Summary Information
Abstract
Writer, counter-culture figure and associate of Beat Generation writers such as
Allen Ginsberg, Peter Orlovksy, and Jack Kerouac.
At a Glance
| Call No.: | MS#0635 |
| Bib ID: | 4078923 View CLIO record |
| Creator(s): | Huncke, Herbert. |
| Title: | Herbert E. Huncke
Papers
1946-1973.
|
| Physical description: | 2 linear ft. (3 document boxes)
|
| Language(s): | Material is in English.
|
| Access: |
This collection is located on-site.
This collection has no restrictions.
More information » |
Arrangement
Arrangement
This collection is arranged in II series:
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Description
Scope and Content
This collection contains correspondence, journal entries, manuscript writings, and
miscellaneous notes.
Series I: Correspondence, 1946-1973
Series I consists of correspondence sent to and written by Herbert Huncke. The
correspondence, much composed while Huncke was in jail, documents his varied
relationships with his friends and cohorts, as well as shedding some insight onto
his writings.
The correspondence is arranged alphabetically by composer of the item, and
chronologically within each writer.
Series II: Writings, 1948-1971
Series II is comprised of Herbert Huncke's writings, including manuscripts,
notebooks, and journals. Many of the notebooks include both fragments of published
and unpublished manuscripts as well as general notes and daily observations.
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Using the Collection
RBML
Access Restrictions
This collection is located on-site.
This collection has no restrictions.
Restrictions on Use
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. The responsibility to secure
copyright permission rests with the patron.
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Herbert Huncke papers; Box and Folder;
Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
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About the Finding Aid / Processing Information
Columbia University Libraries. Rare Book and
Manuscript Library; machine readable finding aid created by Columbia University
Libraries Digital Library Program Division
Processing Information
Cataloged 07/--/89 Christina Hilton Fenn
Papers processed 10/--/2009 Carrie Hintz
Finding aid written 11/--/2009 Carrie Hintz
Machine readable finding aid generated from MARC-AMC source via XSLT conversion
March 11, 2010
Finding aid written in English.
2010-03-11
xml document instance created by Carrie Hintz
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Subject Headings
The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches at Columbia University through the Archival Collections Portal and through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, as well as ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.
All links open new windows.
Genre/Form
| Heading | CUL Archives: Portal | CUL Collections: CLIO | Nat'l / Int'l Archives: ArchiveGRID |
|---|
| Diaries. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
Subjects
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History / Biographical Note
History
Herbert Huncke was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts in 1915,
but moved as a young boy to Detroit and then Chicago where his father owned H.S. Huncke,
a company that distributed machine parts.
Though Huncke grew up in a comfortable middle class household
(a history he recounts in some of his pieces of writing, most notably "Love" and "Song
of the Self"), his family life was not particularly smooth and he often ran away from
home. When he was 17 he went to New York for the first time and, after a few years
drifting around the country working odd jobs, he relocated to the city more-or-less
permanently in 1939.
Over the next several years, Huncke, a junkie, drug-dealer,
hustler, and small time thief, became deeply involved in the street scene that had
emerged around Times Square. Though he left New York for a time during World War II to
serve as a merchant marine, his return to the city meant a return to drugs and the
demimonde of 42nd Street. It was as a bisexual Times Square hustler that Huncke drew
Alfred Kinsey's interest and in his capacity as petty thief and mover of stolen goods
that Huncke first became affiliated with the William S. Burroughs. In 1945 Burroughs
approached Huncke's roommate about selling a shotgun and a cache of morphine syrettes.
Though initially Huncke was deeply suspicious of the clean-cut Burroughs, the two became
close friends and Huncke was adopted into Burroughs's group of young friends, including
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg.
Huncke, with his history of prostitution, drug-use, and other
criminal activity became a sort of talisman of authenticity for the young writers. They
adopted his hipster street lingo--Huncke reputedly coined the term "beat," and his
drug-fueled lifestyle and used him as an urban hipster muse (Huncke appears as a
character in many of Kerouac's works, as well as Burroughs's
Junky,
and is mentioned in Ginsberg's "Howl.").
In the 1940s Huncke began to write more seriously himself,
composing many of the stories and journal entries that he would later publish. In 1947
he briefly moved to the Texas farm where Burroughs and his wife Jean Vollmer were
growing marijuana. He returned to New York where, in 1949, he was arrested for theft and
did a stint in Sing Sing. He was released in 1954, but ran afoul of the law again the
next year and landed back in prison, where he remained until 1959.
Upon his return to New York he reconnected with his beat
friends, living for a time in the same building as Allen Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky
(with whom Huncke had a brief affair). He moved around New York's Lower East Side for
most of the rest of his life. He met Louis Cartwright in the 1970s and Cartwright became
Huncke's lover and primary caretaker for most of the remainder of Huncke's life. Huncke
enrolled in a methadone program in an attempt to kick his heroin habit, but the program
was never fully successful.
Though he began his writing in the 1940s, he found it very
difficult to write in prison, so did very little writing during the 1950s. He gained
some popularity giving live reading in New York City, but was not published until 1965
when Diane DiPrima's Poets Press published excerpts from his journal. His story
"Alvarez" was published in
Playboy
in 1968 and he had
small editions of his work released through small presses with
Elsie John and Joey Martinez
released in 1979 and
The
Evening Sun Turned Crimson
in 1980. His autobiography
Guilty of Everything: The Autobiography of Herbert Huncke
was released in
1990 and a posthumous collection of his work,
The Herbert Huncke
Reader
was published in 1997.
Herbert Huncke died in 1996 at the age of 81.
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