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CWC HistoryCentral Coast Writers BranchCalifornia Writers Club |
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In 2006 the California Writers Club celebrated its 97th birthday with a membership of nearly 1000, making it the largest writers organization in the state. The Central Coast Writers branch of CWC received its charter in July, 2002 and is proud to represent the California Writers Club From San Jose to San Louis Obispo. The California Writers Club grew out of the turn of the century literary movement in the San Francisco Bay area where the literary circle at the Coppa Club included Jack London, poet George Sterling and short story writer Herman Whitaker. From these informal gatherings came the Press Club of Alameda, a faction of which in 1909 formed the California Writers Club. Austin Lewis, an English civil libertarian, was the first president. The Club incorporated in 1913, choosing as its motto "Sail On!" from Joaquin Miller's poem, "Columbus." The Club goal is to promote fellowship and personal and professional growth of writers. Between 1912 and 1914, active membership grew from 60 to 118. Early honorary members included Joaquin Miller (Songs of the Sierra), environmentalist John Muir, Ina Coolbrith (first California poet laureate), and journalist Charles Fletcher Lummis. Jack London, an occasional speaker at the Club, and his friend George Sterling were also honorary members. In the 30's, historical novelist and feminist Gertrude Atherton (A Daughter of the Vine) and Kathleen Norris (Certain People of Importance) were admitted as honorary members. Large banquets and elegant affairs characterized club activities in the 1920's and 1930's. In the early 1920's, Berkeley poet Charles Keeler (The Simple Home) served as president and encouraged more emphasis on poetry and dramatic arts. The Club expanded in Northern California during these decades. The Club soon began publishing members' works. WEST WINDS, a hardcover collection of fiction illustrated by California artists, was published in 1914, and went into eight printings. Jack London and Rebecca N. Porter were among its contributors. WEST WINDS: A Book of Verse, came out in 1925, with poetry by Ina Coolbrith, George Sterling, Edwin Markham, Charles and Ormeida Keeler, and seventy other members. Six years later, WEST WINDS 111- A Book of Fiction, was published with contributions by Agnes Morley Cleveland (No Life for a Lady) and Charles Caldwell Dobie (San Francisco Tales). Other poetry collections followed during the 1930's. The Club tradition of planting trees to honor California writers and poets began in 1930. The "Writers Memorial Grove" at Joaquin Miller Park in Oakland is on land which originally belonged to Miller, who dreamed of establishing a memorial for artists and writers there. The first trees planted honored Joaquin Miller, Bret Harte, Charles Warren Stoddard (South Sea Idyls), Edward Roland Sill (A Fool's Prayer), Ina Coolbrith, Jack London, Mark Twain, Charles Fletcher Lummis, and Edwin Markham. The Berkeley Branch has since added trees in recognition of Dashiel Hammett, Gertrude Stein, and historians Will and Ariel Durant. In the 1940's, the site was named "Woodminster" and expanded by the addition of an amphitheater. At the 1939-1940 Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island, the Club presented weekly literary talks which were well received. As a outgrowth of these literary events, the Club sponsored its first Writers Conference in Oakland in 1941. By the 1950's these educational meetings had become annual affairs. The location shifted from large auditoriums to college campuses in the 1960's -1970's and then to the Asilomar Conference Center in Pacific Grove on the Monterey Peninsula in 2000. Many branches sponsor their own conferences, workshops, and all have regular member programs. Today, the fifteen California Writers Club branches and their members continue to: "Sail On!" exploring new literary horizons. Branches: Berkeley, Central Coast Writers, East Sierra, High Desert, Gold Country, Inland Empire, Marin, Mt Diablo, Orange County, Peninsula, Redwood, Sacramento, San Fernando Valley, South Bay and Writers of Kern (Bakersfield). |