Mathilde Jane Whitehead1

F, #63481, b. 13 February 1925

Family: Ralph John Houghton Jr b. 14 Apr 1920, d. 1 Jun 2009

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
BirthFeb 13, 1925Canton, IL, USA1
MarriageJun 4, 19462
ImmigrationKenosha, WI, USA
Living2013Kenosha, WI, USA
ObituaryJan 16, 2014Mathilde Jane Houghton 1925 - 2014 A supportive wife, outstanding mother and grandmother, passed away peacefully Tuesday evening in her home at Harmony Assisted Living Center. She was born Mathilde Jane Whitehead, in Canton, Ill., on Feb. 13, 1925, to parents Raymond and Arminta Dorcas Whitehead (nee Ross). While attending college at the Illinois State Normal College, she met the love of her life Ralph John Houghton. The two were married in 1946 and moved to Kenosha in 1955. They had five children. With a Bachelors Degree in education, Jane was a keyboarding instructor at Tremper High School and later at Gateway Technical College. She retired in 1987.
Jane was well known for hosting entertaining parties at her and Ralphs former residence on 7th Ave. The original Band Booster Ice Cream Socials were held in their front yard. Jane was a singer, and performed in many harmony groups over the years. Through the 1990s she sang with The Sweet Adelines, a senior womans chorus. Jane and Ralph were instrumental in the creation of the Kenosha Band Shell. She loved family, and was always there for her children and grandchildren, traveling to see them, looking after them in whatever way she could, doing fun activities, and watching the Packers with them. Jane is preceded in death by her father and mother; husband; daughter, Mary (James) Erickson; son-in-law, John (Kathy) Spiro, and close cousin Renick Ross. She is survived by her sons, John (Janey) Houghton, David (Koreen) Houghton, and Steve Houghton, daughter Kathy Spiro, and cousin Janet Ross. Also surviving are 16 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren. Our matriarch, she will be greatly missed. The Houghton family would like to thank the staff of Harmony and the Hospice Alliance for their love and care during Janes final years. Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Saturday, Jan. 18 at St. Marks Catholic Church at 2 p.m. Interment will be private at St. James Cemetery. Visitation will be held on Saturday at the church from 12:30 p.m. until the time of the Mass. In lieu of flowers, memorials to Hospice Alliance would be appreciated by the family. Published online at KenoshaNews.com on Jan. 16, 20141
ParentsDRaymond and Arminta Dorcas Whitehead (nee Ross)

Citations

  1. [S93] Newspaper Obituary, http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kenoshanews/obituary.aspx
  2. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

John Houghton1

M, #63482

Family: Janey (?)

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birth
Marriage2
Living2013

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S93] Newspaper Obituary, http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kenoshanews/obituary.aspx

David Michael Houghton1

M, #63483, b. circa 1949

Family 1: Elizabeth E. Needham b. c 1953

Family 2: Koreen (?)

  • Marriage*: David Michael Houghton married Koreen (?)3

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birthcirca 19491
Marriage2
Marriage3
Residence2013Kenosha, WI, USA

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S1392] Intelius, online http://www.intelius.com/
  3. [S93] Newspaper Obituary, http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kenoshanews/obituary.aspx

Kathy A. Houghton

F, #63484, b. circa 1947

Family: John Spiro d. b 2013

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birthcirca 1947
Marriage1
Living2013

Stephen Ross Houghton

M, #63485, b. circa 1954

Family: Margaret M. Quigley b. c 1955

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Birthcirca 19542
MarriageJun 17, 1978Dallas Co., TX, USA2
Living2013

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S97] Marriage Certificate, Texas Marriage Collection, 1814-1909 and 1966-2002 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005. Houghton Surname Search.

Mary Sue Houghton1

F, #63486, b. 29 July 1957, d. 22 February 2013

Family: James N. Erickson b. c 1957

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
BirthJul 29, 1957Kenosha, WI, USA1,2
MarriageOct 22, 19882
DeathFeb 22, 2013Kenosha, WI, USA2
ObituaryFeb 27, 2013Kenosha, WI, USA, Mary Sue (Houghton) Erickson 1957 - 2013

Mary Sue (Houghton) Erickson, 55, passed away peacefully on the evening of Feb. 22, 2013, at her home in the presence of her beloved husband and four children.

Born on July 29, 1957, in Kenosha, Wis., to Ralph and Jane Houghton, Mary lived a good and fruitful life and will always be remembered as someone who constantly encouraged and lead by example. A graduate of Mary D. Bradford High School she attended the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Mary met her loving husband and best friend of 24 years, James N. Erickson, while living in Kenosha. They were united in marriage on Oct. 22, 1988.

