William Stafford at One Hundred
Honoring the legacy of a beloved professor and an esteemed poet

by Shelly Meyer
At the centennial of William Stafford’s birth, Lewis & Clark honors a beloved professor and an esteemed 20th-century poet.
When I first moved to Oregon in the late 1990s, I was not familiar with the work of William Stafford. When I admitted this to my then supervisor, a highly intelligent, well-read woman, I saw her blanch. I thought to myself, I’m lucky this failing was uncovered after I was hired.
Since that time, I’ve had the pleasure of discovering Stafford’s work as a poet, as a teacher, as a pacifist—and as the patriarch of an incredibly lively family of gifted individuals. Along the way, I found the writing of his son Kim, a marvelous poet and teacher in in his own right, who works tirelessly as his father’s literary executor. I admired the creativity of his daughters, Barbara and Kit, and felt profound sadness in the loss of his oldest son, Bret. I marveled at the fortitude of his wife, Dorothy, now in her 90s, a vibrant presence who has continued to live life fully after her husband’s death. Somehow, it feels like I know them—that they are family.
Indeed, they are important members of the Lewis & Clark family. Bill’s rising reputation—winning the National Book Award in 1963 and becoming poet laureate, first of the United States and then of Oregon—contributed, in large measure, to the growing stature of the college. It’s estimated that he taught more than 2,000 students during his 30-year tenure on Palatine Hill.
Today, his legacy is still very much a part of Lewis & Clark. The college is privileged to be home to the William Stafford Archives, which contain his vast collection of private papers, publications, photographs, recordings, and teaching materials. And his work and approach to writing are still taught in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Education and Counseling.
Over the course of this year and next, Lewis & Clark will host a variety of activities to mark the 100th year of Stafford’s birth. If you are a confirmed Stafford-phile, you’ll want to participate. However, if Stafford’s name is less familiar to you, as it once was to me, I encourage you to get to know him through his writings and these events.
As an introduction to the college’s centennial activities, we’ve asked a few key individuals to reflect on William Stafford so that we may get to know him better. What was important to him? How did he approach the writing life? How does his legacy still enrich and inspire us? Why will we be celebrating his 100th birthday with such enthusiasm in 2014?
—Shelly Meyer, Editor
Reflections on William Stafford
Your Own Way… Some Timely Advice From the Old Man
The Mutual Parade of Our Life
A Poetry Ambassador
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U.S. Poet Laureate (2010–11) W.S. Merwin and poet Carolyn Kizer at the National Council of Teachers of English conference, Rice University, November 1966. -
Richard Hugo, 1971. Although Stafford was a conscientious objector and Hugo was a bomber pilot during World War II, the two Pacific Northwest poets had deep respect for one another. -
Ted Hughes, Washington D.C., spring 1971. One of the greatest poets of his generation, Hughes was an early admirer of Stafford’s poetry. He and Thom Gunn featured Stafford in the Faber & Faber anthology Five American Poets (1963), which introduced Stafford to a British audience. -
Kenny Johnson, June 1988. Johnson was a Lewis & Clark English professor from 1947 to 1978 and one of Stafford’s closest friends. -
Nobel Prize–winning novelist Toni Morrison at a literature panel for the National Endowment of the Arts, New York, December 1973. -
George Starbuck, 1966. Starbuck was a poet who forged a connection with Stafford after being fired from SUNY Buffalo in 1963 for refusing to sign a loyalty oath. Stafford himself refused to sign a loyalty oath in 1951 after being offered a teaching position at the University of Colorado contingent upon his signature. -
Counterculture icon and author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey, 1974.
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