Harold "Hal" Glen Borland was a well-known American author, journalist and naturalist.
Background
Borland was born on the plains in Sterling, Nebraska, to Sarah M (née Clinaburg) and William Arthur Borland, both of whom owned and published a weekly newspaper in Flagler, Colorado, where the family moved to homestead when Borland was 10.
Education
After attending local schools, he studied at the University of Colorado from 1918-1920, majoring in engineering. lieutenant was during this time he realized his true calling was as an author, and he soon moved to New York where he studied journalism and graduated from Columbia University in 1923 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature.
Career
In addition to writing many non-fiction and fiction books about the outdoors, he was a staff writer and editorialist for The New York Times. While there, he held jobs at the Denver Post and the Flagler News. Borland started writing as a journalist for publications such as The Denver Post and the Flagler News.
While attending Columbia University he wrote for the Brooklyn Times, the United Press, and King Features Service.
After graduation Borland worked for a variety of newspapers across the United States, eventually settling in Philadelphia and working for Curtis Newspapers, the Philadelphia Morning Sun, and the Philadelphia Morning Ledger from 1926 until 1937. In 1937 Borland began writing for The New York Times, first as a staff writer for The New York Times Sunday Magazine (1937-1943) and then in 1942 as an editorial writer for The New York Sunday Times, a position he held until his death in 1978.
While at The Times, Borland began writing about his experience as an outdoorsman in a series of editorials that were later compiled into two books He wrote similar pieces for the Berkshire Eagle (1958-1978), Pittsburgh Press (1966-1978), and Torrington Register (1971-1978).
Borland also wrote short stories, poetry, novels (including westerns under the pseudonym Ward West), biographical novels, non-fiction, articles for a variety of magazines, and one play.