After attending University of Wisconsin Whitewater, Mary earned a certificate and license to teach birth to 4k education and eventually a certificate in preschool administration. Mary was a licensed pre-school teacher for 27 years in Kenosha, Wis., and ran a home daycare center for 11 years. In 1994 she was awarded Pre-School Teacher of the Year for the greater South-eastern Wisconsin area. She then worked as a three and four year old teacher at Pleasant Prairie Renaissance School specializing in Reggio instruction. She eventually served as director of Pleasant Prairie Renaissance School for six years before finally being employed by the Kenosha Unified as an educator at the Chavez Center for learning.

She was an avid supporter of fine arts in the Kenosha Unified School system and served on the Band Boosters organization and as a band chaperone for the better part of two decades. Mary also loved watching and attending Packer games with her husband and family. Over the course of their marriage Mary and Jim held many social events at their home as they loved to entertain and offer hospitality. In her later years, Mary became quite the gardener and was always eager for spring so that she could begin her work! Above all else, Mary was love. Her faith in a promise after death gave her a joy and compassion that made even her last days seem like a celebration. The world had more joy because of Mary. Her memory will live on in every single person she encountered and she will always be remembered as someone who loved unconditionally.

Mary is survived by her loving mother, Jane Houghton of Kenosha, Wis; her husband, James Erickson; her children, John ( Andrea ) Anderson, Andrew Anderson, Janelle Erickson (Nate Buchholz), Julie Erickson, and her soon to be born grandsons, Johnathon Joseph Michael Anderson and Owen Ross Anderson. She is also survived by her siblings, John ( Janey ) Houghton, David ( Koreen ) Houghton, Kathy Spiro and Steve Houghton.

Visitation with the family will be held from 1 p.m - 2 p.m. followed by a memorial service at Crossway Community Church at 13905 75th St., Bristol, Wis., on Saturday, March 2, at 2 p.m. Published online at KenoshaNews.com on February 27, 20132

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S93] Newspaper Obituary, http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kenoshanews/obituary.aspx

Eric David Houghton1

M, #63487, b. circa 1974

Family: Nicole Sutton b. c 1974

Biography

Corresponded with authorY
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
Birthcirca 1974Kenosha, WI, USA1
MarriageMay, 20011
Address20113912 8th Ave, Kenosha, WI, USA, e.houghton@sbcglobal.net.
http://ehoughton.com/1
BiographyBio The Bio of 2004 is down there. Since then everything has changed. I finally returned to my home and it was not pretty. Fortunately I like to hang paintings at eye level because the water only got four feet in the house. The paintings in the French Quarter looked fresh. I sold my cart to a man on the street. He's giving it to his son to sell art on Jackson Square. I'm still painting in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Yes, yes, the kids are fine and Nicole is very fine. And the cats came with.

October 2005 The thread that has bound all my experience in New Orleans has been paint. I moved here in 98 and painted my landlord’s house. I got with a French Quarter restoration crew and slapped paint on a few more places. I became an art teacher for the unspeakable Orleans Parish School District. My classroom had a lot of paint around it by the time I was asked to leave. I tried my hand on Jackson Square, and now it’s been four years.

Nicole and I have been together eight years - got married May 2001. Do you like babies? Our daughter Tabitha and our son Gavin appear numerously in the Photo Gallery. They are not for sale. So anyway, right now I’m painting our house. And the cat came back.

Eric Houghton, 2004
Contributn

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S1392] Intelius, online http://www.intelius.com/

Adam M. Houghton1

M, #63488, b. circa 1976

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Birthcirca 1976Kenosha, WI, USA
Living2011Milwaukee, WI
Kenosha, WI
Eau Claire, WI
Menomonee Falls, WI

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

Katie Houghton1

F, #63489

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birth

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

David Charles Houghton1

M, #63490, b. circa 1972

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birthcirca 1972

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S93] Newspaper Obituary, http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kenoshanews/obituary.aspx

Matthew Houghton1

M, #63491

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birth

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

Sarah Houghton1

F, #63492

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Birth

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

Nicole Sutton1

F, #63493, b. circa 1974

Family: Eric David Houghton b. c 1974

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Birthcirca 1974
MarriageMay, 20011

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Eric Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

James P. Houghton1

M, #63494

Biography

Corresponded with authorY
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
AddressSep 20, 2002jhoughton@modrall.com1

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from James P. Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.

