Crane, Hart, 1899-1932

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Crane, Hart, 1899-1932

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Crane, Hart, 1899-1932

Crane, Hart, pseud.

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Crane, Hart, pseud.

Crane, Hart

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Crane, Hart

Crane, Hart (Harold Hart), 1899-1932

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Crane, Hart (Harold Hart), 1899-1932

Crane, Harold Hart 1899-1932

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Crane, Harold Hart 1899-1932

Crane, Hart (American poet, 1899-1932)

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Crane, Hart (American poet, 1899-1932)

Hart Crane

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Hart Crane

クレイン, ハート

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クレイン, ハート

Crane, Harold

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Crane, Harold

Crane, Harold 1899-1932

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Crane, Harold 1899-1932

Crane, Harold Hart

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Crane, Harold Hart

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Exist Dates

Exist Dates - Date Range

1899-07-21

1899-07-21

Birth

1932-04-27

1932-04-27

Death

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Biographical History

BIOGHIST REQUIRED American poet.

From the guide to the Hart Crane Papers, ca.1909-1937, (Columbia University Rare Book and Manuscript Library, )

Author; full name: Harold Hart Crane.

From the description of Postcard of Hart Crane, 1929. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 79449992

American poet.

From the description of Hart Crane collection, 1999. (Johns Hopkins University). WorldCat record id: 148050139 From the description of Hart Crane papers, ca.1909-1937. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 609578482

U.S. poet.

From the description of Works, correspondence, galley proofs, clippings, and photographs, 1923-1933, 1961. (Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center (HRC); University of Texas at Austin). WorldCat record id: 122632932

American poet Hart Crane was born in Garrettsville, Ohio, on July 21, 1899, the only child of Clarence and Grace Hart Crane. He moved with his family to Cleveland in 1908 and attended Cleveland public schools through the eleventh grade. From a young age Crane declared that he would be a poet and devote his life to literary pursuits. As a teen, Crane began the practice of completely immersing himself in the study of literature to relieve the constant tension created by his parents' unhappy marriage and subsequent divorce. In 1916, at the age of 17, Crane left school in Cleveland and moved to New York, ostensibly to prepare for entrance into Columbia University, but in reality to strike out on his own as a poet and writer, and to escape the unhappiness of his family life. From this point on, until his death in 1932, Crane lived in a number of different places including Cleveland, New York, Los Angeles, Isle of Pines, France and Mexico. He supported himself with a variety of writing jobs and publication of his poems, gifts from patrons, allowance from his family and a Guggenheim fellowship. His unstable finances, abuse of alcohol and family emergencies dictated many of these moves but his quest for solitude in which to compose his poems provided motivation as well. Crane is considered one of the greatest American poets of the early 20th century. His major work, The Bridge, is a mystical synthesis of America which connects the country's past, present and future. For this poem Crane received the Helen Haire Levinson Prize in 1931. While returning from Mexico in April, 1932, Crane lept to his death from the deck of the S.S. Orziba.

From the guide to the Hart Crane Collection, 1889-1987, 1920-1973, (Case Western Reserve University)

Hart Crane, twentieth-century American poet, author of The Bridge.

From the description of Hart Crane Collection (1910-1972). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702132839

Crane was born in Ohio, writing poetry from his earliest childhood. His two major themes are the sea and the city. He is famous for, The Bridge. He died tragically on his way back from Mexico by jumping ship.

From the description of Collection, 1923-1935 (inclusive), 1923-1929 (bulk). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122450707

At the time of his early death at thirty-two in 1932, Hart Crane was already recognized as a major American poet, though he had published only two volumes of poetry and a handful of poems in various magazines.

Born in the small town of Garretsville, Ohio, on July 21, 1899, the only child of Clarence A. and Grace Hart Crane, Harold Hart Crane experienced an unsettling childhood and adolescence that undoubtedly affected his adult personal life and poetical career. Though he was freed of economic want by his father's first success in the canning of syrup, then in the manufacturing of candy, Crane from an early age had to contend with the increasing marital unhappiness of his parents. Their constant bickerings eventually resulted in divorce in 1916, an event that his biographers agree left an ineradicable scar in the seventeen year old Crane's emotional makeup.

Partly because of his disrupted home life and partly out of an early desire to make a name for himself in the literary world, Crane left home at seventeen for New York City. Throughout his adult life he experienced professional disappointments, emotional crises, heavy drinking spells, and a series of short-lived jobs in advertising or sales, but Crane was not deterred from his ambition to become an acclaimed poet. Although he never completed high school and entered college only to take a single advertising course, he was extremely well read in American and European literature, both past and present. Moreover, he was fortunate to become associated at an early age with many prominent authors, critics, and artists, among them Sherwood Anderson, Gorham Munson, Malcolm Cowley, Allen Tate, Waldo Frank, Matthew Josephson, Samuel Loveman, Carl Schmitt, William Sommer, and Alfred Stieglitz.

Having already published a number of poems in various magazines by the time he was twenty-five, Crane experienced his first major success in 1926 with the publication of White Buildings, his first volume of verse. Allen Tate called it "the most distinguished poetry of the age," and Yvor Winters claimed that this volume placed Crane among the five or six greatest contemporary poets in English. Between the publication of White Buildings and his death in 1932, Crane published only some fifteen poems in magazines, his poetic efforts being channeled to a completion of his seven-year project, The Bridge . Reaction to this long poem in 1930 was mixed, but The Bridge has come to be generally regarded as one of the supreme poetic statements of twentieth-century American literature. As Crane himself termed his poem, The Bridge was "a synthesis of America and its structural identity," an attempt to amalgamate and objectify the diverse American experience into a cohesive statement.

In 1931 Crane, with a Guggenheim fellowship, went to live in Mexico to work on a poetic drama of Montezuma's life. Heavily into drink and experiencing alternating periods of elation and depression, he made little headway on the projected poem and feared a loss of creative inspiration. Sailing back to the United States to resolve financial problems in his father's estate, Crane ended his life on April 26, 1932, by leaping from the deck of the S. S. Orrizaba . The publication of Crane's personal letters, several major biographies, and numerous critical studies have revealed Hart Crane to be one of the most complex, accomplished, and troubled voices of modern American poetry.

From the guide to the Hart Crane Collection, (1910-1972), (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

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https://viaf.org/viaf/22140431

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80057229

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80057229

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q380723

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eng

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American literature

Art, Modern

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Authors, American

American poetry

Poets, American

Poets, American

Poets, American

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Brooklyn Bridge (New York, N.Y.)

Poetry, Modern

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Americans

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Poets, American

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United States

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United States

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15925427