The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Riley, James Whitcomb
18491916, American poet, b. Greenfield, Ind., known as the Hoosier poet. He was at various times a traveling actor, a sign painter, and a newspaperman. Under the name Benj. F. Johnson of Boone he began to write verse in the Hoosier dialect for the Indianapolis Journal in 1875, selections first collected in The Old Swimmin-Hole and Leven More Poems (1883). Rileys verse was popular because of its humor, pathos, simplicity, and sentimentality. Especially well-known are his childrens poems such as Little Orphant Annie and The Runaway Boy. Among the collections of his verse are Rhymes of Childhood (1890) and Knee Deep in June (1912).