Rev. John William Houghton Ph.D.1

M, #63495, b. 24 July 1953

Biography

Corresponded with authorY
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
NotableY
BirthJul 24, 1953South Bend, IN, USA2
Adoptioncirca 1954
Graduation1994Medieval Insitute, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, IN, USA, John William Houghton, Ph.D. 1994 * Dissertation: “Bede’s Exegetical Theology: Ideas of the Church in the Acts Commentaries of St. Bede the Venerable” * Advisor: John Cavadini
OccupationSep 20, 2002Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Co., LA, USA, Chaplain, Chair, Department of Religious Studies,The Episcopal High School of Baton Rouge1

Addressbetween Sep 20, 2002 and Dec 14, 20033200 Woodland Ridge Boulevard, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish, LA, USA, numenor@aya.yale.edu
houghtonj@ehsbr.org1




Author2005Rough Magicke
Retirementcirca 2018
Contributn
NoteOur Indiana Houghtons come from two brothers, James and John, born in the late 1790's in Swanwick, in the Parish of Titchfield, Hampshire, where their father was the current holder of the Manor Farm (now a handsome B&B). The Houghton line in that part of Hampshire--the Meon Valley--is pretty well-documented back to the 1400's through the work of my cousin Miss Gwen Houghton, of Durley, and her researcher Ms. Pamela Peskett, sometime Mayor of Winchester (the Pesketts themselves have a connection by marriage with the Houghtons). Indeed, we had a family reunion there last Easter, with representatives from the US, Canada and Australia, as well as the UK lot.
Notableauthor, Medieval scholar, and Tolkein expert
BiographyJohn William Houghton grew up in Culver, Indiana (a town his family founded in 1844), and was graduated from Culver Military Academy in 1971. A prize-winning historian with degrees from Harvard, Yale, Indiana and Notre Dame universities, he has taught English and Religious Studies, served as a school chaplain, and contributed to both Tolkien the Medievalist and The Harper Collins Encyclopedia of Catholicism. He is now an Episcopal minister.

John William Houghton, Ph.D.
john_houghton_AB75 [at] post.harvard.edu

Education:

* Hillcrest Medical Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Clinical Pastoral Education Internship, 2004
* The University of Notre Dame, Medieval Institute, M.M.S., 1991; Ph.D., 1994

Dissertation: Bede's Exegetical Theology: Ideas of the Church in the Acts Commentaries of St. Bede the Venerable (Director, John Cavadini)
* Yale Divinity School, M.A.R. summa cum laude with concentration in systematics, 1989
* Berkeley Divinity School at Yale, Diploma in Anglican Studies, 1989
* Indiana University, A.M. in English, 1977
* Harvard College, A.B. cum laude in English and American Language and Literature, 1975



Academic Employment:

* 2005- : Chair, Department of English
The Canterbury School, Fort Wayne, IN
* 1999-2004: Chaplain; Chair, Department of Religious Studies; Director, Honors Diploma Program; Instructor in English and Religion
The Episcopal High School of Baton Rouge, Baton Rouge, LA
* 1994-1999: Instructor in English and History
Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School, Ladue, MO
* 1993-1994: Teaching Fellow, Freshman Writing Seminar
University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
* 1978-1987: Instructor in English and Theology; Neville-Parry Chair in English and Department Chairman; Chair, Faculty Executive Committee; Chair, Faculty Advisory Committee on Search for a Headmaster
John Burroughs School, Ladue, MO
* 1977-1978: Instructor in English
Riverside Military Academy, Gainesville, GA
* 1975-1976: Assistant Instructor in English; Assistant Counselor
Culver Military Academy, Culver, IN

Academic Publications:

* “Tolkien, King Alfred and Boethius: Platonist Views of Evil in The Lord of the Rings,” with Neal K. Keesee, Ph.D., Tolkien Studies 2 (2005), 131-159.
* Abstracts for The Year’s Work in Old English Studies, 2003 (for 2000).
* “Twice-Told Tales: Teaching Medievalisms to High School Seniors,” Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching, 9:2 (Fall, 2002), 15-34.
* “Augustine in the Cottage of Lost Play: The Ainulindalë as Asterisk Cosmogony,” in Tolkien the Medievalist, ed. Jane Chance (Medieval Religion and Culture) (London: Routledge, 2002), 171-182.
* “St. Bede among the Controversialists: A Survey,” American Benedictine Review 50 (1999), 397-422.
* “No Bishop, No Queen: Queens Regnant and the Ordination of Women,” Anglican and Episcopal History 47 (1998), 2-25.
* “Bede and His World” (review), Libraries and Culture 32 (1997), 132-133.
* “Bede," ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies, 1996
* Encyclopedia of Catholicism (72 entries), (San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1995).
* “Augustine and the Ainulindale,” Mythlore 79 (1995), 4-8.
* “The Old English Benedictine Office and its Audience,” American Benedictine Review 45 (1994), 431-445.
* “(Re)Sounding Brass: Alcuin's New Castings in the Questions and Answers on Genesis,” Proceedings of the PMR Conference 16/17 (1992-1993), 149-161.
* “Mirabile dictu: The Medieval Text behind a Modern Window at Canterbury,” Scintilla 8 (1991), 70-86.
* “Commedia as Fairy-Story: Eucatastrophe in the Loss of Virgil," Mythlore 64 (1990), 29-34.
* “Rochester the Renewer: The Byronic Hero and the Messiah as Elements in the King Elessar,” Mythlore 39 (1984), 13-16.
* “The Augustinian Tradition: A Different Voice,” Religious Education 79 (1984), 184-191.



