
Benjamin Capps Papers
1946-1993

6.5 linear ft.
Accession Number: 93-24
Collection Number: AR363
Prepared by Shirley R. Rodnitzky
February 1995, revised 2002
CITATION: Benjamin Capps Papers, AR363, Box number, Folder number, Special Collections Division, The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries.
Benjamin Franklin Capps was born June 11, 1922, in Dundee, Texas, in the West Texas country he writes about. He grew up on a ranch near Archer City, Texas. After graduating from Archer City High School in May 1938, at age fifteen, Capps left home to attend Texas Technological College in Lubbock. After a year of college he served one year in the Civilian Conservation Corps. Capps then worked as a surveyor for the U.S. Department of Engineering in the construction of airfields in Colorado and Texas, and as a truck driver in the building of Lake Texoma. In 1942 he married Marie Thompson, whom he met in Colorado, and entered the U.S. Army Air Force. During World War II he flew forty bombing missions as the navigator of a B-24 Liberator in the Pacific and attained the rank of first lieutenant.
Thanks to the GI Bill, Capps was able to attend The University of Texas at Austin after the war. He graduated in 1948 with a B.A. in English and a Phi Beta Kappa key, and in 1949 he received his M.A. in English. After graduation Capps taught English and Journalism for two years at Northeastern State College in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. Teaching was time-consuming and did not allow him time to write and be with his family. In 1951, Capps left teaching to write full-time in Paris, Texas. A year later, his savings exhausted, he took a job as a machinist after he moved the family to Grand Prairie, Texas. He reasoned that such work would be different enough from writing fiction that it would not drain his creativity. During the years as a machinist and tool-and-die maker, he continued to write and publish short stories and articles in addition to accumulating a wealth of material on the Old West. With the help and support of his family, Capps left his mechanical trade in 1961 to become a full-time writer. In 1976 he returned briefly to teaching as the first writer-in-residence at UTA, where he taught a senior writing workshop and served as a consultant to the English Department. That year he co-edited, with Dr. Thomas Sutherland, the first book UTA published, Duncan Robinson: Texas Teacher and Humanist.
Capps' first novel, Hanging at Comanche Wells, a Ballantine paperback, was published in 1962. It related the tale of a valiant deputy helping to keep peace in a town awaiting the execution of a convicted hired gun. The Trail to Ogallala was Capps' first hardcover novel and established him as a major chronicler of the West. The story realistically dramatized a trail drive by focusing on moving a herd of cattle 1,500 miles to market. The novel received a Spur Award from the Western Writers of America and the Levi Strauss Golden Saddleman Award for its outstanding contribution to western literature in 1964. It was selected by the National Association of Independent Schools as one of the ten best books that year for pre-college readers. It was also selected as one of thirty-one books placed in the White House Library that year by the American Booksellers Association. Another novel, Sam Chance, profiled a West Texas cattle baron and won the Spur Award for 1965.
In 1969, The White Man's Road, the story of a Comanche half-breed trying to find his place in the world of western Oklahoma, won Capps his third Spur Award. It also won the Wrangler Award from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame and Western Heritage Center for the best western novel of the year. The True Memoirs of Charley Blankenship (1972) and Woman Chief (1980) were each one of three finalists for the Spur. True Memoirs is the light-hearted story of a runaway who "went west" as a boy and came back a man. Woman Chief is based on the story of a captive Gros Ventre girl who became a warrior chief in a band of the Crow tribe. The Warren Wagontrain Raid won the Wrangler Award in 1974 for the best western book of non-fiction and was also a finalist for the Spur.
Other Capps books include: The Brothers of Uterica (1967), which portrayed a common but almost forgotten ingredient of Western settlement, the socialist colony, and A Woman of the People (1966), the story of a white girl and her sister captured by Comanches. The Heirs of Franklin Woodstock, published in 1989, is Capps first contemporary novel. Set against West Texas ranch life, it explores the relationship between grown children and aging parents. Tales of the Southwest, a collection of short stories written over a span of forty years, was published in 1991. In addition to western novels, Capps is recognized as one of America's authorities on Indian life and culture. He produced two works on the American Indian for Time-Life Books, The Indian and The Great Chiefs.
