Preece was born in 1906 in
Bull Creek Community near
Round Rock, Texas. He was a ministerial student at
Texas Christian University with special studies at the
University of Texas. In the 1940s he moved to
Monteagle,
Tennessee. In 1941 he met his wife, Ruth Kruskal Preece (aka Celia Kraft). They had at least one son, Hillel David Preece. Preece and Kraft collaborated on a book published in 1946, in which year they also moved to
New York City. The Preeces later separated. Preece met poet Winona Morris Nation in 1978, with whom he lived in later years. He developed
Alzheimer's disease towards the end of his life, and died less than a month after Winona in 1992. He was cremated and his ashes scattered on Winona's grave in the Spring of 1993. She is buried at Hillcrest Cemetery, on a hill overlooking
Comanche, Oklahoma.
Writing career Preece "began his career as a cub reporter for the
Austin Statesmen in 1922, started selling articles to magazines in 1925, and became a free-lance writer and specialist in American and Texas folklore." He was the
Americana expert for
Adventure magazine, considered by editor
Ken White as "our final court of appeal" on the subject. Preece also assisted
John and
Alan Lomax in collecting archives of
American folk music for the
Library of Congress. He was the folklore editor of the
Federal Writers' Project in Texas. Preece's main impact, however, came in his writings on civil rights, not least because of his unusual status as a southern white man supportive of Negro issues. He described his evolution from prejudice to anti-racism in the August 1935 article "Confessions of an Ex-Nordic: The Depression Not an Unmixed Evil," which appeared in
Opportunity, the monthly journal of the
National Urban League. He attributed his change in outlook to the shared hardships of the Great Depression: "I waited in line with other men – white and black who spent their days frantically wandering to obtain the same tawdry necessities. Forgetful of
Jim Crow we discussed the appalling debacle and shared crumbs of cheap tobacco. ... To me, white and black no longer exist. There are only oppressors and oppressed." Arthur I. Hayman, his collaborator on a book exposing problems in
Liberia, wrote that Preece became "widely known as a champion of the race ... particularly ... for his sympathetic studies of the great Negro folk culture." In addition to
Opportunity, Preece wrote for
American Spectator,
Crisis,
New Masses,
Nation, and other liberal/left-wing publications. His most influential work was likely his regular column "The Living South" in the Negro newspaper
The Chicago Defender. Texas politician
Martin Dies criticized Preece's newspaper articles, referring to him as a "negro writer." Preece rejoined that he was white but not insulted, taking his stand with the Negro. One of Preece's more controversial stands was a review of
Zora Neale Hurston's
Mules and Men published in
Crisis, December 1936: "When an author describes her race in such servile terms as 'Mules and Men' critical members of the race must necessarily evaluate the author as a literary climber." While living in Tennessee he worked with the
Highlander Folk School, was president and managing editor of
New South Features, and staff-writer for the inter-racial magazine
Now, and Southern correspondent for
Religious News Service. Preece corresponded with
Roy Wilkins and
W. E. B. Du Bois as a fighter for civil rights. He continued his support for civil rights in
New Masses as well. He took on the
Ku Klux Klan in the October 16, 1945 issue, with the result that "[i]n 1946 the Ku Klux Klan chased him and his family out of the state, and they moved on to
New York."
Preece and Robert E. Howard Harold Preece and Robert E. Howard were friends in their respective youths. They met through a mutual friend through involvement with
Lone Scouts, a
Boy Scouts program for youth in smaller and isolated communities. They also expressed literary ambitions in
The Junto, a self-published literary magazine circulated among members of their small social group and initially edited by Preece. When after Howard's death his fiction started to become a focus of scholarly interest, fans and scholars of his work resorted to Preece as an authority on the man. Science fiction author
L. Sprague de Camp met and quizzed Preece on November 30, 1951, obtaining biographical material that went into the sketch of Howard in his
Science-Fiction Handbook.
Glenn Lord, later Howard's posthumous literary agent, also corresponded with Preece, and included contributions by him in
The Howard Collector and the bio-bibliography
The Last Celt. In the 1970s Preece wrote articles on Howard for
Fantasy Crossroads and other fanzines. During this same period some of Winona Nation's poetry was published in
Fantasy Crosswinds and
Simba. ==Bibliography==