Conference Presentations:

* “Maldon, Gettysburg and the Somme: Tolkien’s ‘Homecoming’ and the Idea of Chivalry,” Beowulf Comes to Edoras: Tolkien as a Gateway to Medieval Studies, 39th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, May, 2004 (Session organizer on behalf of TEAMS and Tolkien at Kalamazoo)
* “Tolkien, King Alfred and Boethius: Platonist Views of Evil in The Lord of the Rings,” with Neal K. Keesee, Ph.D., 38th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, May, 2003
* “Web Site Review Boards for Secondary School Teachers,” Keeping Medieval Studies Alive and Well in K-12: A Roundtable Discussion for Educators, 37th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, May, 2002
* ORB Roundtable on “The I-Search Paper,” 36th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, May, 2001
* “Twice-Told Tales: Teaching Medievalisms to High School Seniors,” Teaching the Middle Ages Conference, Emporia State University, Emporia, KS, September, 1998
* “Augustine and the Ainulindalë,” 25th Conference of the Mythopoeic Society, Washington, DC, August, 1994
* “(Re)Sounding Brass: Alcuin’s New Castings in the Questions and Answers on Genesis,” 17th Patristic, Medieval and Renaissance Conference, Augustinian Historical Institute, Villanova University, Villanova, PA, 1992
* “Science, Creation, and their -isms” and “Using Moral Reasoning in the Classroom,” Mt. Vernon Teaching Conference, Mt. Vernon, IL, October, 1985
* “Using Moral Reasoning in the Classroom,” Teaching Critical Issues Conference, Fontbonne College / St. Louis Public Schools, Clayton, MO, February, 1985
* “Rochester the Renewer: The Byronic Hero and the Messiah as Elements in the King Elessar,” 15th Conference of the Mythopoeic Society, 1984
* “Tolkien’s Use of the Calendar,” 11th Conference of the Mythopoeic Society, 1980



Academic Service:

* Executive Committee, The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages, Inc.
* The University of Notre Dame:
o Graduate Student Representative, The Medieval Institute
o President pro tempore, Graduate Student Union Council
o Graduate School Council
o English Department Search Committee
o President's Committee on the Bookstore
o University Library Award Committee
* Yale Divinity School / Berkeley Divinity School at Yale:
o Convenor, Lutheran-Anglican-Roman Catholic Dialogue
o St. Luke's Committee




Awards and Fellowships:

* Nelson Burr Prize, The Historical Society of the Episcopal Church, 1998 (for “No Bishop, No Queen”)
* Burlington Teaching Fellowship, University of Notre Dame, 1993- 1994
* Dorothy A. Given Fellowship, The Episcopal Church Foundation, 1990- 1993
* Dissertation Year Fellowship, University of Notre Dame, 1992- 1993
* Riley Prize in Art History and Criticism, University of Notre Dame: First Prize, 1991; Honorable Mention, 1992
* Graduate Assistantships, University of Notre Dame, 1989-1992
* Hooker Graduate Fellowship, Yale Divinity School, 1989-1990
* Lansing Hicks Service Prize, Berkeley Divinity School, 1989
* Walker Scholarship Prize, Yale Divinity School, 1988

Other Employment:

* 2002, 2003 Dean of Students
The Oxford Tradition, Oxbridge Academic Programs, New York, NY / Oxford, England
* 1991-1994: Lecturer in Theology and Church History
Diocesan School for Faith and Ministry, South Bend, IN
* 1989-1994, 1996: Reader, Advanced Placement Test in English
Educational Testing Service, Princeton, NJ
* 1975, 1977-1983, 1988-1994: Counselor, Third Naval Company; Supervising Counselor, Specialty Camps; Assistant Program Director, Woodcraft Camp; Commander, Woodcraft Division Three; Assistant Chaplain; Woodcraft Cabin Counselor
Culver Summer Camps, Culver, IN


Fiction and Poems:

* Rough Magicke (Bloomington: Unlimited Publishing, 2005)
* Falconry and Other Poems (Bloomington: Unlimited Publishing, 2003)
* "Ave Verum Corpus," The Living Church 199:12 (13 September 1989), 9.
* "Focal Point," The Living Church 199: 7 (13 August 1989), 12.
* "To My Father," The Classical Outlook 64 (1987), 110.
* "The Hart and the Hunter," The Living Church 180:9 (2 March 1980), 2.
* "Solomon's Song," The Living Church 180:3 (20 January 1980), 2.
* "In My Father's House," The Living Church 179:1 (1 July 1979), 11.

