Background
Carlyle “Carl” McKinley was born on November 22, 1847 at Newnan, Coweta County, Georgia. He was the son of Charles G. and Frances (Jackson) McKinley. He was also known as Carl McKinley.
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essayist journalist writer poet
Carlyle “Carl” McKinley was born on November 22, 1847 at Newnan, Coweta County, Georgia. He was the son of Charles G. and Frances (Jackson) McKinley. He was also known as Carl McKinley.
McKinley entered the Confederate army with a student company and subsequently saw active service in the battles around Atlanta. He entered the Columbia Theological Seminary at Columbia, S. C. , where he graduated with distinction in 1874.
After the Civil War McKinley became a cotton broker in Augusta, Georgia, and later worked in the United States marshal's office at Savannah, Ga. Owing to a change in his theological views he refrained from entering the ministry and became a teacher in the school of Hugh S. Thompson at Columbia. During this teaching his interest in literature and writing became aroused, and in 1875 he was made the Columbia correspondent for the Charleston News and Courier. In 1879 he went to Washington to be correspondent for the paper and in 1881 went to Charleston to become associate editor. This position he held until failing health just before his death caused his retirement.
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McKinley's verse, published in Selections from the Poems of Carlyle McKinley (1904), is of great beauty. It is mostly subjective and reflective in theme and it exhibits the bravery and the hopefulness of the Southern writers during the Reconstruction period. He sometimes indulged, however, in the romantic, satiric, and humorous types of poetry, but he was always restrained and had a delicate sense of humor. The charm of his expression of his own faith and optimism made for him a place as one of the chief Southern poets of the period.
McKinley was married to Elizabeth H. Bryce, the daughter of Campbell R. Bryce.