufort.'
But the crux of the story is that a divorced woman who smoked, drank and read The New Yorker had to support herself and her young daughter with a typewriter and empty sheets of paper.
And she did it.
She filled page after page with complex characters and subject matter that pushed the boundaries, much like her personal life that included affairs with married men, a pregnancy hidden through a tangled scheme, and a second marriage that brought her stability and standing, but also turmoil.
Ann Head tapped into the world of magazines, where she had to cater to the demand for soft endings, but her characters and Lowcountry settings could bring her decent money when America entertained itself by reading well-illustrated magazines instead of staring at cell phones.
She sat at the typewriter every day, listening to the music of Broadway shows or opera, wearing little rubber finger tips.
From there, often looking over the Beaufort River, she attracted an international audience, the moguls of Hollywood and the admiration of other writers on the world stage – especially Samuel Hopkins Adams, a mentor who wintered in Beaufort.
'Boy, did she push the boundaries,' said Harlan Greene of Charleston, the writer, historian and archivist who suggested the biography and mentored Thode through the five-year process.
'There seem to be no boundaries between her life and her writing,' Greene said. 'It's like what came first, the chicken or the egg.'
Ann Head was loved and admired in Beaufort, where if people were offended by some of her ways, they got over it. The town showed her grace when she needed it most.
Thode saw her mother as kind, and giving, and too modest about her writing accomplishments.
Pat Conroy was perhaps the first to tell the world about her, calling her his first novelist in an essay published in his 2004 book, 'The Pat Conroy Cookbook.' He placed a rose on Ann Head's tombstone in the St. Helena's churchyard every time he sold a book to a publisher.
But even he had no idea about all of his mentor's magazine stories, and how she supported herself and young Nancy through her art alone. In 2020, the family established the Ann Head Prize for Short Story Literature at Beaufort High School.
And the Ann Head story came full circle when the Pat Conroy Literary Center co-sponsored the biography's local launch event. And it featured high school students.
A year ago, Ann Head was inducted into the South Carolina Academy of Authors.
But the newest chapter in the Ann Head story – the biography – has its own lessons to teach. 'I learned how scared she was,' Thode said. 'I learned how brave she was.
How she persevered through thick of thin, no matter what.' Thode said that from the age 3 to 13, it was just the two of them. A team, led by a mother plagued with various phobias.
'She never conveyed that fear to me. She always made me feel things were an adventure, if we didn't have enough money or enough food. It was, 'No. I'm going to do this. I'm going to do this.' '
Thode may try to get some of her mother's novels back in print. So perhaps one of Beaufort's most remarkable stories will never end.
David Lauderdale may be reached at lauderdalecolumn@gmail.com.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

17 illegal migrants discovered crammed in RV, sedan in sweltering Arizona heat
17 illegal migrants discovered crammed in RV, sedan in sweltering Arizona heat

Fox News

time32 minutes ago

  • Fox News

17 illegal migrants discovered crammed in RV, sedan in sweltering Arizona heat

A man has been arrested and charged with human smuggling after 17 illegal migrants were found crammed inside an RV and a nearby sedan in the sweltering Arizona heat Wednesday. The majority of the illegal migrants, who are all from Mexico, were found packed inside the cramped RV which was parked on a property in Nogales as temperatures inside soared under the summer sun, according to Sean L. McGoffin, chief patrol agent of Border Patrol's Tucson Sector. Those inside the RV, including a minor, had limited space and ventilation with no access to running water, McGoffin said. The rest of the migrants were wedged into a small sedan that was discovered during a vehicle stop. "This rescue likely prevented a tragedy," McGoffin said. "With summer temperatures already climbing, packing people into trailers and vehicles without proper ventilation or water is a recipe for disaster. Human lives should never be treated as cargo." All the migrants are now safe, in custody and will be processed accordingly, McCoffin said. The rescued individuals are being processed for expedited removal in accordance with U.S. immigration law. The man who was arrested is a U.S. citizen and initially attempted to flee the scene on foot but was apprehended by agents shortly after. Investigators are working to determine whether others were involved. The operation was carried out by Nogales Border Patrol, Nogales Police and Homeland Security Investigations. "No recreation happening in this vehicle, instead it was used by smugglers forcing people to hide out in inhumane conditions in sweltering heat," McGoffin said. "Although no one was injured, the situation shows the danger illegal aliens face in the hands of smugglers."