Professional Organizations:

* The Medieval Academy of America
* The North American Patristic Society
* American Academy of Religion
* Society of Biblical Literature
* The Mythopoeic Society
Languages Read: Latin, French, German, Old English.


John Houghton grew up in Culver and graduated from Culver Academy in the 1970s. He went on to receive degrees from Harvard, Yale, Notre Dame, and Indiana University, among others, and has taught at Notre Dame as well as in Georgia, Baton Rouge, and at Culver Academy. His latest book, Rough Magicke, was just published in April 2005 by Unlimited Publishing of Bloomington (an earlier collection, Falconry and Other Poems, was published by Unlimited in 2003), and is a novel employing elements of fantasy, religion, mystery, history, and interestingly enough, a great deal of local history and lore. Much of the book is set in Culver and Culver and the Culver Academy are prominently featured in the story.
Following is an interview with Mr. Houghton about his connections to Culver, the Culver-related content of the book, and the book in general.

Q: First of all, of course, you are no stranger to Culver and the Culver area. Can you give us some background and history of yourself and your family's involvement in the area?

A: Well, I was adopted, and brought here when I was about six months old, by Forrest and Leta (Kingery) Houghton, so I really don't remember any home but Culver. Mother's family had moved here from Flora, Indiana, where the Kingerys had been pioneers, when she was six: my grandfather Kingery worked with his brother-in-law, J. M. Miller, at Miller's Dairy for some years, then took over the Cloverleaf Dairy himself. My father's mother's family were Decks, from down in Delong, and his father's family descended from two brothers, James and John Houghton, who were pioneers in southern Indiana, then came up here with the first wave of settlement in Marshall County in the 1830s. John's son-in-law, Bayless Dixon (he was married to Emma Houghton) founded Union Town in the south-west part of his farm in 1844, then sold it to John's son, Thomas K. Houghton, which is when the name was changed to Marmont. Then Thomas K. Houghton sold the north part of the farm—the part that wasn't in the village of Marmont—to my own great-great-grandfather, James's son, Thomas Houghton. That chunk adjoined grandfather Thomas's main farm, on the northwest corner of 17th Road and Highway 17, across from the old Three Sisters. Over the years slices of what grandfather Thomas bought from his cousin have been gradually added back on to the north edge of town, most recently my great-aunt Ethel's land across from the high school.

Anyway, I grew up here pretty much the way everyone does, surrounded by lots of cousins, descended in my case from the Millers and the Decks and the Houghtons (including a number of Joneses and Prossers). I used to really like the Deck family reunion, which was always held on my birthday. I forget how old I was when it was explained to me that it was actually held on great-grandfather John Deck's birthday, which happened to be the same as mine (which also explains why I was named first for him and then for my great-grandfather William Houghton, rather than the other way around). I took piano lessons from your grandmother, and then later from my great-aunt Ethel. When I was small, we had a farm south of town, on Road 110, where we raised hogs and soybeans. (You'll remember that there's a soybean field at one point in Rough Magicke.)

I went to school through eighth grade in what was then the “new” elementary school and in the old high school building, and had classes with Alice McLane, Florence Page, Dorothy Manis, Bill Harris...the same names a lot of people around town remember. Summers, I went to Woodcraft and Naval School, and then in ninth grade I started at the Academy, where I was in the class of 1971.

Q: What have you been up to, generally, since you left Culver after graduating from the Academy?

A: Mostly either going to school or teaching. I was an undergraduate at Harvard, and took a master's in English at IU Bloomington; then many years later I went back to graduate school, and took a master's in religion at Yale Divinity School and Berkeley Divinity School (the Episcopal part of Yale), then a master's and doctorate in medieval studies up at Notre Dame. I've taught at the Academy, at a school in Georgia, at two different schools in St. Louis, and most recently I was the chaplain at a school in Baton Rouge. This fall, I'm starting a new position as chair of the English Department at Canterbury School over in Fort Wayne. I've had summer jobs at Woodcraft Camp, Specialty Camps and the Naval School—lately I've been spending the summers with an American summer camp in Oxford, England, which gives me a chance to visit my English cousins at least once a year. And, as you know, I even wrote a column for the Citizen, thirty years ago, on local history. Q: So you've been all over the world, really, from Harvard to Notre Dame, England to Baton Rouge...what motivated you to set this novel -- fictionally at least -- in this rural little Indiana town on the shores of Lake Maxinkuckee?

