Kenneth Taylor Perkins was born on May 16, 1890, in
Kodaikanal, India in the south Indian state of Madras (now known as
Tamil Nadu), where his parents were posted as missionaries with the
Madura Mission,
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. His father, James Coffin Perkins, graduated from the
University of California with the Class of 1874; he then received his LL.B degree from
Columbia University in 1876 and graduated from the
Princeton Theological Seminary in 1885. On June 28, 1885, James married Charlotte Jean Taylor in
Baltimore, Maryland. They met when newly ordained James was brought in as a substitute pastor at Faith Presbyterian Church, where Charlotte attended. Shortly after the wedding, they sailed for India. Their first children, twin girls, died at childbirth on May 3, 1886. Kenneth's older brother, Donald, was born in 1888. A third son, Malcolm, died at 18 months in June 1895. Following a brief illness, Charlotte died from hepatitis on January 19, 1898, in
Tirumangalam. Shortly thereafter, James' sister Mary R. Perkins sailed from
San Francisco to India by herself to help him take care of the children. James married his second wife, Lucy Elizabeth Croswell, on March 24, 1904 and they had one son, James Croswell Perkins (1905–1980). Around the time of their father's remarriage, Kenneth and Donald, accompanied by their aunt, were sent to live in
San Francisco, California, with their grandfather, Samuel Perkins, a wealthy shipping agent and "Argonaut," who arrived in San Francisco during the
California Gold Rush on June 14, 1850, from
Maine. Their grandmother, Sarah Coffin Perkins, had died three years earlier on September 3, 1901. Kenneth was living with his grandfather at the time of the
1906 earthquake. Their house survived the temblor but was then dynamited to make the Van Ness firebreak. Samuel Perkins died shortly afterwards in the refugee camp in
Belvedere on July 10, 1906. Kenneth's brother Donald Campbell Perkins died at age 24 on August 18, 1913, in the wreck of the
S.S. State of California. He was the
First Radio Operator and went down with his ship when the steamer, running at full speed, struck an uncharted rock in Gambier Bay, ninety miles south of
Juneau, Alaska. When the vessel began to sink, he relieved his subordinate in order to send the
SOS signal himself. Within the three minutes that it took for the ship to go down, Perkins got out his call for help several times. Out of 179 lives aboard, only 31 were lost. For his bravery and quick action, Donald C. Perkins' name is inscribed on the Wireless Operators Memorial in
Battery Park,
New York City. After graduating from
Lowell High School in
San Francisco in 1909, Kenneth Perkins spent some time as a steward on a Pacific steamer before entering the
University of California as a member of the Class of 1914. As a student, Perkins was active in the English Club, where three plays that he wrote, "Beyond," "Blind Alleys," and "Bagdad," were produced and performed by the club. Another play, "A Full House," co-written with Norman Loyall McLaren and set in the "Nu Beta Sorority House" at Berkeley, was performed as part of the "Junior Farce and Curtain Raiser on Junior Day" in 1912. Through the club, Perkins met future writers
Sidney Coe Howard and
Frederick Schiller Faust. Howard would win the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1925 and a posthumous
Academy Award in
1940 for his screenplay for
Gone With the Wind, and Faust would go on to have a very successful career as the iconic
Western writer
Max Brand. After graduation, Perkins stayed another year at Berkeley in order to earn a
Master's degree in
English in December 1915, with a thesis on symbolism in the works of
Nathaniel Hawthorne. With degree in hand, he went to work in 1916 at
Pomona College in
Claremont, California, as an Assistant Instructor in
English and
Dramatics. He was hired along with Reginald Pole, a highly regarded English Shakespearean actor (and the father of
Rupert Pole), who was put in charge of the college's dramatics program with Perkins as his assistant. The American entry into World War I interrupted his academic career and Perkins enlisted in the
United States Army in 1917 and served as a
2nd lieutenant in the
field artillery. After the war, in summer 1919, Perkins taught a pair of courses (elementary and advanced) on the "motion picture scenario" for
UC Extension in
San Francisco. ==Career==