Capps is also the author of numerous published short stories, articles, essays, and book reviews. In 1991 he won the Western Writers of America Spur Award for one of his short stories, "Cimarron, The Killer." He writes on many subjects and does not consider himself only a western writer, even though his greatest successes were western novels. However, he is primarily interested in the past and its influence on us today. Much of his writing's appeal lies in his knowledge of the Old West's folklore. According to Capps, his writing's aim is to be authentic and "to probe the human nature and human motives" involved in his stories. His works are painstakingly researched for historical accuracy and generally explore lesser known facets of the American frontier. The Western Literature Association honored Capps with the Distinguished Achievement Award in October 1986.
Benjamin Capps died December 23, 2001.
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Aids List Special Collections Home Page
Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
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Works by Benjamin Capps
Fiction:
Non-fiction:
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The Benjamin Capps Papers are arranged in seven series:
Series I. Diaries, 1946-1979. 1.5 inches (4 items). Arranged chronologically. Description of experiences and thoughts in notebook format. Includes a manuscript publication record. Dates of diaries overlap.
Series II. Correspondence, 1968-1993 (bulk 1974-1990). 5 inches (1 document box). Arranged alphabetically. Correspondence with friends, colleagues, and members of the Western Writers of America.
Series III. Plagiarism Case Files, 1980-1988 (bulk 1981-1983). 15 inches (3 document boxes). Arranged by document-type. Correspondence, legal documents, financial documents, essays, notes, statements, clippings, and exhibits. Includes an M.A. thesis about the case.
Series IV. Reviews, 1951-1992 (bulk 1964-1992). 5 inches (1 document box). Arranged alphabetically and chronologically. Primarily clippings divided into three subseries: general publicity, reviews about Capps' work, and reviews by Capps.
Series V. Literary Works, 1946-1991. 3.3 linear ft. (8 document boxes). Arranged chronologically and alphabetically. Manuscripts, typescripts, notebooks, galleys, clippings, and photocopied research materials of early unpublished stories up through his latest published work. Includes University of Texas at Austin classwork and teaching notes from Northeastern State College.
Series VI. Printed Material, 1965-1991. 5 items (l document box). Arranged by document-type. Award certificates and copies of Sacajewea.
Series VII. Oversize Material, 1869-1989. 10 inches (2 oversize boxes, 2 oversize folders). Chronological arrangement. Includes research materials, galleys, printed material, legal documents, maps, and a certificate.
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This second acquisition of Benjamin Capps Papers, 1946-1993, overlaps and supplements the division's earlier acquisition of his papers acquired in 1977. They were developed since the late seventies and include some material that has been in storage since the 1940s. The inclusive dates of Capps' papers do not reflect the dates of research materials, but rather the dates during which he produced and collected the materials. There are six and one half linear feet in sixteen document storage boxes of correspondence, legal and financial documents, manuscripts, typescripts, research materials, notes, galleys, and printed material. The collection was organized into seven series: diaries, correspondence, plagiarism case files, reviews, literary works, printed materials, and oversize materials.
Series I, diaries, 1946-1979, are notebooks in which Capps describes his feelings and experiences as a rookie schoolteacher, machinist, and full-time writer. They also contain a manuscript publication record in which he lists expenses and income related to writing, descriptions of family activities, studies of writing techniques, character descriptions, letter drafts, a biographical outline, and the story draft for "Pilgrimage of a Writer," a fictional autobiography.
Series II, correspondence, 1968-1993, contains letters exchanged with Henry Allen (pen name, Will Henry), Lawrence Clayton, Don Graham, Dorothy M. Johnson, Elmer Kelton, and C.L. Sonnichsen as well as officers and members of the Western Writers of America. Earlier correspondence with some of these writers can be found in his other collection. Of special interest is the correspondence with writers Henry Allen and Dorothy Johnson with whom he discusses the writing of western literature, other authors and their works, current projects, and his plagiarism case.