A: Partly, I suppose, it's just a matter of writing about what you know; and partly, too, it was sort of sentimental for me, living in Missouri and Louisiana and such, to be writing a story that had a lot of Hoosier connections. Obviously, living on Houghton Street in Houghton's Addition to Culver, I was bound to grow up with a certain sense of place. But then, too, I wanted to write a story about magic and supernatural happenings, and I think stories like that gain from having a very ordinary background. And after all there was a certain amount of odd stuff that used to go on, superstitious stuff, at the least—I'm sure some people still plant according to the sign of the moon, and my grandfather Kingery used to have things he would do to heal people, like “measuring” babies who weren't growing well. Q: There are a number of "Culver" connections in the book: people, places, traditions. Can you discuss some of that for those who haven't yet read the book? What are some of the fun little clues that local people will immediately "get" which others who are less familiar with Culver, the Academy, and the Lake, might not?

A: Sure, I'll try. Of course, the most obvious thing is just having the story set at a military academy in a small town on a large lake in north central Indiana—that kind of narrows things down a bit! Then the county seat in the story is Withougan, which, spelled with a “y,” is a name associated with Plymouth. We find out that the old railroad north of Annandale was the Nickle Plate Line, which is the road that ran through Burr Oak before it was merged into the Norfolk and Western in 1964. And there's a neighboring town called “Wolf Creek,” which was the site of a Native American village, and a battle between the Pottawattomi and the Fox.

Part of the story revolves around the legend of Pau-koo-shuck, the son of Aubenaubee, and actually there I ended up using (more or less by accident) several details mentioned in the histories, including that Aubenaubee lived for several hours after Pau-koo-shuck attacked him, and that white folks reburied Aubenaubee and piled stones over him. And I moved one of the Fulton County round barns up to the east side of the lake.

John Houghton 01

Then there are some games with names. Several of the characters, all noted, I hope, in the Author's Note, have the names of real people—friends or colleagues of mine, including Dr. Davies, of the Culver history faculty. There are several references to the Trout family of Indianapolis having cottages on the lake, whereas historically we had the Vonneguts here, and Kurt Vonnegut invents a fictitious hack novelist called “Kilgore Trout.” There is one reference to two Indiana political families having been associated with Annandale, and the Bayh and Quayle names have both appeared on rosters at Culver at one point or another. And there are just some nods to local figures, like a couple of references, as you noticed, to your own Voreis ancestors, or one to Ellis Licht and his pie business—we're sort of related, through the Decks and the Duddlesons. One or two things are more elaborate—at one point Jonathan refers the first wife of the founder of a neighboring town being named “Bertha,” which is a reference to the mad first wife of Mr. Rochester, in Jane Eyre. Q: How did you decide what changes to make in the local places and lore? Obviously some of that was a matter of what fit in well with the plot of the story (such as establishing an Anglican Abbey just off of East Shore).

A: Right, some things were required by the plot; on the other hand, a lot of others were just whims. CMA had barracks named “Argonne” and “Chateau Thierry”—now rather gruesome names for girls' dorms—whereas Annandale has “Ypres” and “Verdun,” all four being battles of World War I. CT and Argonne were appropriate for CMA because they were major battles for Pershing's American Expeditionary Force, whereas the battles remembered at literary Annandale are the ones mentioned in Carl Sandburg's poem “Grass.” Culver has a Logansport Gate, Annandale has a Wabash Gate, and so on. In a few cases, I wanted to avoid trademarks, so Annandale has a “Happy Villa” nursing home. There are a few places in the published version of the book where all this renaming got out of hand, so that the fictional “Glenarm's Bay” appears once as the actual “Aubenaubee Bay,” for example. Q: In the back of the book, you cite Meredith Nicholson's well-known novel, The House of a Thousand Candles, which is rather famous locally for having been set in a fictionalized version of Culver. In fact, you chose to keep Nicholson's fictional name, Annandale, for Culver. Can you talk about that book, its impact on you, and how you see your book fitting into the legacy of The House of a Thousand Candles?

