Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892
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Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892
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Whittier
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John Greenleaf
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1807-1892
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Whittier, John G. (John Greenleaf), 1807-1892
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Whittier
Forename :
John G.
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John Greenleaf
Date :
1807-1892
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Whittier, J. G. (John Greenleaf), 1807-1892
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Whittier
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J. G.
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John Greenleaf
Date :
1807-1892
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Biographical History
John Greenleaf Whittier was a wildly popular New England poet. A deeply committed and active abolitionist, he wrote many of his poems with a political agenda, although distinguished by an open-minded tolerance so often lacking in his fellow abolitionists. Although his works are somewhat marred by overtly political and overly sentimental works, the core of his output stands as fine, lyrical American verse.
Poet and abolitionist; of Massachusetts.
John Greenleaf Whittier, an American writer, was born in 1807 in Haverhill, Massachusetts to John and Abigail Hussey Whittier. He had little formal schooling until he entered the Haverhill Academy in 1827. His first poem was published in 1826 in William Lloyd Garrison's newspaper "Free Press." His poems were also published weekly in the "Haverhill Gazette." In 1829, he became editor of "The American Manufacturer", and published his first book in 1831. Following his meeting with Garrison in 1833, Whittier became a strong abolitionist. In 1835, he was elected to the Massachusetts General Court. He spoke at many anti-slavery rallies, wrote for abolitionist newspapers and championed the formation of the Republican Party. In his later years, he published many volumes of poetry and served as a political consultant to a number of Republicans. He died on September 7, 1892, in Hampton Falls, Massachusetts.
Whittier, American Quaker poet and abolitionist.
John Greenleaf Whittier, a New England Quaker poet, journalist, and abolitionist, was born at Haverhill, Massachusetts on December 17, 1807. Among Whittier's many writings, his abolitionist poems were a powerful influence in rallying public sentiment against slavery. His poem "The Kansas Emigrants" (or "The Kansas Emigrant Song") was issued as a broadside in 1854, printed on card stock, and was sung to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne" by groups of emigrants to Kansas Territory. From 1876 until the year of his death, Whittier made his home at Oak Knoll in Danvers, Massachusetts. He died on September 7, 1892 at Hampton Falls, New Hampshire, and was buried in the Union Cemetery at Amesbury, Massachusetts.
John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) was an American poet and abolitionist. Samuel Thomas Pickard (1828-1915) was an editor of the Portland (Me.) Transcript. He was married to a niece of Whittier's and became Whittier literary executor and biographer.
Poet and abolitionist.
American poet and abolitionist.
American poet.
Whittier was an American poet and abolitionist.
American Quaker poet.
John Greenleaf Whittier was a New England Quaker poet, born in Amesbury, Massachusetts. His early poems reflect his involvement in anti-slavery politics. He served in the state legislature, edited The Pennsylvania freeman (1838-1840), published verse in the 1850s, and during the 1860s contributed to The Atlantic monthly, which he had helped to found. His later works include: Home Ballads (1860), In war time and other poems (1864), and "Barbara Frietchie" and the very successful Snow-Bound (1866). Whittier spent his later years, after 1876, in Danvers, Massachusetts, where he lived with female cousins.
John Greenleaf Whittier was born near Haverhill, Massachusetts in 1807 and published his first volume of poetry in 1831. Whittier edited several newspapers and found time to engage in politics, while remaining an active Quaker all his life. A close friend of William Lloyd Garrison, he considered slavery a great evil and supported abolition, often at cost to his personal safety. Whittier died in New Hampshire in 1892.
Whittier is called the "fireside Poet". He was born on Dec. 17, 1807 in Mass. His first poem was printed in 1826. In 1827-1828 while teaching school he had his first prose article published and edited the American Manufacturer, a political paper. In 1831 his first book was published. In 1833 his abolitionist article began to be published. He was elected to the Mass. Legislature in 1835. He was active as a Quaker abolitionist politician and lobbyist in NY, Pa., and Mass. After the publication of his poem Snow-bound in 1866, nearly every volume he published was a best seller. He died on Sept. 7, 1890, recognized in his lifetime as one of America's foremost poets. The Clarke also has numerous books and poems written about or by Whittier. (For further information see the finding aid.).
Johnson was at this time associate editor of the publication and Beecher was the editor.
John Greenleaf Whitter (1807-1892) was an American poet, editor and abolitionist. Born in Massachusetts, Whittaker spent his youth on a Quaker farm. His discovery of Robert Burns led to his career as a poet. His major works include: Snow-bound, The Pennsylvania Pilgrim and Other Poems, and The Tent on the Beach and Other Poems. Among his patrons was William Lloyd Garrison, who gave Whittier his first editorial job at a Boston newspaper and published some of Whittier's poems in The Liberator. Whittier was also active in politics and worked to help form the Republican party.