Series III, the plagiarism case files, 1980-1988 (bulk 1981-1983), is the second largest series. It contains the widest variety of materials, correspondence, legal and financial documents with accompanying exhibits, and printed materials. A few letters are from people who read Capps' work and noticed the similarity between his writings and the novel Sacajawea, by Anna Lee Waldo. Most of his time and energy from 1981 through June 1983 was involved in "the most outrageous case of plagiarism in the history of this country," according to Capps. Waldo and the publisher, Avon Books, were sued by Capps for copyright infringement of parts of several of his works that were used in Sacajawea. Capps has stated that the case exhausted him and caused him to be hospitalized for major surgery. A long recovery period was necessary. The settlement was finalized in June 1983. Capps agreed not to publicize the case, but because several scholars knew about it before the final agreement was settled, Capps believes that the details of the case should be available specifically for scholarly research.
The bulk of the correspondence in series III is between Capps and his attorney, Richard S. Pastore of Albert, Pastore & Ward, P.C., New York City, and his literary agent, Al Hart, of The Fox Chase Agency, New York City. Much of the correspondence with his agent, attorney, and friends discuss possible settlement amounts. The letters and contracts that reflect the final agreement are closed at this time for research to prevent them from being used by the news media until after Capps' death. An agreement stipulates that the "parties agree to keep confidential the terms of this agreement, including the amount of any payment or payments made. . . ." Included are the various court documents, proofs, essays, interrogatories, financial records, and comparisons of text (which Capps calls paste-ups) between his work and Lee's novel as well as text from other well-known authors, especially Jack London, James Michener, John Steinbeck, and Andrew Garcia. Also included is a copy of a 1986 M.A. thesis by Mary C. Simpson, Benjamin Capps and the Sacajawea Plagiarism Case.
Series IV, reviews, 1951-1992, are primarily in the form of clippings. They include general publicity about Capps, the writer, reviews of Capps' work in whole or in part, and reviews by Capps of other western writer's work. The general publicity files contain biographical information and an oral interview transcript by Joanna Gibson conducted in March 1978. The reviews of Capps' work are organized by the title of the work with a collection of essays about several of his works organized according to the journal title in which they appeared. Reviews by Capps of other authors' work is organized by the newspaper or journal in which they were published. Included there is a file of early rejection slips, 1951-1962, primarily for short story submissions to various publishers.
Series V, literary works, 1946-1991, the largest series, contains manuscripts, typescripts, galley sheets, research materials from published sources and various libraries, notebooks, printed material, letters, and clippings. The literary material is arranged in chronological order by publication date. Early unpublished materials, short stories, published and unpublished are arranged alphabetically by title. Most of the materials in the collection were created and published during the late 1970s to 1991. However, many early works that had been in storage are included. Short stories, essays, and classroom assignments for English and Journalism classes dominate the early materials. This material overlaps and repeats some of the same material from Capps first collection of papers, although they are, in many cases, different versions or drafts of those same stories. Class notes and exams for classes that Capps taught at Northeastern State College at Tahlequah, Oklahoma, demonstrate his philosophy of teaching and writing. Notes and research materials for Brothers of Uterica, Sam Chance, and The Warren Wagontrain Raid appear in this collection and in AR309. Parts of two unpublished novels, short stories, published and unpublished, are in both collections of his papers. Manuscripts, typescripts, galley sheets, notebooks, outlines, plans, and drafts pertaining to three novels published after 1979, Woman Chief, The Heirs of Franklin Woodstock, and Tales of the Southwest are included.
Ten notebooks placed at the end of the literary series did not fit exclusively into any of the previous categories. The notebooks contain a mixture of story plans, notes, essays, character descriptions, ideas, biographical information, and letter drafts pertaining to two or more of his works. Letter drafts in the notebooks include letters regarding the plagiarism case, reviews, and letters for which there is likely a typed copy in the appropriate series.