A: Well, when I was growing up, I thought it was the neatest thing in the world that my town had been the setting for a novel, much less that the novel connected to a particular house here in town. When I was just a kid, my Dad used to mow lawns at couple of the old Vonnegut cottages, including "The House of a Thousand Candles," so I remember being in and around the buildings. And a copy of Nicholson's book was the first thing I ever bought at an auction, when I was in sixth grade or so. I had to take a bushel basket full of old books to get the one I wanted. Actually, the story of the second copy of the book I bought is even better—I was walking past the shop window of a men's clothing store down in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on my way home from the grocery—and there it was being used as a prop in the display. So I went in and offered them $10 for the book—which was a good deal less than they would have asked for anything else in the window. The clerk had to go into the back to check with the manager, but pretty soon I was on my way home with a loaf of bread, a gallon of milk and a second copy of the book.

Anyway, when I decided to tell a story about a fictional version of Culver, it just seemed natural to use the one that already existed. In fact, part of the story takes place in the House of a Thousand Candles, and the narrator actually comments that Nicholson wrote his novel there—so the real Nicholson shows up even in this second-hand version of his fiction, if I can put it that way. I guess part of what I was feeling was a kind of Hoosier pride—saying to my readers, if there are any, that look, there's a lot more to Indiana writing than just this little story—if they go back to The House of a Thousand Candles, which is still a good read, though it may not be Great Literature, they may also read Booth Tarkington's The Magnificent Ambersons—which was a movie by Orson Welles, starring Tim Holt (who was CMA Class of '36 and also appeared in Spirit of Culver ), and has since been made into a 2002 mini-series from Welles's original script—or Theodore Dreiser's Sister Carrie or American Tragedy. Not that I'm claiming to be in the same league with the “Hoosier Renaissance,” nor even to have read a lot of the writing myself—but I'm happy if Rough Magicke points back to those authors and that “Golden Age” in Indiana history. Q: An interesting thing about this book, besides of course its local content, is that there's a lot of variety in what's going on in the story and even in the genre of fiction it occupies. It's not a book that's easy to pin down; there are elements of mystery, fantasy, adventure, intrigue, and suspense, but there are also a lot of intellectually stimulating elements of history, theology, liturgy, and even literary references in the story. Can you generally discuss the story itself and the varying elements of style going on in it?

John Houghton 02

A: You're right, it is hard to categorize. There's a place on the back cover where the genre is supposed to be stated, and the book designer and the publisher and I had to try several times before we settled on whatever it actually says now...Fantasy (Contemporary, Epic), I think it is, and I'm still not sure about “Epic.” But I did want there to be more to it than just a fantasy story: I mean, I hope that a person can pick it up and have a good read, but at the same time that there will be things to attract the readers' attention, whether to make them think, “I wonder where that came from?” or just to say “That's an interesting question.”

I guess if the genre or style of the book is more like one thing than another, it's probably in the tradition of a couple of English authors from the first part of the last century, Charles Williams and Dorothy Sayers. Williams wrote supernatural thrillers set against a background of ordinary city or country England, which is sort of the pattern of what happens in Rough Magicke; and Dorothy Sayers writes detective stories full of philosophical questions and literary references, which is somewhat like the style of RM. Q: The main character of the plot, an Episcopal chaplain of the Academies, is at least somewhat autobiographical, yes? How are you and Father Mears alike and different?



A: Oh, we're very different: Jonathan likes classic Coke and I like Diet, for example. But, no, seriously, there are obviously some autobiographical elements in Jonathan—even his name, Mears, comes from the family name of John and James Houghton's mother's family. Jonathan's family founded the town of Annandale, as the Houghtons were in on the ground floor of Culver. Jonathan and I have had similar educations at AMA/CMA, Harvard and Yale, though he came home to Annandale straight out his version of Yale/Berkeley and never went to IU or Notre Dame. But obviously Jonathan is, as the story starts, an experienced Anglican priest, whereas I'm just now beginning the ordination process; then, too, a certain amount of the plot revolves around Jonathan's brother and niece, whereas I grew up as an only child. Q: You've set up a website, annandalemilitary.com, that actually "pretends" to be the real website of the actual Annandale Military Academy, which could be a fun read for local folks. Can you talk a bit about what's on that site?

A: Yes, well, as an English teacher, I have to say that one thing on the site is a page of corrections to all the mistakes I've noticed since the book went to the printer! But I'm not sure that counts as a fun read, except in some cruel sense. Besides that, there are some things that are meant as aids to reading the book—a genealogical chart of the Mearses, a dictionary of some of the Annandale campus slang, a map of the Annandale area, and a campus map. The campus map also has photos of some of the Annandale buildings—the First Class Club, for instance, which has a strange resemblance to the Carnegie Library, or the Memorial Building, which is based on Herstmonceux Castle in England (which is also the model for the Culver Legion Memorial). The AMA naval building is actually the Royal Naval Museum in Greenwich, England. There's a page, too, with links to real world things that are mentioned in the book, so that the reader can go off and read about the real Mears family, or see a picture of things referred to in the story. Oh, and in the slide show on the first page, one of the pictures shows two of the real people who have characters named after them, Richard Platt and Rob English.