American Quaker poet, advocate of the abolition of slavery, usually listed as one of the Fireside Poets.
Epithet: American poet
John Greenleaf Whittier was an American poet, essayist, journalist, politician, and writer of hymns and antislavery literature.
John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) was an American poet and abolitionist. Samuel Thomas Pickard (1828-1915) was an editor of the Portland (Me.) Transcript. He was married to a niece of Whittier's and became Whittier's literary executor and biographer.
Whittier was one of the founding members of the American Anti-Slavery Society. Elizur Wright was editor of the Quarterly Anti-Slavery Magazine, 1835-37.
John Greenleaf Whittier was born on the family farm in Haverford, Massachusetts, in 1807, the son of devout Quakers. When he was fourteen, a teacher introduced him to Robert Burns' poetry, and he was inspired to begin writing his own. In 1826, his sister submitted one of his pieces to the Newburyport Free Press. Editor William Lloyd Garrison visited the farm and tried to persuade Whittier's father to send him to school, but was turned down. The next year, however, Haveford Academy opened, and Whittier was able to cover his tuition by making shoes and teaching. Two years later, Garrison managed to get Whittier the editorship of American Weekly, and Whittier used the position to promote his own Quaker-based political views. In 1835, he was elected to the Massachusetts legislature, but he did not pursue a political career after this position. Over the next decades, while continuing to write poetry, he became a leader of the abolition movement. By the 1870's, he was so popular that celebrations were held on his birthday. Whittier died in 1892.
More information is available in the American National Biography, CT213 .A68 1999, or the American National Bibliography Online.
The son of two devout Quakers, John Greenleaf Whittier was born and raised on the family farm on December 17, 1807, in Haverhill, Massachusetts. His first published poem, "The Exile's Departure," was published in William Lloyd Garrison's Newburyport Free Press in 1826. At Garrison's urging, Whittier attended Haverhill Academy from 1827 to 1828, while supporting himself as a shoemaker and schoolteacher.
A Quaker devoted to social causes and reform, Whittier worked passionately for a series of abolitionist newspapers and magazines. In Boston, he edited the American Manufacturer and the Essex Gazette before becoming editor of the New England Weekly Review. Whittier was also active in his support of National Republican candidates; he was a delegate in 1831 to the national Republican Convention in support of Henry Clay, and he himself ran unsuccessfully for Congress the following year.
His first book, "Legends of New England in Prose and Verse", was published in 1831. For the next thirty years until the Civil War, Whittier wrote essays and articles as well as poems that were concerned with abolition. In 1833 he wrote "Justice and Expedience" urging immediate abolition. In 1834 he was elected as a Whig for one term to the Massachusetts legislature. The folowing year he was mobbed and stoned in Concord, New Hampshire, for his beliefs. In 1836 Whittier moved to Amesbury, Massachusetts where he worked for the American Anti-Slavery Society. Later while working as the as editor of the Pennsylvania Freeman, in May 1838, the paper's offices were burned to the ground and sacked during the destruction of Pennsylvania Hall by a mob.
Whittier helped to establish the antislavery Liberty party in 1840 and ran for the U.S. Congress in 1842. In the mid-1850s he helped form the Republican party, supported the presidential candidacy of John C. Frémont in 1856, and helped to found the Atlantic Monthly in 1857.
The Civil War inspired the famous poem, "Barbara Frietchie," but with slavery abolished in 1865 Whittier turned his attention to topics of religion, nature, and rural life. His his most popular work, Snow-Bound (1866) sold 20,000 copies, enough to leave Whittier and his extended family without financial need.
In the early 1880s, he formed close friendships with Sarah Orne Jewett (1849–1909) and Annie Fields (1834-1915), both well-known New England authors. For his seventieth birthday dinner in 1877, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Mark Twain, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, and William Dean Howells were in attendance. While Whittier's critics often considered him to be just an average poet, they thought him a nobel and kind man whose verse gave unique expression to ideas they valued. Whittier passed away at Hampton Falls, New Hampshire, on September 7, 1892.
Epithet: Poet
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/19723987
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80034928
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80034928
http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q458372
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/12307364
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eng
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Subjects
American literature
Slavery
Slavery
Slavery
Abolitionists
Abolitionists
Abolitionists
Abolitionists
Authors, American
Authors, American
Authors, American
American poetry
American poetry
Poets, American
Poets, American
Poets, American
Poets, American
Poets, American
Antislavery movements
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Buena Vista, Battle of, Mexico, 1847
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Hampton Falls
NH, US
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Death
Haverhill
MA, US
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Birth
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