Archibald Joseph Cronin (19
July 1896 6 January 1981) was a Scottish
novelist and writer of non-fiction. His best-known works are
Hatter's Castle,
The Stars Look Down,
The Citadel,
The Keys of the
Kingdom and
The Green
Years, all of which were adapted to film. He also created
the
Dr. Finlay character, the
hero of a series of stories that served as the basis
for the popular
BBC television and radio series
entitled
Dr.
Finlay's Casebook.
Early life

Rosebank Cottage, Cronin's
birthplace
was born at Rosebank Cottage in
Cardross
,
Dunbartonshire
, the only child of a
Protestant
mother, Jessie Cronin, and a
Catholic father, Patrick
Cronin, and would later write of young men from similarly mixed
backgrounds.
His paternal grandparents were the
proprietors of a public house in
Alexandria
. His maternal grandfather, Archibald Montgomerie, was a hatter who owned a shop in Dumbarton
. After their marriage, Cronin's parents
moved to
Helensburgh, where he
attended Grant Street School. When he was seven years old, his
father, an insurance agent and
commercial traveller, died from
tuberculosis. He and his mother moved to her
parents’ home in Dumbarton, and she soon became the first female
public health inspector in
Scotland.
Cronin was not only a precocious student at Dumbarton Academy who
won many prizes and writing competitions, but an excellent athlete
and
football. From an early
age, he was an avid
golfer, a sport he enjoyed
throughout his life, and he loved
salmon
fishing as well.
The family later moved
to Yorkhill, Glasgow
, where he
attended St. Aloysius' College
in the Garnethill
area of the city. He played football for the
First XI there, an experience which he included in one of his last
novels,
The Minstrel
Boy, also published as
Desmonde in the USA.
Due to his
exceptional abilities, he was awarded a scholarship to study
medicine at the University of
Glasgow
in 1914. He was absent during the 1916-1917
session for naval service and graduated with highest honours in
1919, being awarded an
M.B. and
a
Ch.B. Cronin went on to earn additional
degrees, including a Diploma in Public Health (1923) and his
MRCP
(1924). In 1925, he was awarded an
M.D. from the University of Glasgow for
his
dissertation, entitled "The History
of
Aneurysm."
Medical career
Cronin served as a
Royal Navy surgeon during
World War
I before graduating from medical school.
After the war, he
trained at various hospitals including Bellahouston
and Lightburn
Hospitals in Glasgow and Rotunda Hospital in Dublin
, before
taking up his first practice in Tredegar
, a mining town in South Wales
. In 1924, he was appointed Medical Inspector
of Mines for Great
Britain
, and over the next few years, his survey of medical
regulations in collieries and his reports
on the correlation between coal dust inhalation and pulmonary disease were published.
Cronin
drew on his experiences researching the occupational hazards of the
mining industry for his later novels The Citadel, set in Wales, and
The Stars Look Down,
set in Northumberland
. He subsequently moved to London where he
practised in Harley
Street
before opening his own thriving medical practice in
Westbourne
Grove
, Notting
Hill
. Cronin was also the medical officer for
Whiteleys
at this time and was becoming increasingly
interested in ophthalmology.
Writing career
1930, Cronin was sent on an enforced holiday after being diagnosed
with a chronic
duodenal ulcer.
It was at Dalchenna Farm on Loch Fyne
where he indulged his lifelong desire to write a
novel, having theretofore "written nothing but prescriptions and
scientific papers." He composed
Hatter's Castle in the span of three
months, and the manuscript was quickly accepted by
Gollancz, the only publishing house to
which it had been submitted. This novel launched his career as a
prolific author, and he never returned to practicing
medicine.
Many of Cronin's books were
bestsellers
which were translated into numerous languages. His strengths
included his compelling
narrative skill
and his powers of acute observation and graphic description.
Although noted for its deep social
conscience, his work is filled with colorful
characters and witty dialogue. Some of his stories draw on his
medical career, dramatically mixing
realism,
romance, and
social criticism. Cronin's works examine
moral conflicts between the individual and society as his
idealistic heroes pursue justice for the common man.
