# 1294 - 1967 $1 Prominent Americans: Eugene O'Neill
$1 Eugene O’Neill
Prominent Americans Series
City: New London, CT
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Color: Dull purple
Birth Of Eugene O’Neill
The son of a traveling actor, O’Neill spent much of his youth at the St. Aloysius Academy for Boys, a Catholic boarding school in the Bronx. It was here O’Neill discovered his love of reading and found great comfort in books.
O’Neill went on to attend Princeton University for one year. There are several reasons given for his short stay, one of which claims he threw a beer bottle into Professor Woodrow Wilson’s window. After leaving school, O’Neill spent several years at sea. He had a deep respect for the sea and it would later serve as inspiration for several of his plays. During these early years, he dabbled with writing, contributing poems and articles for the New London Telegraph.
In 1912, O’Neill was admitted to a sanatorium for tuberculosis. After he was released, he decided to work full time writing plays. O’Neill attended Harvard for a year to study dramatic techniques with Professor George Baker but didn’t complete the course.
O’Neill suffered from alcoholism and depression throughout his life. Over time, he developed severe tremors in his hands that eventually made it impossible for him to write. He managed to write a few plays in his final years, most notably The Iceman Cometh, Long Day’s Journey into Night, and A Moon for the Misbegotten. Long Day’s Journey into Night is considered one of his best plays and was included on a shortlist of the finest US plays of the 20th century. It won a Pulitzer in 1957.
Click here for a website dedicated to O’Neill, including digital versions of all his plays.
$1 Eugene O’Neill
Prominent Americans Series
City: New London, CT
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Color: Dull purple
Birth Of Eugene O’Neill
The son of a traveling actor, O’Neill spent much of his youth at the St. Aloysius Academy for Boys, a Catholic boarding school in the Bronx. It was here O’Neill discovered his love of reading and found great comfort in books.
O’Neill went on to attend Princeton University for one year. There are several reasons given for his short stay, one of which claims he threw a beer bottle into Professor Woodrow Wilson’s window. After leaving school, O’Neill spent several years at sea. He had a deep respect for the sea and it would later serve as inspiration for several of his plays. During these early years, he dabbled with writing, contributing poems and articles for the New London Telegraph.
In 1912, O’Neill was admitted to a sanatorium for tuberculosis. After he was released, he decided to work full time writing plays. O’Neill attended Harvard for a year to study dramatic techniques with Professor George Baker but didn’t complete the course.
O’Neill suffered from alcoholism and depression throughout his life. Over time, he developed severe tremors in his hands that eventually made it impossible for him to write. He managed to write a few plays in his final years, most notably The Iceman Cometh, Long Day’s Journey into Night, and A Moon for the Misbegotten. Long Day’s Journey into Night is considered one of his best plays and was included on a shortlist of the finest US plays of the 20th century. It won a Pulitzer in 1957.
Click here for a website dedicated to O’Neill, including digital versions of all his plays.