The New York Times
June 6, 1900

Stephen Crane Dead

                OBITUARY

                By THE NEW YORK TIMES

                    ADENWEILER, Baden, June 5.--Stephen Crane, the American author
                    and war correspondent, died here to-day, aged thirty years.

                Stephen Crane stepped early into literary notice because of his power in word
                painting. "The Red Badge of Courage," his first published novel, drew
                approving comment from various quarters, and some speculation regarding
                the author. In England the opinion was advanced that he must be a veteran
                soldier, since no one who had not been under fire could so well describe a
                battle. Mr. Crane dismissed this theory by saying that he got his ideas from
                the football field.

                After this introduction, in 1895, to book readers, Mr. Crane issued a book
                called "Maggie: A Girl of the Streets," which had been written by him when he
                was about sixteen years old and printed privately. In the five years between
                these books he occupied himself with miscellaneous newspaper and sketch
                work in this city, printing among other things verses entitled "The Black
                Riders, and Other Lines." He printed "George's Mother" in 1896, and "The
                Little Regiment," a war story, and "The Third Violet," in 1897, his books by
                that time having vogue both here and abroad.

                "The Red Badge of Courage" was written while he was in New York writing
                sketches for the various newspapers and in very indifferent financial
                circumstances. His inspiration for it came from an artist friend whose studio he
                was visiting. Crane had been reading a war story in a current magazine, which
                he finally tossed aside in disgust, saying that he could write a better story
                himself.

                "Why don't you do it, then?" said his friend.

                "I will," said Crane, snatching up his hat and leaving the room. The next three
                days he secured all the books he could find on the civil war in the various
                public libraries and read carefully the accounts of several battles. He knew
                little or nothing about the civil war when he started, but when he had finished
                his studies he was thoroughly imbued with local color. The story which he
                produced was refused by all the publishers, but was afterward accepted in a
                condensed form for $90 by a newspaper syndicate.

                When the Graeco-Turkish war broke out he was in London. He went into the
                field as correspondent for The Westminster Gazette and The New York
                Journal. After that he started for Cuba with a filibustering expedition, which
                was wrecked off the American coast. He then went to Cuba as The Journal's
                correspondent and witnessed the operations at Santiago and Havana and
                afterward in Porto Rico.

                After this experience he came to this city, intending to engage here and in
                London in book writing. While looking in the Tenderloin for "color" for a story
                of the seamy side of life he was arrested and had an experience with the
                police. In court the following day he pleaded his case so well that the
                Magistrate released him, and also the young woman arrested with him. He
                wrote in 1898 'The Open Boat" and "The Eternal Patience."

                For the last eighteen months Mr. Crane lived in England, having made his
                home on an estate in Essex since last Fall. He wrote, after leaving here, two
                novels and a volume of verse called "War Is Kind," all three books inspired
                by the Turkish war, and a volume of short stories entitled "The Monster." His
                last work, "Whilomville Stores," a series of tales of child life, is now in course
                of publication in American magazines.

                Mr. Crane was born in Newark, N. J., in 1871, and was the son of the Rev.
                Dr. J. I. Crane. He attended Lafayette College and Syracuse University, but
                was not graduated from either.