One of his earliest
novels, The Stars Look
Down, chronicles transgressions in a mining community in
Northeast England
. Cronin's
humanism
continues to inspire - the film
Billy
Elliot was partly drawn from
The Stars Look Down,
and the opening song of the
Billy Elliot the Musical is
entitled this as a tribute.
A few of Cronin's novels also deal with religion, something he had
grown away from during his medical training and career, and with
which he reacquainted himself in his thirties. The example of his
mother, a converted and devout Catholic, combined with his early
years in a Jesuit school to make his religious beliefs important to
him. Having suffered from a then prevalent bigotry, both with his
parents' mixed marriage and at the time of his own marriage (his
wife's family were Protestants), his Catholicism was
ecumenical far before such
tolerant attitudes became commonplace. In
The Keys of the
Kingdom, the priest protagonist's
liberal philosophy, notably toward
atheism, are quite remarkable considering the time
at which the novel was written.
Extremely diligent, Cronin liked to average 5,000 words a day,
meticulously planning the details of his plots in advance. He was
known to be very tough in business dealings, although in private
life he was a good-humoured person to whom each day was an
adventure.
Cronin also contributed a large number of stories and essays to
various international publications.
Influence of The Citadel
The
Citadel incited the establishment of the National Health Service in the
United Kingdom
by exposing the inequity and incompetence of
medical practice at the time. Dr. Cronin and
Aneurin Bevan had both worked at the
Tredegar
Cottage Hospital
in Wales, which served as the basis for the
NHS. Cronin's novel informed the public of corruption within
the medical system, planting a seed that eventually led to
necessary reform. Not only were the author's pioneering ideas
instrumental in the creation of the NHS, but the popularity of his
novels played a substantial role in the
Labour Party's landslide 1945
victory.
Family
It was at university that Cronin met his future wife, Agnes Mary
Gibson, who was also a medical
student.
May was the daughter of Robert Gibson, a
master baker,
and Agnes Thomson Gibson (née Gilchrist) of Hamilton
, Lanarkshire. The couple married on 31
August 1921.
As a doctor, May helped her husband with
research and worked in the dispensary
while he was employed by the Tredegar General Hospital
, and she also assisted him with his practice in
London. When he became an author, she would
proofread his
manuscripts. Their first son,
Vincent, was born in Tredegar in 1924.
Their
second son, Patrick, was born
in London
in
1926. Andrew, their youngest son, was born in London in
1937.
With his
stories being adapted to Hollywood
films, Cronin and his family moved to the United States
in 1939, living in Bel-Air
, California, Nantucket
, Massachusetts, Greenwich
, Connecticut, and Blue Hill
, Maine. In 1945, the Cronins sailed back to England
aboard the RMS
Queen Mary
, where they
stayed briefly in Hove
and then in
Raheny
, Ireland
before returning to the U.S. the following year.
They
subsequently took up residence at the Carlyle Hotel
in New York
City
and then in Deerfield
, Massachusetts before settling in New
Canaan
, Connecticut in 1947. Ever the nomad,
Cronin also frequently traveled to his homes in Bermuda
and Cap-d'Ail
, France
, where he
summered.
Later years
Ultimately, Cronin returned to Europe,
residing in Lucerne
and Montreux
, Switzerland
for the last twenty-five years of his life and
continuing to write into his eighties. He included among his
friends
Laurence Olivier,
Sir Charles Chaplin and
Audrey Hepburn, to whose first son he was
godfather.
He died on 6 January 1981 in Montreux,
and is interred at La Tour-de-Peilz
. Many of Cronin's writings, including
published and unpublished literary manuscripts, drafts, letters,
school exercise books and essays, laboratory books, and his M.D. thesis, are held
at the National Library of Scotland
and the University of Texas
.