Inside the battles that shattered Trump and Musk's alliance
Inside the battles that shattered Trump and Musk's alliance

Washington Post

time43 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Inside the battles that shattered Trump and Musk's alliance

President Donald Trump was dejected, processing his very public split with the world's richest man. Rattled in the wake of Elon Musk's public attacks and apparent call for his impeachment, Trump worked the phones, debriefing close confidants and casual acquaintances alike. His former ally was 'a big-time drug addict,' Trump said at one point as he tried to make sense of Musk's behavior, according to a person with knowledge of the call, who like others interviewed for this story spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.

Jury skepticism of experts could determine outcome in Karen Read murder trial: former judge
Jury skepticism of experts could determine outcome in Karen Read murder trial: former judge

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

Jury skepticism of experts could determine outcome in Karen Read murder trial: former judge

Whenever there's a battle of the experts, it's the jurors who hold the winning hand, according to a retired Massachusetts judge. And that's shaping up to be the case in Karen Read's retrial on murder charges in the death of her former boyfriend, 46-year-old Boston Police Officer John O'Keefe. Read, 45, is accused of hitting him with an SUV and leaving outside a house party at 34 Fairview Road in Canton, Massachusetts, as he died of a skull fracture and hypothermia during a blizzard on Jan. 29, 2022. Dr. Daniel Wolfe, a director at the ARCCA crash reconstruction firm, testified that the results of numerous tests he conducted to try and reconstruct the alleged crash that killed O'Keefe came back with "inconsistent" results. But special prosecutor Hank Brennan tore into the validity of his methods during cross-examination, noting he used a dummy that was significantly smaller than O'Keefe, alternated between different types of dummy arms without noting that under direct examination and conducted only one test at each speed rather than multiple tests to check for consistent results. A key moment in his testimony came not while discussing his findings, but when Brennan asked him about something Read said in a video clip played earlier in the trial, according to Jack Lu, a retired Massachusetts Superior Court Judge and Boston College law professor. "There's Brennan's theory – the taillight 'impaled' [O'Keefe] on the nose," he told Fox News Digital. "Read picked glass out of [his] nose, and [his] nose bled – from her video statement." Brennan played video from one of Wolfe's accident reconstructions that showed plastic fragments flying away from the vehicle after impacting a crash dummy's arm. "When the taillight is shattered and it spreads through the air, does it have the potential to impale a person, for example, on their nose?" Brennan asked. "I think that would be unlikely," Wolfe replied. As part of the prosecution's case, Brennan played a clip of Read telling an interviewer she pulled a "piece of glass" out of O'Keefe's nose and that it started bleeding. Wolfe's task has been to discredit the prosecution's core allegation that Read slammed into O'Keefe in reverse with her 2021 Lexus LX 570 SUV and left him to die on the ground in a blizzard on Jan. 29, 2022. "Juries have great powers of observation, and a fundamental depth of experience seldom seen in American life," Lu told Fox News Digital. "Partially because of how many jurors there are. I predict that the jury will conclude that both accident reconstructionists' conclusions are not worthy of belief in a jury trial." GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB The defense is also aiming to sow reasonable doubt in the prosecution's crash experts, Dr. Judson Welcher and Shanon Burgess from a firm called Aperture. Welcher testified last week that he believes "[O'Keefe's injuries are] consistent with being struck by a Lexus and also contacting a hard surface, such as frozen ground." Wolfe found that the injuries were inconsistent when stacked up against the damage to Read's SUV as well as the damage to O'Keefe's clothing – which prosecutors allege had fragments of taillight plastic embedded in it. Lu said that he expects jury instructions to include a note that the experts don't decide the facts – jurors do. "Juries are not in the least bit cowed by experts," he said. "To the contrary, they view them with skepticism." Especially "hired guns," he added. Jurors will be looking at the case as a whole, but while Lu said he believes Brennan scored a victory on the day, the defense has a significant advantage. "The defense need not prove anything; they merely must establish reasonable doubt," said Mark Bederow, a New York City defense lawyer who is representing Canton blogger and Read ally Aidan Kearney. "But over the course of a few hours, Dr. Wolfe cast serious doubt by methodically dismantling the key premise of the prosecution case – through multiple scientific examinations and effective video he offered support for his opinion that the damage to the taillight was not consistent with the collision alleged by the prosecution." Read's team is expected to rest their case next week. She could face up to life in prison if convicted of the top charge.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store