Dashiell Hammett(1894-1961)
- Writer
- Actor
Dashiell Hammett was born May 27, 1894, in St. Mary's County, Maryland,
to Richard Hammett and Mary Bond. He joined the Baltimore branch of the
Pinkerton Detective Agency in 1915. He enlisted in the US Army's
Ambulance Corps in June 1918 and was posted to a camp 20 miles from
Baltimore, where he caught the flu, which developed into tuberculosis.
He was invalided out of the army in July 1919 and returned to
Pinkerton's. Hammett entered the veterans hospital near Tacoma,
Washington, with tuberculosis in 1920. Upon his release he worked at
Pinkerton's Spokane branch. Hospitalized again with tuberculosis, he
met and courted a nurse, Josephine Dolan. In February 1921 he was moved
to an army hospital near San Diego. After he was released he married a
now-pregnant Josie in San Francisco. Hammett worked for the San
Francisco branch of Pinkerton's, but left the agency in 1921 or 22 due
to ill health. He took a writing course and sold droll vignettes to
"The Smart Set" magazine during 1922, and some short stories to other
magazines. He began to sell detective stories to "The Black Mask" from
1923. After the birth of the couple's second daughter in 1926, Hammett
gave up freelance writing and became an advertising copy writer for the
jeweler Albert Samuels, but left after six months due to ill health.
Forced by his tuberculosis to live apart from Jose and the children,
the marriage eventually broke up. Hammett supported himself through
writing, chiefly for "The Black Mask", now under editor Joe Shaw.
Hammett's long short stories were republished in novel form by Alfred
Knopf. In 1929 Hammett moved to New York. After the success of his
novel "The Maltese Falcon", he was engaged as a screenwriter by
Paramount Pictures and moved to Hollywood, where he met
Lillian Hellman. He returned to New York
in 1931, where he wrote "The Glass Key". "The Thin Man" was published
as a magazine serial in 1933. Hammett was encouraged by Hearst to write
the "Secret Agent X9" comic strip, which ran from 1934-35, his last
original work. In 1942 he re-enlisted in the army and was posted to the
Aleutian Islands off of Alaska, where he edited The Adakian. When
discharged in 1945, he returned to New York and became President of the
NY Civil Rights Congress. In July 1951 Hammett was subpoenaed to
testify on the Civil Rights Congress' bail fund, and was jailed for
refusing to answer questions. Upon his release from jail, he was
presented with a bill by the Internal Revenue Service for $111,000 in
back taxes. In failing health, he lived off and on with Hellman. In 1961
he was admitted to New York's Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, where he
died on January 10.