Honours
Bibliography
- Hatter's Castle (1931),
ISBN 0-450-03486-0
- Three Loves (1932), ISBN
0-450-02202-1
- Kaleidoscope in "K"
(serial novella, 1933)
- Grand Canary
(1933), ISBN 0-450-02047-9
- Country Doctor
(serial novella, 1935)
- The Stars Look Down
(1935), ISBN 0-450-00497-X
- The Citadel (1937),
ISBN 0-450-01041-4
- Vigil in the
Night (serial novella, 1939) ISBN 9780972743969
- Jupiter Laughs (play,
1940), ISBN B000OHEBC2
- The Valorous Years
(serial novella, 1940) ISBN 9780972743976
- The Keys of the
Kingdom (1941), ISBN 0-450-01042-2
- Adventures of a Black
Bag (1943, rev. 1969), ISBN 0-450-00306-X
- The Green Years (1944),
ISBN 0-450-01820-2
- Shannon's Way (1948),
ISBN 0-450-03313-9
- The Spanish
Gardener (1950), ISBN 0-450-01108-9
- Adventures in Two
Worlds (autobiography, 1952), ISBN 0-450-03195-0
- Beyond This Place
(1953), ISBN 0-450-01708-7
- A Thing of Beauty
(1956), ISBN 0-515-03379-0; also published as Crusader's Tomb (1956), ISBN
0-450-01394-4
- The Northern
Light (1958), ISBN 0-450-01538-6
- The Innkeeper's
Wife (short story, 1958)
- The Cronin Omnibus
(1958), ISBN 0-575-05836-6
- The Native Doctor;
also published as An Apple in
Eden (1959)
- The Judas Tree (1961),
ISBN 0-450-01393-6
- A Song of Sixpence
(1964), ISBN 0-450-03312-0
- Further
Adventures of a Black Bag (1966), ISBN 0-563-49432-8
- A Pocketful of Rye
(1969), ISBN 0-450-39010-1
- Desmonde (1975), ISBN
0-316-16163-2; also published as The Minstrel Boy (1975), ISBN
0-450-03279-5
- Lady with
Carnations (1976), ISBN 0-450-03631-6
- Gracie Lindsay (1978),
ISBN 0-450-04536-6
- Doctor Finlay of Tannochbrae (1978), ISBN 0-450-04246-4
Selected periodical publications
- "The Most Unforgettable Character I Ever Met: The Doctor of
Lennox," Reader's Digest,
35 (September 1939): 26-30.
- "Turning Point of My Career," Reader's Digest, 38 (May
1941): 53-57.
- "Diogenes in Maine,"
Reader's Digest, 39 (August 1941): 11-13.
- "Reward of Mercy," Reader's Digest, 39 (September
1941): 25-37.
- "How I Came to Write a Novel of a Priest," Life, 11
(20 October 1941): 64-66.
- "Drama in Everyday Life," Reader's Digest, 42 (March
1943): 83-86.
- "Candles in Vienna
,"
Reader's Digest, 48 (June 1946): 1-3.
- "Star of Hope Still Rises," Reader's Digest, 53
(December 1948): 1-3.
- "Johnny Brown Stays Here," Reader's Digest, 54
(January 1949): 9-12.
- "Two
Gentlemen of Verona
,"
Reader's Digest, 54 (February 1949): 1-5.
- "Greater Gift," Reader's Digest, 54 (March 1949):
88-91.
- "Irish Rose," Reader's Digest, 56 (January 1950):
21-24.
- "Monsieur le Maire," Reader's Digest, 58 (January
1951): 52-56.
- "Best Investment I Ever Made," Reader's Digest, 58
(March 1951): 25-28.
- "Quo Vadis?," Reader's
Digest, 59 (December 1951): 41-44.
- "Tombstone for Nora Malone," Reader's Digest, 60
(January 1952): 99-101.
- "When You Dread Failure," Reader's Digest, 60
(February 1952): 21-24.
- "What
I Learned at La Grande
Chartreuse
," Reader's Digest, 62 (February 1953):
73-77.
- "Grace of Gratitude," Reader's Digest, 62 (March
1953): 67-70.
- "Thousand and One Lives," Reader's Digest, 64 (January
1954): 8-11.