Besides those sorts of things, there's a school song, to the tune of “Scots Wha Ha'e Wi' Wallace Bled” (complete with a synthesized bagpipe accompaniment) and of course a school tartan and coat of arms, and even a school plant (rosemary, as it turns out). The English Department and the Religion and Philosophy Department have course descriptions posted, though again you have to wonder what kind of person would find those “fun,” exactly. And there's a Chapel page with some actual sermons and links to some resources on spirituality and daily prayer—I thought I ought to include something edifying for anyone who wanted to poke through that far. Q: Lastly, how can people get their hands on Rough Magicke?

A: It can be ordered on-line from Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com, and most bookstores can order it for a person, as well (the website has, under the Quartermaster's Store section, a sheet that you can print out and take to the bookstore with specific directions). Also, Mary's Shoppe on Main Street in Culver will be stocking the book.

Interview by Jeff Kenney3

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from John William Houghton, Sep. 20, 2002.
  2. [S415] E-mail from John William Houghton, Ph.D., Sep. 17, 2002, Descendants of William Houghton.
  3. [S654] Electronic Web Site, , http://home.mchsi.com/~numenor/webcv.htm

Kathleen Walsh1

F, #63496

Family: Stanley Paul Beck b. 6 Dec 1945

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Marriage1

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Nancy Lee Foltz Heinicke Beck, Sep. 20, 2002.

Paul Houghton1

M, #63497

Biography

Occupationa Primatologist, Primate Products
Administration, Position: CEO/CFO-Founder
Areas of interest: Breeding,Husbandry,Conservation,Equipment,Transporation,Research,Quarantine,Enrichment,Regulatory Complience.
Species of interest: Primarily Macaques but other New and Old World Species
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressNov 7, 2001Miami, FL, USA, Paulhoughton@primateproducts.com
PrimateProducts.com
Phone: (650) 529-0419
FAX: (650) 851-1763
Entry created: 2001-11-07

Citations

  1. [S654] Electronic Web Site,.

Eugenia L. Post1

F, #63498

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
BirthCA, USA1
DeathSan Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA, USA1

Citations

  1. [S654] Electronic Web Site, , http://members.tripod.com/Tesslyn2/houghton.htm

Todd Houghten1

M, #63499

Biography

Address718 Buck Hill Rd., Lowell, Orleans Co., VT, USA1
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
Duplicate

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Cynthia Jean Marckres1,2

F, #63500, b. 25 June 1976

Family: Bradley Earle Houghton Jr b. 2 Apr 1976

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
BirthJun 25, 1976VT, USA2
MarriageJun 3, 2000Craftsbury Commons, Orleans Co., VT, USA1,3
AddressMay, 2002Scott Highway, Groton, Caledonia Co., VT, USA1
ParentsDEugene Arthur Marckres & Dorothy Pearl Griggs

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.
  2. [S882] Ancestry.Com, online www.ancestry.com, Vermont Birth Records, 1909-2008 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.
  3. [S882] Ancestry.Com, online www.ancestry.com, Vermont Marriage Records, 1909-2008 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.

Roy Landry Jr1

M, #63501, b. 22 May 1967

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
BirthMay 22, 19671

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail from Sharon Goyette Uusitalo, Sep. 20, 2002.

Jen Houghton1

?, #63502

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressMay, 2002Montpelier, Chittenden Co., VT, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Suzanne Houghton1

F, #63503

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressMay, 2002Murg?, VT, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Tammy Houghton1

F, #63504

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressMay, 2002Burke, Caledonia Co., VT, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Florence Houghton1

F, #63505

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressSep, 2001Bethlehem, Montgomery Co., MD, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

John Houghton1

M, #63506

Family: Wendy (?)

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Marriage1
AddressJeffersonville, Lamoille Co., VT, USA, Route 115 A1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Wendy (?)1

F, #63507

Family: John Houghton

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Marriage1
AddressJeffersonville, Lamoille Co., VT, USA, Route 115 A1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Ralph Houghton1

M, #63508

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressSep, 2001Passumpsic, Caledonia Co., VT, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Rodney Houghton1

M, #63509

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Corresponded with author?
AddressSep, 2001Jeffersonville, Lamoille Co., VT, USA, Route 21

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.

Peter Houghten1

M, #63510

Family: Roselyn (?)

Biography

Corresponded with author?
A Contributor to Houghton Surname Project?
Marriage1
AddressFeb, 2002VT, USA1

Citations

  1. [S1083] Telephone Book.