Cunningham, Allan, 1784-1842
Name Entries
person
Cunningham, Allan, 1784-1842
Name Components
Surname :
Cunningham
Forename :
Allan
Date :
1784-1842
authorizedForm
rda
Cunningham, Allen, 1784-1842
Name Components
Surname :
Cunningham
Forename :
Allen
Date :
1784-1842
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rda
Cunningham, A.C. (Allan C.), 1784-1842
Name Components
Forename :
A.C.
NameExpansion :
Allan C.
Date :
1784-1842
eng
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alternativeForm
rda
Cunningham, Alan, 1784-1842
Name Components
Surname :
Cunningham
Forename :
Alan
Date :
1784-1842
eng
Latn
alternativeForm
rda
Cunningham, Allan C., 1784-1842
Name Components
Surname :
Cunningham
Forename :
Allan C.
Date :
1784-1842
eng
Latn
alternativeForm
rda
Hidallan, 1784-1842
Name Components
Forename :
Hidallan
Date :
1784-1842
eng
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alternativeForm
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Biographical History
Allan Cunningham was a Scottish author. Trained as a stonemason, he made a name for himself by passing off his own poetry as a collection of traditional Scottish ballads. As a professional man of letters, he had diverse interests, writing plays, novels, short stories, collecting and editing anthologies, and writing biographies and other nonfiction, but was probably most successful as a poet.
Scottish poet.
British poet and art historian Allan Cunningham was born on 7 December, 1784 at Keir, Dumfriesshire. In 1814, Cunningham made the acquaintance of the sculptor Sir Francis Chancery who agreed to employ the struggling writer as his superintendent of works. While working for Chancery, Cunningham continued writing and began to publish his works. Between 1829 and 1833 Cunningham produced his six volume work, Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors and Architects, which benefited greatly from the author's personal connection and intimacy with many of his subjects. The last work to appear in his lifetime was a biography of Robert Burns, published in 1834. A biography of Sir David Wilkie, composed during the last years of Cunningham's life appeared posthumously.
Scotch poet.
Allan Cunningham (1784-1842), the poet and songwriter, was born in Dumfriesshire, on 7 December 1784. He is the author of The life of Burns. It is possible that his correspondent, Mrs. Jameson is the author Anna Brownell Jameson.
Allan Cunningham was a diverse and prolific English author. Born in Scotland, he and his family overcame lower-class circumstances with ability and effort. He worked a variety of jobs, including stonemasonry, and assistant to sculptor Francis Chantrey, while publishing poetry and the songbook Remains of Nithsdale and Gaolloway Song, ostensibly a collection of folk songs but actually Cunningham's original compositions. He made numerous literary contacts, published biographies of Walter Scott and Robert Burns, and wrote an extensive work on British literature. An engaging writer with good descriptive qualities, he also wrote novels, stories, and other non-fiction, but is perhaps best remembered for his poems, many in Scots vernacular.
Allan Cunningham, Scottish poet and songwriter.
Scottish poet and biographer.
Born on 7 December, 1784 at Keir, Dumfriesshire, Allan Cunningham was one of nine children. He attended a dame's school briefly, before being apprenticed to his brother James, a stonemason in Dalwinton, at age 11. Bookish from an early age, Cunningham read avidly in his spare time and soon began experimenting with his own poetry. Some poems signed 'Hidallan' were published in the 'Literary Recreations' (1807) edited by Eugenius Roche.
In 1809 R.H. Cromek met Cunningham while touring Scotland looking for indigenous songs and ballads. Cunningham showed him his work and the result was that Cromek persuaded Cunningham to move to London and try his hand at literature as a living. That was in April, 1810. A volume entitled Remains of Nithdale and Galloway Song was published under Cromek's aegis which featured some of Cunningham's work.
In London, following a period of intermittent employment as a journalist and newspaper poet, Cunningham made the acquaintance of the sculptor Sir Francis Chancery. Sir Francis agreed to employ the struggling writer as his superintendent of the works in 1814. From then on he resided at 27 Lower Belgrave Place, Pimlico - the address which appears on most of the letters in the following collection. Cunningham's position was that of Chancery's secretary; he conducted his correspondence, represented him during his absence, and perhaps advised him artistically.
In his spare time Cunningham continued to write. He contributed a series called 'Recollections of Mark Macrabin' to Blackwood's Magazine from 1819 - 1821, later giving up Blackwood's for the London Magazine . In 1822 there appeared his two volume Traditional Tales of the English and Scottish Peasantry, and in 1825 he produced a four volume collection entitled The Songs of Scotland, Ancient and Modern . In both 1829 and 1830 Mr. Cunningham edited a poetical 'Anniversary', references to which appear in some of the following letters, which contained contributions from such contemporaries as Southey, Lockhart, Hogg, Wilson, Croker, and Proctor. Between 1829 and 1833 Cunningham also produced his six volume work, Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors and Architects, which benefitted greatly from the author's personal connection and intimacy with many of his subjects. The last work to appear in his lifetime was a biography of Robert Burns, published in 1834. A biography of Sir David Wilkie, composed during the last years of Cunningham's life appeared posthumously.
Allan Cunningham was married to Jean Walker in Southwark on 1 July, 1811. His marriage remained stable and happy until his death in 1842. His widow succeeded him by 22 years. Their union produced five sons and a daughter, the two eldest sons being awarded cadetships in the Indian service as a result of the influence of Sir Walter Scott whom Cunningham had met via Sir Francis Chancery. In 1831 Cunningham received the freedom of Dumfries as well as the praise of Thomas Carlyle, by whom he was referred to as 'the solid Dumfries stonemason'. He was generally known as 'honest Allan Cunningham', a stalwart, hearty, prolific and kindly man with 'a tag of rusticity to the last'. He lies buried at Kensal Green. (Excerpted from the Dictionary of National Biography ).
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/79253486
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2062341
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82208573
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n82208573
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
ger
Zyyy
Subjects
Printing
Art
Art historians
Art historians
Artists, British
Art, Stuart
Authors, English
Authors, Scottish
Authors, Scottish
Ballads, English
Ballads, Scots
English poetry
Engraving
Male authors, English
Scottish poetry
Songs
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Britons
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Great Britain
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Great Britain
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>