Career
He also wrote and published a large number of love poems for Miriam including well-known pieces like "23rd Street Runs Into Heaven."
Miriam met Patchen in Boston in 1933 at a friend"s Christmas party. At the time, Miriam was an undergraduate at Massachusetts State College in Amherst. The two kept in touch and Patchen started sending her the first of many love poems.
They soon fell in love and decided to get married.
Then they relocated to the West Coast, living in San Francisco and later, towards the end of Patchen"s life, they settled into a cottage house in Palo Alto where Patchen died. In addition to their financial struggles, the couple had to contend with serious medical problems as well.
Kenneth Patchen struggled with chronic pain from a back injury for many years before he finally became incapacitated when his injury was severely aggravated by a botched surgery in 1959. To help make ends meet at this point, Miriam also had to take a job working in retail at a local department store.
At the same time, Miriam also had serious health problems, including diabetes and multiple sclerosis.
After her husband"s death on January 8, 1972, she became an activist for peace and an advocate for her husband"s poetry. Laurent B. Frantz, a civil rights activist, became her companion until he died on September 20, 1998. In 1998, Miriam was the subject of a short documentary film by Kim Roberts titled Miriam Is Not Amused.
She was born Miriam Oikemus in Waverley, Belmont, Massachusetts on 28 September 1914 and died in Palo Alto, California on 6 March 2000.