Born in Farmington, Missouri, he was raised in a highly religious family which included several generations of devout Methodist preachers. When he was in his early teens, he and his siblings became disenchanted with the local Southern Methodist church.
During World War I, Asbury enlisted as a private in the United States Army. He was later promoted to sergeant and then to second lieutenant. He served in France until his lungs were severely damaged in a gas attack. He received an honorable discharge in January 1919.
Asbury first achieved notoriety with a story published in The American Mercury in 1926. The story profiled a prostitute from Asbury's hometown of Farmington, Missouri. The prostitute took her Protestant customers to the Catholic cemetery to conduct business, and took her Catholic customers to the Protestant cemetery; some in Farmington considered this woman beyond redemption.
The article caused a sensation: The Boston Watch and Ward Society had the magazine banned. Asbury became a celebrity. Asbury then focused his attention on a series of articles debunking temperance crusader Carrie Nation.
The following year he wrote a biography of Francis Asbury.
Herbert continued working as a reporter for various newspapers including The Atlanta Georgian, the New …