- "How to Stop Worrying," Reader's Digest, 64 (May
1954): 47-50.
- "Don't Be Sorry for Yourself!," Reader's Digest, 66
(February 1955): 97-100.
- "Unless You Deny Yourself," Reader's Digest, 68
(January 1956): 54-56.
- "Resurrection of Joao Jacinto," Reader's Digest, 89
(November 1966): 153-157.
Film adaptations
- 1934–Once to Every
Woman (from short story, Kaleidoscope in "K")–directed by
Lambert Hillyer, featuring Ralph
Bellamy, Fay Wray, Walter Connolly, Mary Carlisle, and Walter Byron
- 1934–Grand
Canary–directed by Irving Cummings, featuring Warner Baxter, Madge
Evans, Marjorie Rambeau,
Zita Johann, and H.B. Warner
- 1938–The
Citadel–directed by King
Vidor, featuring Robert Donat,
Rosalind Russell, Ralph Richardson, and Rex Harrison
- 1940–Vigil in the
Night–directed by George Stevens, featuring Carole Lombard, Brian
Aherne, Anne Shirley, and
Robert Coote
- 1940–The
Stars Look Down–directed by Carol Reed, narrated by Lionel Barrymore (US version), featuring
Michael Redgrave, Margaret Lockwood, Emlyn Williams, Nancy
Price, and Cecil Parker
- 1941–Shining
Victory (from play, Jupiter Laughs)–directed by Irving Rapper, featuring James Stephenson, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Donald Crisp, Barbara
O'Neil, and Bette Davis
- 1942–Hatter's
Castle–directed by Lance Comfort, featuring
Robert Newton, Deborah Kerr, James
Mason, Emlyn Williams, and
Enid Stamp-Taylor
- 1944–The
Keys of the Kingdom–directed by John M. Stahl,
featuring Gregory Peck, Thomas Mitchell, Vincent Price, Rose Stradner, Edmund Gwenn, Benson
Fong, Cedric Hardwicke, Jane
Ball, and Roddy McDowall
- 1946–The Green
Years–directed by Victor Saville, featuring
Charles Coburn, Tom Drake, Beverly Tyler, Hume Cronyn, Gladys
Cooper, Dean Stockwell, Selena
Royle, and Jessica Tandy
- 1953–Ich suche
Dich ("I Seek You" - from play,
Jupiter Laughs)–directed by
O.W. Fischer, featuring O.W. Fischer,
Anouk Aimée, Nadja Tiller, and Otto Brüggemann
- 1957–The
Spanish Gardener–directed by Philip Leacock, featuring Dirk Bogarde, Jon
Whiteley, Michael Hordern,
Cyril Cusack, and Lyndon Brook
- 1958– Kalapani ("Black
Water" - from novel, Beyond
This Place)–directed by Raj
Khosla, featuring Dev Anand, Madhubala, Nalini
Jaywant, and Agha
- 1959–Web of
Evidence (from novel, Beyond This Place)–directed by
Jack Cardiff, featuring Van Johnson, Vera
Miles, Emlyn Williams, Bernard Lee, and Jean
Kent
- 1967– Pula
Rangadu (from novel, Beyond This Place)–directed by
Adurthi Subba Rao, featuring ANR, Jamuna, and Nageshwara Rao Akkineni
- 1971–Tere
Mere Sapne ("Our Dreams" - from novel,
The Citadel)–directed
by Vijay Anand, featuring Dev Anand, Mumtaz,
Hema Malini, Vijay Anand, and Prem
Nath
- 1972–Jiban
Saikate (from novel, The Citadel)–directed by Swadesh
Sarkar, featuring Soumitra
Chatterjee and Aparna Sen
- 1975–Mausam
("Seasons" - from novel, The
Judas Tree)–directed by Gulzar, featuring Sharmila Tagore, Sanjeev Kumar, Dina Pathak, and Om
Shivpuri
- 1982–Madhura
Swapnam (from novel, The Citadel)–directed by K. Raghavendra Rao, featuring Jaya Prada, Jayasudha,
and Krishnamraju
