Robert
Trammell (1939-2006)
WordSpace founder
A
beloved Texas poet whose ancestors helped establish the earliest
frontier settlements in East Texas, Robert was a graduate of Woodrow
Wilson High School and Southern Methodist University. He was founder
and executive director of the Dallas literary organization WordSpace,
and was a Fellow of the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture.
His numerous books of poetry and prose include:
Jack
Ruby and the Origins of the Avant-Garde in Dallas, Cicada,
Cam I Sole, Famous Men, Epics, No Evidence,
Birds: An Almanac, A Book Of Diseases, The Quiet
Man Stories, and Queen City of the Plains, and his
work appeared in over 200 magazines, including Southwest Review,
Exquisite Corpse, Another Chicago Magazine, and
The Texas Observer. Bob spoke his mind whatever the situation
and cut a wide and irreverent swath wherever he went. As director
of WordSpace, and as founder and operator of the Barnburner Press,
he supported and encouraged countless writers, singers and artists
throughout Texas and beyond, and he inspired many with his example
of living and writing on his own terms.

Bob's words are featured on eleven large wind screens at the Lovers Lane Dart Station in East Dallas. According to Dart.org, "The station celebrates that past with a light-hearted, romantic motif. Poet Robert Trammell contributed verses, prose poems and snippets of phrases that bring to life several layers of Dallas history, in which Native Americans, turn-of-the-century blues musicians and 1950s sweethearts all appear, interwoven with the design touches of artist Jim Branstetter."
Robert Trammell: 'The grass-roots poet in Dallas'
1939-2006
10:58 AM CDT on Tuesday, May 9, 2006
By JEROME WEEKS / The Dallas Morning News
"Of all the insane things to do," Robert Trammell once
said, "to be a poet in Dallas."
Mr. Trammell, who died Monday in his East Dallas home, persisted
in his insanity, writing nearly a dozen books of poetry, including
Lovers/killers and George Washington Trammell. He also established
the local literary organization, WordSpace, which has brought to
town such notable writers as the poet Robert Creeley and Man Booker
Prize-winning novelist James Kelman.
Mr. Trammell, 66, had been diagnosed with a rare form of cancer,
cholangiocarcinoma or bile-duct cancer, said his wife, Adrienne
Cox Trammell. He had been given six months to live. But after more
than two years, he had begun to decline in only the past two months,
she said. Two weeks ago, he attended the Hiett Prize award ceremony,
presented by the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture, where
he was a fellow.
"He was the essential, grass-roots poet in Dallas," said
Jack Myers, former Texas poet laureate. "He had a nitty-gritty
streak. He was mainly self-taught, and he was very encouraging to
young black and Hispanic writers. He didn't go through the MFA programs
that most writers follow these days. But while he was writing about
the back alleys of Dallas and the prairie, he was seriously interested
in theoretically difficult poets like Ezra Pound and Charles Olsen."
"He was the first bohemian I ever knew," said novelist
David Searcy, who met Mr. Trammell in 1966. "He set the mold
for me, wearing a beret, getting drunk and reciting the poetry of
[Spanish writer Federico García] Lorca."
Tall and lean with long hair and a beard, "Bob looked like
a cross between a cowboy and a biker," said Dallas writer Ben
Fountain. "And people could find him intimidating."
In fact, Mr. Trammell had spent a year in prison for marijuana possession.
"But," said Mr. Fountain, "it didn't take people
long to realize that he had this finely developed aesthetic sense,
not just in poetry but music and art. He really had a gentleness
in him."
Thousands of Dallasites may never have heard of Mr. Trammell, but
they've read his words: DART's Lovers Lane light-rail station has
10 enamel "wind panels" featuring his poetry.
A fifth-generation Texan, Mr. Trammell often wrote about the region,
from Dallas to Cherokee County in East Texas, where his grandparents
lived and where he spent a lot of time as a youth.
Among his ancestors were circuit-riding ministers. On the other
hand, Ms. Trammell said, there are historical markers near Jefferson
in East Texas designating Trammell's Trace, an early pioneer trail
that was used by Mr. Trammell's great-great-great uncle, Nicholas
Trammell, a horse thief nicknamed "Hot Horse" Trammell.
Robert and Adrienne gave Clinton, their 12-year-old son, Hot Horse
for his middle name.
Mr. Trammell studied political science at Southern Methodist University
with the intention of becoming a lawyer, Ms. Trammell said, but
gave that up.
"I want to show the people of Dallas that they have more alternatives
than being a banker or developer," he said in 1984.
Mr. Trammell wrote his first poem at 30, and it was published in
the Southwest Review. Other periodicals to print his work included
the Texas Observer and The Exquisite Corpse, the journal edited
by National Public Radio commentator Andrei Codrescu.
Mr. Trammell was deeply enamored of singer-songwriters and Texas
musicians, notably Townes Van Zandt, as well as spoken-word performance.
In the '70s, he ran several New Arts Festivals in Dallas, which
featured the area's first performance of the Sam Shepard play, The
Tooth of Crime. Through the years, WordSpace, which Mr. Trammell
co-founded 11 years ago with his wife, often presented evenings
combining writers, slam poets and song lyricists.
"He felt that Dallas' literary greatness was in its music,"
said Ms. Trammell.
Of Mr. Trammell's several books of poetry, Jack Ruby and the Origins
of the Avant-Garde in Dallas was probably his most popular, Ms.
Trammell said with a laugh.
"We had a lot of conspiracy theorists buying it without realizing
what it was."
A complete list of surviving relatives could not be confirmed, but
they include, in addition to his wife and son, Mr. Trammell's sister,
Billye Sue Byrum; and two previous wives, Ginger Myles and Allison
Kraft.

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