Series VI, printed materials, includes three award certificates, 1965-1991, and two editions of Sacajawea published in 1978 and 1980. Series VII, oversize materials, 1865-1989, contains photocopies of research materials, photostatic copies of post returns, 1871, and maps, 1869-1875, legal documents, printed materials, and galley proofs taken from other series and placed here due to the size limitations of the containers.
A list of books and periodicals that were removed from the collection to be cataloged individually for Special Collections can be found in the Materials Removed List at the end of this finding aid. The collection was originally contained in twenty-one boxes of varying sizes. Correspondence, plagiarism case files, reviews, short stories, and manuscripts were received in labeled folders, one certificate was framed, maps were rolled, and post returns were folded. Several documents, research materials, photocopied articles, the diaries, notebooks, and galley sheets, as well as printed materials such as books, flyers, periodicals, and booklets, were received packed in boxes but unfoldered. Original folder titles were retained, and the remaining materials were placed in folders and combined with related materials. The series were organized by the processor by document-type and subject as developed by the creator. Basically, this collection is organized similar to AR309, Capps' earlier papers.
Personal material such as diaries, correspondence, and the plagiarism case files were placed before Capps' literary works and materials related to those works both published and unpublished. Oversize materials from all series were placed in larger containers at the end of the collection. Document out sheets in the original locations show the original placement of these documents. Contents of all files were arranged in chronological order. Several files, especially in the plagiarism case series were very large. These files were divided into two or sometimes three smaller files. Large documents and the rolled maps were humidified and flattened before they were housed. Duplicate photocopied letters and documents, and clippings were discarded. Most of these duplicates appeared in the plagiarism case series. Clippings were photocopied on acid-free paper and the originals were discarded.
Biographical information about Capps, his works, and writing experiences can be found throughout the collection; in his diaries, in reviews, and general publicity clippings, in his letter files, in his literary files, and in his notebooks. Although they defy catagorizing, the notebooks should not be ignored by the serious Capps researcher. They contain a wealth of information about Capps' life, the development of his style, and his methods.
These papers are of great value for law students, journalism students, and students of literature and creative writing.
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
The Benjamin Capps Papers were purchased by The University of Texas at Arlington. Gerald D. Saxon, Assistant Director for Special Collections, received the materials from Benjamin Capps at his home in Grand Prairie, Texas, on June 10, 1993.
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
Permission to publish material from the Benjamin Capps Papers must be obtained from the Special Collections Division. Approval to publish unpublished material from the Benjamine Capps Papers in Special Collections should come from Mrs. Marie Capps.
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
See also collection AR309, the Benjamin Capps Papers, acquired by the Special Collections Division in 1977. There is overlap in the correspondence, publicity, and literary works files of the two collections.
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
Box 1
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Series II. Correspondence, 1968-1993
Box 2
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Series III. Plagiarism Case
Files, 1980-1988
9-14. Correspondence, 1980-1982(April). Letters between
Capps and attorneys, literary agent, and other interested parties. Includes examples of
copyright infringement.
Box 3
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 4
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 5
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Series IV. Reviews, 1951-1992: A. Reviews of Capps' Work, 1963-1992
Series IV. Reviews, 1951-1992: B. Reviews by Capps, 1951-1989
Box 6
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Series V. Literary Works, 1946-1991
Box 7
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 8
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 9
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 10
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 11
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 12
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 13
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Box 14
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
1-3. Notebooks, 1982-1989, undated. Essays, story
drafts, drafts of letters, descriptions of characters, and ideas.
Series VI. Printed Materials, 1965-1991
Series VII. Oversize Materials, 1869-1989
Box 15
Folder Title, Dates, and Description
Oversize Box 187
Garrett Oversize (Drawer GO2)
Oversize Maps in Cartographic History Library
Drawer 92/7
Drawer 19/4
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
Periodicals
Cisco: Cisco Junior College,
vol. 1, no. 1, May 1984. (Contains " Mesquite Country: Benjamin
Cappss Unpublished First Novel" by Don Graham)
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Series I Series II
Series III Series IV Series V
Series VI Series VII Materials
Removed
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