Selected television credits
- 1955–Escape From
Fear (CBS), featuring William Lundigan, Tristram Coffin, Mari Blanchard, Howard
Duff, and Jay Novello
- 1957–Beyond This
Place (CBS), featuring Farley Granger, Peggy Ann Garner, Max
Adrian, Brian Donlevy, and
Shelley Winters
- 1958–Nicholas (TV Tupi), featuring Ricardinho, Roberto de Cleto,
and Rafael Golombeck
- 1960–The Citadel
(ABC), featuring
James Donald, Ann
Blyth, Lloyd Bochner, Hugh Griffith, and Torin Thatcher
- 1960–The
Citadel, featuring Eric Lander, Zena Walker, Jack May,
Elizabeth Shepherd, and Richard Vernon
- 1962-1971–Dr. Finlay's
Casebook (BBC), featuring Bill Simpson,
Andrew Cruickshank, and Barbara Mullen
- 1962 & 1963–The
Ordeal of Dr. Shannon (NBC &
ITV), featuring Rod
Taylor, Elizabeth MacLennan, and Ronald Fraser
- 1963-1965–Memorandum
van een dokter, featuring Bram van der Vlugt, Rob
Geraerds, and Fien Berghegge
- 1964–La
Cittadella (RAI
),
featuring Alberto Lupo, Anna Maria Guarnieri, Fosco Giachetti, and Eleonora Rossi Drago
- 1964–Novi asistent,
featuring Dejan Dubajic, Ljiljana Jovanovic, Nikola Simic, and
Milan Srdoc
- 1967–O Jardineiro
Espanhol (TV Tupi), featuring Ednei
Giovenazzi and Osmano Cardoso
- 1971–E le stelle stanno a
guardare (RAI
),
featuring Orso Maria Guerrini, Andrea
Checchi, and Giancarlo
Giannini
- 1974–The Stars Look
Down (Granada),
featuring Ian Hastings, Susan Tracy, Alun Armstrong, and Christian Rodska
- 1976–Slecna Meg a talír Ming (Ceskoslovenská
Televise), featuring Marie Rosulková, Eva Svobodová, Petr Kostka, and Svatopluk Benes
- 1977–Les Années d'illusion
(TF1
), featuring Yves Brainville, Josephine Chaplin, Michel Cassagne, and
Laurence Calame
- 1983–The
Citadel (BBC and PBS), featuring Ben Cross,
Clare Higgins, Tenniel Evans, and Gareth Thomas
- 1993-1996–Doctor Finlay
(ITV and PBS), featuring
David Rintoul, Annette Crosbie, Ian
Bannen, Jessica Turner, and Jason
Flemyng
- 2003–La Cittadella
(Titanus), featuring Massimo Ghini, Barbora Bobulová, Franco Castellano,
and Anna Galiena
Selected radio credits
- 1940– The Citadel (The Campbell Playhouse -
CBS), featuring Orson
Welles, Geraldine
Fitzgerald, Ernest Chappell,
Everett Sloane, George Coulouris, and Ray Collins
- 1970-1978–Dr. Finlay's
Casebook (BBC Radio 4),
featuring Bill Simpson, Andrew
Cruickshank, and Barbara Mullen
(rebroadcast in 2003 on BBC 7)
- 2001-2002–Adventures of a Black
Bag (BBC Radio 4), featuring
John Gordon Sinclair, Brian Pettifer, Katy
Murphy, and Celia Imrie
- 2007-2009– Doctor
Finlay: The Further Adventures of a Black Bag (BBC Radio 7), featuring John Gordon Sinclair, Brian Pettifer, and Katy Murphy
See also
Further reading
- Salwak, Dale. A. J. Cronin. Boston:
Twayne's English Authors Series, 1985. ISBN 080576884X
References
- [1]
- [2]
- Cronin, A. J. Adventures in Two Worlds.
Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1952, pp. 261-2.
- Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography
- R. Samuel, "North and South," London Review of Books
17.12 (22 June 1995): 3-6.
- Dictionary of Literary Biography
External links