William Strunk was born and reared in
Cincinnati,
Ohio, the eldest of the four surviving children of William and Ella Garretson Strunk. He earned a bachelor's degree at the
University of Cincinnati in 1890 and a PhD at Cornell University in 1896. He spent the academic year 1898–99 at the
Sorbonne and the
Collège de France, where he studied
morphology and
philology. Strunk first taught mathematics at
Rose Polytechnical Institute in
Terre Haute, Indiana in 1890–91. He then taught English at Cornell for 46 years, and was elected to
Phi Beta Kappa, disdaining specialization and becoming an expert in both classical and non-English literature. In 1922 he published
English Metres, a study of poetic metrical form, and he compiled critical editions of
Cynewulf's
Juliana, several works of
Dryden,
James Fenimore Cooper's
Last of the Mohicans, and several
Shakespearean plays. Strunk was also active in a gathering known as the Manuscript Club, an "informal Saturday-night gathering of students and professors interested in writing," where he met "a sensitive and deeply thoughtful young man named
Elwyn Brooks White." In 1935–36, Strunk enjoyed serving as the literary consultant for the
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film
Romeo and Juliet (1936). In the studio he was known as "the professor," in part because, with his three-piece suit and wire-rim spectacles, he "looked as though he'd been delivered to the set from MGM's casting department." In 1918, Strunk privately published
The Elements of Style for the use of his Cornell students, who gave it its nickname, "the little book." Strunk intended the guide "to lighten the task of instructor and student by concentrating attention ... on a few essentials, the rules of usage and principles of composition most commonly violated." In 1935, Strunk and Edward A. Tenney revised and published the guide as
The Elements and Practice of Composition (1935). In his
New Yorker column of July 27, 1957, E. B. White praised the "little book" as a "forty-three-page summation of the case for cleanliness, accuracy, and brevity in the use of English."
Macmillan and Company then commissioned White to revise the 1935 edition for republication under Strunk's original title. His expansion and modernization sold more than two million copies. Since 1959, total sales of the three editions have exceeded ten million copies. In 1900, Strunk married Olivia Emilie Locke, with whom he had three children, including the noted musicologist
Oliver Strunk. William Strunk retired from Cornell in 1937. In 1945 he suffered a mental breakdown, diagnosed as "senile psychosis", and died less than a year later at the
Hudson River Psychiatric Institute in
Poughkeepsie, New York. Strunk's Cornell obituary noted that his friends and former students remembered "his kindness, his helpfulness as a teacher and colleague, [and] his boyish lack of envy and guile". ==References==